The Armourer

Queensland auction outrage

-

An auction of National Socialist militaria, including items related to concentrat­ion death camps,, at Danielle Elizabeth auction house in Queensland, Australia has stirred up outrage in the Jewish community. The online auction features 166 lots, a number of which have come from the son of a deceased German Waffen-SS officer. The items include 500 photos featuring piles of skulls and a stretcher entering a crematoriu­m, a ‘Jews Unwanted’ building sign from 1938, Star of David armband, as well as the usual flags and daggers featuring the swastika.

The Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales criminalis­ed the public display of Nazi symbols last year and there are concerns that if Queensland joins them the remaining, smaller states will follow suit, leading to a complete Australia-wide ban. The New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies Chief Executive, Darren Bark commented, “This is sickening and beyond the pale. These items belong in a museum as a constant reminding of the pain and suffering innocent people endured at the hands of the Nazis.”

In May 2022 the Queensland Premier, Annastacia Palaszczuk, said she would introduce legislatio­n to make it a crime to display hate symbols such as Nazi swastikas but this has not happened yet. A Queensland government spokesman commented, “As the Premier has previously said, auctions like this are disrespect­ful and outrageous.”

Dustin Sweeny, Managing Director for the auction house pointed out the items were historical artefacts and legal to sell in Queensland. He also contacted Jewish museums in Sidney and Melbourne to notify them of the auction as many items would be of historical interest to them. ■

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom