The Asian Age

German theatre probed over free seats for swastika wearers

◗ Theatre- goers in the picturesqu­e city of Constance have been offered free tickets to Friday’s premiere if they wear a swastika, given to them on entry ◗ The premiere of Mein Kampf, ainspired by the book written by Hitler when he was in prison before ta

-

Berlin, April 18: A probe has been launched after a theatre in Germany promised free entry to spectators who wear a swastika to a play named after Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf, prosecutor­s said on Tuesday.

A spokesman from the prosecutor’s office in the southern city of Constance said that it would investigat­e after a number of complaints were made, according to the German news agency DPA. Under German law, publicly displaying the Nazi symbol is illegal.

Theatre- goers in the picturesqu­e lakeside city have been offered free tickets to Friday’s premiere if they wear a swastika, given to them on entry, during the performanc­e.

Those who pay for a ticket will be asked to wear a Star of David “as a sign of solidarity with the victims of National Socialist ( Nazi) barbarism,” the theatre’s operators wrote on their website.

The premiere of Mein Kampf, a reference to the book written by Hitler when he was in prison before taking power, is scheduled to take place on Friday April 20, the anniversar­y of his birth in 1889 in Austria.

The theatre says it aims to show how easily people are corruptibl­e, but the approach has sparked controvers­y.

The German- Israeli Society in the Lake Constance region and the Judeo- Christian Society called for the boycott.

The play by George Tabori, who died in 2007, is a caricature of Hitler’s youth, according to the theatre.

Investigat­ors, however, need to examine the extent to which this can be a freedom of artistic creation.

The controvers­y comes as German authoritie­s are worried about the rise of anti- Semitism, especially in schools.

 ??  ?? Adolf Hitler
Adolf Hitler

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India