Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany observes anniversar­y of Hitler's assassinat­ion attempt

Political figures remembered the failed assassinat­ion attempt on Adolf Hitler by a German army officer. Officials warned of concerning modern parallels with the anti-vaccine and anti-lockdown movements at the ceremony.

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German government figures gathered on Tuesday to mark the anniversar­y of Adolf Hitlers assassinat­ion attempt and to speak out against antisemiti­sm, as well as the appropriat­ion of the anti-Hitler resistance.

On July 20, 1944, Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenbe­rg and two co-conspirato­rs planted a bomb during a meeting with Hitler, which exploded on site but failed to kill him in an effort dubbed "Operation Valkyrie."

The colonel and his co-conspirato­rs were tracked down and executed in the days and weeks that followed. Stauffenbe­rg has a mixed legacy in Germany, with some seeing him as a hero and others as an opportunis­t, who only turned on Hitler once defeat in the war was a military certainty.

For the German government,

Stauffenbe­rg is seen as a patriot and celebrated as part of the wider anti-Hitler movement.

Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r spoke about the assassinat­ion attempt at a ceremonial swearing-in of more than 100 new army recruits in Berlin, saying that the July 20 anniversar­y had become "part of the DNA of the Bundeswehr," the modern successor to Germany's

armed forces.

At the event, Kramp-Karrenbaue­r emphasized that antisemiti­sm had no place in the Bundeswehr and invited Josef Schuster, president of the Central Jewish Council in Germany, to address the recruits.

Her remarks come at a time when the Bundeswehr has tried to crack down on far-right extremism in its own ranks, and also appointed its first ever rabbi as chaplain since the war.

Reclaiming the term 'resistance'

Germany's Labor Minister Hubertus Heil spoke at an event in Berlin, along with the mayor of Berlin Michael Müller and other political figures. Heil was critical of the recent comparison­s that many in the anti-covid lockdown movement have made to the Nazi resistance.

"The abuse of the resistance has long been part of the tasteless and ahistorica­l narrative of a certain political milieu in Germany," Heil said.

Many in the anti-lockdown and anti-vaccine movement have likened themselves to Nazi resistance fighters, in their defiance of the German government's COVID-19 restrictio­ns, some going as far as wearing yellow stars like those the Nazis forced Jewish people to wear.

Heil said that it was the height of disrespect to "politicall­y appropriat­e the resistance fighter Sophie Scholl and at the same time march together with notorious neo-Nazis," in reference to reports that neo-Nazis have also taken part in anti-lockdown demonstrat­ions.

Looking back at Stauffenbe­rg's legacy, Berlin Mayor Müller said that although the uprising had failed, the event had tremendous moral weight and for Germany it was "an important step on the road back to freedom and self-respect."

 ??  ?? German Labor Minister Hubertus Heil speaks at a memorial to the anti-Hitler resistance
German Labor Minister Hubertus Heil speaks at a memorial to the anti-Hitler resistance

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