Inside the railcar, besides the paper clips, there are the Schroeders’ book and a suitcase filled with letters of apology to Anne Frank by a class of German schoolchildren.
Apologizing for … being German? That’s really bizarre.
Apologizing for … being German? That’s really bizarre.
Not really. Most cultures go funny in the head around the Holocaust. It is, for some reason, considered imperative that 10th graders in California spend more time being made to feel guilty about the Holocaust than learning about the actual politics of the Weimar Republic.
Cultures can also be very weird about how they treat schoolchildren. The kids weren’t responsible for any part of the Holocaust, and they’re theoretically apologizing to someone who can’t hear it.
I can see some point in all this if you believe that Germans are especially apt to genocide (I have no strong opinion about this) and need to keep being reminded not to do it. Still, if this sort of apology is of any use, I’d take it more seriously if it were done spontaneously by individuals.
From that Wikipedia article:
Apologizing for … being German? That’s really bizarre.
Not really. Most cultures go funny in the head around the Holocaust. It is, for some reason, considered imperative that 10th graders in California spend more time being made to feel guilty about the Holocaust than learning about the actual politics of the Weimar Republic.
Cultures can also be very weird about how they treat schoolchildren. The kids weren’t responsible for any part of the Holocaust, and they’re theoretically apologizing to someone who can’t hear it.
I can see some point in all this if you believe that Germans are especially apt to genocide (I have no strong opinion about this) and need to keep being reminded not to do it. Still, if this sort of apology is of any use, I’d take it more seriously if it were done spontaneously by individuals.