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Villa of Norway's Nazi leader to open as Holocaust museum

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  • Villa of Norway's Nazi leader to open as Holocaust museum

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    December 27, 2004, Monday
    02:05:07 Central European Time

    Villa of Norway's Nazi leader to open as Holocaust museum

    By Thomas Borchert, dpa

    Oslo

    The former mansion of Norwegian Nazi politician and occupation leader
    Vidkun Quisling is due to be opened as a centre for Holocaust studies
    in January. Following extensive building works, 25 historians and
    other scientists are waiting to move into the huge villa which once
    boasted 3,000 square metres of living space high above the Oslo
    Fjord. The residence, in which Quisling - infamous for his
    deferential collaboration with the Nazis between 1941 and 1945 -
    mocked the lifestyle of his idolized Fuehrer, is scheduled to be
    opened in September 2006 with a permanent exhibition about the
    Holocaust. A series of other genocides will also be featured in the
    exhibition, among them the 1905 killing of the Herero in South West
    Africa, as well as the genocides in Armenia (1915), Cambodia (1975)
    Rwanda (1994), and the Balkans (1995). "I am afraid that we might
    have to include Darfur in Sudan, too," says the centre's director
    Odd-Bjorn Fure. The 62-year old historian from Bergen plans to "bring
    the Holocaust back into the entirety of history" with the exhibition.
    He also refers to the fate of 15 million civilian forced labourers,
    and that of the Sinti and Roma, homosexuals and Jehovah's Witnesses
    under the Nazi regime. Including these groups and other genocides
    into the perspective of the exhibition is morally correct and the
    only way to point out the specific features of the Holocaust,
    according to the historian, whose previous academic postings include
    Zurich and Berlin. Fure's position is supported by Oslo's Jewish
    community, which represents half of the board of the "Centre for the
    Study of the Holocaust and the Position of Minority Belief Groups in
    Norway". In total, 735 Norwegian Jews were killed in the German
    Holocaust, while only 50 survived. It was a former detainee of the
    Sachsenhausen concentration camp, retired General Bjorn Egge, who
    first suggested to turn Quisling's former villa into a centre to
    commemorate the Holocaust. The building, which resembles the massive
    structures of Nazi architecture outside and inside, is beautifully
    located on the Bygdoy Peninsula on the Western side of the Oslo
    Fjord. Other popular tourist destinations on the peninsula are the
    Kon- Tiki Museum of explorer Thor Heyerdahl, the Fram Museum, which
    commemorates the achievements of Polar explorers such as Fridtjof
    Nansen and Roald Amundsen, as well as Viking and maritime museums.
    Neo-Nazis searching for traces of Quisling, however, will not find
    much in the centre, even though the oak-furnished study of the former
    Minister President of Norway's Nazi occupation government has been
    preserved, as well as the so-called jewellery room of Quisling's wife
    Maria. Visitors of the exhibition will only have access to his
    furnished underground bunker which has been preserved the way it was
    at the end of the Nazi regime in Norway, when Quisling was arrested
    at the villa on May 9, 1945. The man, who had formed Norway's fascist
    Nasjonal Samling party in May 1933 and whose name eventually became a
    synonym for traitor, was tried and executed by a firing squad on
    October 24, 1945. Far from allowing history to be taken over by
    sentiment, the new centre's director emphasizes: "Here, we do not
    want to appeal to feelings above all, as is the case at the Holocaust
    Museum in Washington." "We place much greater emphasis on rational
    understanding and the question how similar events can be prevented in
    the future," he adds. dpa tb emc sc
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