Monday, October 30, 2017

German Train Name

From the BBC:
"Row over German high-speed train called Anne Frank"

The German rail operator Deutsche Bahn (DB) has defended its decision to name a high-speed train after the world-famous Holocaust victim Anne Frank.  Anne Frank's name is among those of 25 famous Germans chosen by a jury after a public consultation. A German conservative MP, Iris Eberl, tweeted that it was a "tasteless" choice, as Anne Frank and other Jews had been sent by train to their deaths. But DB spokesperson Antje Neubauer said the girl was a symbol of tolerance. Anne Frank also represented "peaceful co-existence of different cultures, which is more important than ever in times such as this", she said.  The Diary of Anne Frank is a global bestseller, describing the Jewish girl's life in hiding with her family in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam in World War Two. The Frank family were deported to Auschwitz death camp in 1944, and Anne died later in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at the age of 15.  DB is state-owned and the successor of the Deutsche Reichsbahn, which deported millions of Jews and other victims of the Nazis.  Julian Reichelt, a journalist at the popular German daily Bild, tweeted: "Now DB is naming trains after victims of deportation by train, starting with Anne Frank."  The names will adorn a new generation of DB's ICE high-speed trains, set to go into service in the next two years.  Jury member Prof Gisela Mettele said there was "impressive diversity" in the many famous names suggested by the public. The ones selected, she said, "have one thing in common: they were curious about the world".  The 25 include some wartime dissidents who died resisting the Nazis: Hans and Sophie Scholl and the theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer. There are also former German chancellors Konrad Adenauer, Ludwig Erhard and Willy Brandt, as well as philosophers Hannah Arendt and Karl Marx.  ICE trains will also be named after novelist Thomas Mann, music maestro Ludwig van Beethoven and actress and singer Marlene Dietrich.


^ I think the fact that it is Germany doing this makes it very tasteless. If any other country (like her adopted Holland) wanted to name a train after Anne Frank or any Holocaust victim then it would be an honor, but not for Germany doing it. It may be over 70 years since the war and the Holocaust ended and while Germany has done a lot to overcome the horrors they committed back then there are still just some things that shouldn't be done and naming a German train after a Holocaust victim is one of those. ^

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-41803131

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