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Beorn
08-10-2009, 01:01 PM
Germany's Central Council of Jews has taken the unprecedented step of backing a proposal to republish Adolf Hitler's infamous autobiographical manifesto Mein Kampf, which has been strictly outlawed in the country since the end of the Second World War.

Although many German Jews still oppose reissuing Hitler's anti-Semitic work, Stephan Kramer, the general secretary of the country's leading Jewish organisation, supports a new scholarly edition of the work designed to inform future generations of the evils of Nazism.
"It makes sense and is important to publish an edition of Mein Kampf with an academic commentary," Mr Kramer said. "A historically critical edition needs to be prepared today to prevent neo-Nazis profiting from it."

However the southern state of Bavaria, which holds the rights to the book, remains strongly opposed to the idea. "We won't lift the ban as it may play straight into the hands of the far right," said a spokesman for the Bavarian government. "Prohibition is highly regarded by Jewish groups and we mean to keep it that way," he said.
Several German academics, including the historian Jürgen Faulenbach, also oppose republishing the work and insist that it does little to throw light on the Nazi era. "The book does not provide any important answers to questions about how the Nazi regime was possible," he said. "It only contains the polarising views of the author. To lift a 60 year old ban on Mein Kampf would be problematic."

Hitler wrote Mein Kampf, which means "My Struggle", in 1924 while serving a four-year term in a Bavarian prison. The book contains the Nazi leader's well-known views on racial purity, and demonstrates his hatred of communism and the Jews. It also hints at his long term plans for the Holocaust.
During the Third Reich, the book became a household item, although few Germans managed to get through all of its turgid prose. The book was outlawed in 1945 and although it has been republished abroad several times, Bavaria has insisted that the ban be upheld in Germany ever since.

However, Bavaria's rights over the book are due to expire in 2015 and the courts have yet to determine whether German laws banning the distribution of Nazi propaganda will continue to prevent the book from ever appearing in the country.
In an attempt to forestall any new legal ban on the book after 2015, Munich's Institute for Contemporary History applied this week for permission to reprint the work after that date. It aims to produce an edition containing scholarly footnotes challenging most of Hitler's assertions. "A scientific edition would help to dispel the peculiar myths surrounding this book," said Horst Möller, the institute's director.

The idea has also received firm backing from the British historian and acclaimed Hitler biographer Sir Ian Kershaw. "A grown up democracy like Germany does not need to fear that Hitler's damaging treatise would somehow constitute a threat to society," he said in an interview with Germany's Stern magazine. He pointed out that the internet meant that attempts to ban Mein Kampf were a waste of time.
The internet is also one of the reasons for the new stance taken by Germany's Central Council of Jews: "It is all the more important that young people should see the critical version when they click on to Mein Kampf on the web," Mr Kramer said.


Source (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/german-jews-want-mein-kampf-reprinted-1769960.html)

Vulpix
08-10-2009, 01:15 PM
http://blogs.sltrib.com/movies/uploaded_images/BL0516-Censorship-774141.jpg

Loki
08-10-2009, 01:23 PM
Yes, good for the principle of free speech. It remains an incredibly boring book to read though -- I've tried a few times.

Skandi
08-10-2009, 02:32 PM
I have managed the first half, and most of the second, but it is so badly written that it is a real struggle :( At least my edition does not have patronising footnotes about how awful his ideas were. It does have a few footnotes, filling in historical details that a non Austrian/German is unlikely to know.

Beorn
08-10-2009, 02:36 PM
Glad I wasn't the only one then. I got it from my local library when I was 13 for a history project; read the first few pages and got extremely bored of it all and returned to my Lone Wolf series I expect.

I'd lobby just for the book to remain out of circulation. Spare the poor children the horror of having to actually read it.

Atlas
08-10-2009, 03:17 PM
I agree with the above sentiment. Very badly written. Uninteresting on top of that. I gave up after a few pages.

Vulpix
08-10-2009, 03:27 PM
Well the crux of the matter really isn't its literary merits, but censorship.

anonymaus
08-10-2009, 04:06 PM
I'm pleasantly surprised by this. Things didn't go quite the same when prominent members of The Tribe held sway (http://www.fpp.co.uk/Hitler/MeinKampf/Canada_ban.html) here.

Cato
08-10-2009, 07:29 PM
I've read it.. twice. It was interesting in a very few areas but really rambling and self-absorbed throughout. Still, it's an important piece of literature.

Karaten
08-10-2009, 07:45 PM
Well, I've read the first few chapters of a translation, it's not too bad, I find it interesting, but I'm a nerd and I find things like that intriguing.


"It makes sense and is important to publish an edition of Mein Kampf with an academic commentary,"

"Academic commentary", in other words, calculated bias.

Zardoz
08-10-2009, 07:51 PM
Apparently, the Muslims just love Mein Kampf! As this article (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1388161/Mein-Kampf-for-sale-in-Arabic.html) in the Telegraph points out, you can buy the Arabic version of Hitler's book in London.

I don't like fascists, whether they're Nazis or Muslims. Sales of Mein Kampf are booming in the Muslim world because the book appeals to the Muslim "victim" mythology. Hitler would be proud of his Muslim followers! Heil Hitler and death to democracy, inshallah!

Quote from article:
"In the preface, Luis al-Haj, the translator, states: 'National Socialism did not die with the death of its herald. Rather, its seeds multiplied under each star.'"

Cato
08-10-2009, 08:03 PM
It's a historical and political statement by a disturbed individual. It shouldn't be edited or commented upon except in a supplementary volume.

Baron Samedi
08-10-2009, 09:15 PM
Yes, good for the principle of free speech. It remains an incredibly boring book to read though -- I've tried a few times.

Seconded. I often wonder if that's the real reason why the dude offed himself.

Karaten
08-10-2009, 09:41 PM
Well, it's a good read if you're interested in observing a historical event from a view different than the one usually portrayed.

Hitler's writings are really some of the few I would accept to not be perverted with pro-Ally propaganda, not to say his writings are not biased to the other end, however, that just adds to the intrigue to me, to see how utterly different the same thing can appear simply by the way it is explained and what information is left out or even which words are used.

Cato
08-10-2009, 11:43 PM
I own many un-PC books like The Satanic Bible, Might is Right, Reflections on the Evils of Christianity, Jesus Never Existed, Mein Kampf, The Jews and Their Lies and even some neo-nutzi literature. There's nothing harmful with owning a book with a message of controversy and there's nothing wrong with agreeing with some or all of what said book(s) put forth. Yes, an utterly heretical opinion in the PC world, but it's true. Books appeal to a wide audience and, while I agree with some of Hitler's points in his otherwise longwinded book, I don't agree with how he went about restoring the honor of Germany. He had some salient points on racial issues, but wiping the "muds" out really isn't an option (and never was one to begin with). Frankly, he blew it, and the nutzi cultists who worship Hitler can't get it into their heads that the guy was a total failure. If the Jews want to reprint his book, let them.