Germany's Buchenwald Camp raps 'disrespectful' tobogganers

Site complains masses of daytrippers 'disturb the peace of the dead' with winter sports at former Nazi camp; 'Historical sensitivity is fading,' says foundation director

AFP|
The German memorial at former Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald Thursday demanded an end to visitors playing winter sports at the site, after some were even spotted sledding at its mass graves.
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  • Criticizing "disrespectful" behavior, the foundation asked guests to refrain from leisure pastimes at Buchenwald and the former subcamp Mittelbau-Dora in eastern Germany.
    3 View gallery
    The former Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald
    The former Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald
    The former Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald
    (Photo: Bild)
    "Sporting activities are a violation of visitor rules and disturb the peace of the dead," it said in a statement, warning that its security staff would be stepping up patrols and trespassers would be reported to the police.
    The director of the foundation, Jens-Christian Wagner, told news website Der Spiegel that "masses" of daytrippers had gathered at the site over the weekend and most seemed to have come for fun in the snow.
    "Some of the sled tracks ended at the mass graves," he said.
    3 View gallery
    The mass graves at Buchenwald
    The mass graves at Buchenwald
    The mass graves at Buchenwald
    (Photo: Bild)
    Wagner said he could understand that many families with children wanted to spend time outside, particularly during a nationwide lockdown due to the coronavirus, but that the memorial expected appropriate behavior from its visitors.
    "As time passes, historical sensitivity is fading," he said.
    More than 76,000 men, women and children died at Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora during World War II. They were either killed by the Nazis or perished through illness, cold or starvation.
    Thousands of Jews were among the dead, but also Roma, gypsies and political opponents of the Nazis, gays and Soviet prisoners of war.
    3 View gallery
    Local Jews in Thuringia place flowers at the mass graves during Holocaust Remembrance Day
    Local Jews in Thuringia place flowers at the mass graves during Holocaust Remembrance Day
    Local Jews in Thuringia place flowers at the mass graves during Holocaust Remembrance Day
    (Photo: AP)
    Last January the then head of the Buchenwald foundation, Volkhard Knigge, warned that unwanted visits from neo-Nazis were becoming an increasing problem ahead of the 75th anniversary of the camp's liberation.
    "We increasingly find messages in the guest book claiming that Nazism and the concentration camps were sensible and good for the Germans," he told German media.
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