ChatterBank2 mins ago
Rebuilding Hitler's Bunker
26 Answers
A necessary evil to keep his monstrous actions in the conscience of future generations, so a step too far?
I'm presently undecided but think I'm erring on the side of the latter.
http:// www.huf fington post.co .uk/201 5/01/10 /hitler s-bunke r-to-be -recrea ted-as- exhibit -by-ger man-mus eum_n_6 448268. html?ut m_hp_re f=uk
I'm presently undecided but think I'm erring on the side of the latter.
http://
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Nothing wrong with it in the context of an exhibit at a museum.
We can visit Churchill's Bunker at the Imperial War Museum, so why not Hitler's counterpart?
http:// www.iwm .org.uk /visits /church ill-war -rooms
We can visit Churchill's Bunker at the Imperial War Museum, so why not Hitler's counterpart?
http://
I'm worried that it might encourage visitors to sympathise with Hitler.
From the link:
"We want this to be an educational experience so that families or groups of school kids can see how it really was; to experience the tiny rooms and the dampness of the bunker. We want to recreate it to show people," [museum director, Ingo Mersmann said]
From the link:
"We want this to be an educational experience so that families or groups of school kids can see how it really was; to experience the tiny rooms and the dampness of the bunker. We want to recreate it to show people," [museum director, Ingo Mersmann said]
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