Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Danger in denigrating Nazi strip show

Critics of the Nazi strip show at Canberra’s National Multicultural Fringe Festival are not only being a little precious and, dare I say it, provincial in their outrage, they are advocating a dangerous path for the future.

It would seem from their comments that any entertainment with a Nazi theme must be anti-Semitic and therefore condemned. They appear to want Hitler and his cohorts to be buried in history, never mentioned except perhaps in bland documentaries and the occasional academic paper.

But to turn our backs on the era would be the height of folly. Young people by and large are not particularly interested in documentaries or history books, but they do attend events such as the Fringe Festival and for some on that night it may well have been the first time they ever had to think about Nazism and Hitler.

Far better that it should be a strip show that clearly lampoons the fuehrer than at a street corner listening to the rantings of some potential demagogue. As World War II and its origins fade from living memory, there is a dangerous vacuum being created that is already being filled by Holocaust deniers and those who would seek to twist the Nazi philosophy for their own purposes.

I know an American diplomat, who some years ago was packing up her Washington flat in preparation for an overseas posting and had secured help from the daughter of a friend, a bright girl on holiday from her university.

As she was helping she noticed some books on the Holocaust on the diplomat’s shelves. “Why do you have that rubbish – it never happened you know,” she said.   

I have no wish to comment on the good taste or otherwise of the skit – except to say that tastes change and there are television shows now where the language would have burned the ears off a viewer in the 1970s – but what the audience apparently saw was a girl dressed up as a silly little man with a moustache who stripped down to her undies. Hardly promotional material for a Fourth Reich.

There is one acid test for whether this performance in any way promotes Nazism: What would have happened to the organisers if they had put it on in Hamburg in 1938?

I don’t think they would have been awarded the Iron Cross.

 

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