Thursday, July 16, 2009

Nazi of the Day

This is breaking news, so I couldn’t wait until it became the next “Nazi of the Week” post. This story is just crying out to be told.

It seems that vicious neo-Nazi sentiments have recently arisen within the vertically-challenged community in Germany. As you can see from the photo below, a virtual Freikorps of fascist gnomes has been recruited to spread the evil ideology of Die Herrenzwerge:
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Nazi gnomes!

Here’s the accompanying story from The National Post:

German Authorities Probe Hitler Gnome Art Piece

BERLIN — German prosecutors said on Thursday they had launched an inquiry into whether a garden gnome with its right arm raised in a Hitler salute in a Nuremberg art gallery is against the law.

“The investigation is ongoing and people are being interviewed,” Wolfgang Traeg, a spokesman for the public prosecutors office in the southern city, told AFP.

Hitler salutes and Nazi symbols have been illegal in Germany since the Second World War, but Mr. Traeg said that investigators may establish that the garden gnome is in fact ridiculing the Third Reich.

“It is also a question of art a bit… and a garden gnome,” Mr. Traeg said. “It will also depend on what the artist and the owners of the gallery have to say for themselves about the whole thing.”

The artist in question is German-born Ottmar Hoerl, who has designed numerous exhibitions and projects in public spaces including the large blue euro sculpture in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt.

“I was a bit surprised that this gnome has produced a reaction like this. Until now everyone has understood it.” Mr. Hoerl told AFP, calling his artwork “an image of the German master race.”

“I view (this investigation) with a certain irony.”

He said he has been making gnomes for the past nine years, and put them on display for the first time in Belgium in 2008 in an exhibition called “Dance With The Devil.” Others have take place in Austria and Aschaffenburg, Germany.

Since 2005 he has been president of the Academy for Fine Arts in Nuremberg.

The Bavarian city has particular resonance when it comes to the Second World War, as it was the scene of huge rallies by Hitler and also where trials of Nazis took place after Germany’s defeat in 1945.


Hat tip: Vlad Tepes.

2 comments:

ɱØяñιηg$ʇðя ©™ said...

Heinrich Gnommler is on the rise again...

Henrik R Clausen said...

I believe these gnomes represent Enemies of the Working Class, and as such deserve the hardest punishment available under Soviet law.