Bangkok Post

‘FAKE NEWS’ IS NOT NEW: THE NAZIS USED IT TOO, SAYS HOLOCAUST EXHIBIT

- SAMANTHA KOESTER

“Fake news” is not new: an exhibit in Brussels calls on visitors to see a parallel in Nazi Germany.

The exhibit in the halls of European Parliament focuses on how the Nazi party used propaganda and the media to help Adolf Hitler win power in Germany.

Curator Steven Luckert, who brought the exhibit to the European Union capital from the Holocaust Memorial Museum Washington DC, said the tactics mirror those used by populist parties today to appeal to voters.

The exhibit — the “US State of Deception: The Power of Nazi Propaganda” — was inspired by months of debate on how, and how much, fake news may have influenced the 2016 US presidenti­al campaign and the election of President Donald Trump.

Luckert hopes it will help counter the rise of racism and anti-Semitism in Europe. “There are some frightenin­g aspects of contempora­ry culture and society that we’re seeing with the growth of the far-right movement in places,” he said.

Through photograph­s, old newspapers, slogans and other materials disseminat­ed by the Nazi party, the exhibition tries to shed light on how it sold itself — increasing its power in the German parliament from 6.5% to 33.3% over eight years.

It shows how the party’s marketing campaigns targeted women, farmers, and other more vulnerable classes of society. Even Hitler’s use of body language helped to form public opinion.

Luckert said the Nazi’s success came in part from people’s desire for conformity, which encouraged them to act differentl­y in a group, for example, by supporting something they might not otherwise.

“Propaganda works not just to change your opinion, but to change how you behave,” he said.

The exhibit is at the European Parliament until May 13.

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