“Learning from our history was the premise for Germany to be respected worldwide,” said German Vice-chancellor Sigmar Gabriel in response to a call to forget the Holocaust.
Germany’s vice-chancellor on Wednesday harshly condemned remarks by a prominent member of the nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, who suggested ending the country’s decades-long tradition of acknowledging and atoning for its Nazi past.
Sigmar Gabriel wrote on Facebook that even though he knows the AfD party thrives on provocation, the comments by Bjoern Hoecke, who leads the party in the eastern state of Thuringia, were “shocking.”
“This is not just some kind of provocation,” Gabriel wrote. “We must never let this kind of demagoguery be undisputed.”
Hoecke had called the Berlin memorial to the millions of Jews killed in the Holocaust a “monument of shame.” He told party supporters in the eastern city of Dresden that no other country would erect such a memorial in its capital and called instead for Germany to take a “positive” attitude toward its history.
He also said Germany needs to perform a “180-degree turn” when it comes to remembering its past.
Nazi Germany was responsible for the murder of more than 6 million Jews and other minorities before and during World War II.
The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe is located in downtown Berlin near the city’s landmark Brandenburg Gate. It’s an uneven field of thousands of concrete slabs, comparable to a gigantic graveyard.
Gabriel said that while Hoecke insinuated that dealing with the country’s Nazi past belittles Germans, he himself believes the opposite to be true.
“Learning from our history was the premise for Germany to be respected worldwide,” said Gabriel.
Gabriel, a Social Democrat, said he entered politics decades ago partly as a protest against his own father’s Nazi convictions.
The head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany also criticized Hoecke’s remarks, calling them “deeply upsetting and totally unacceptable.”
“With these anti-Semitic and inhuman words, the AfD shows its true face,” Josef Schuster said. “I would not have dared to think that 70 years after the Shoah such remarks by a politician in Germany would be possible.”
By: AP