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16.07.2008 - Hitler Card Game Raises Eyebrows in Germany

The game, called Das Fuehrer Quartett , is based on a popular German children's card game called
Quartett , but with a difference.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.prague-hotel-hotels.com

In the traditional game, the cards feature cars or flowers or even beer brands, which players try to collect from their opponents. In this new version, the cards present pictures and information on notorious historical figures such as Joseph Stalin, Danish film Terribly Happy wins Karlovy Vary festival ...
The two-thousand words that started the Prague Spring ...
Germany marks the 60th anniversary of the Berlin airlift ...
Stalin survives village poll ...
Francisco Franco and Adolf Hitler.
 
"We didn't really have a clear political idea in mind with the game," said Volker Oppmann of Onkel & Onkel, the Berlin-based publishing house behind the deck. "But we did want to take away some of the power that these figures still have. When you can laugh at them, you don't fear them as much."
 
Each card features one dictator, the country he ruled, his educational/vocational background and how long he was in power, among other factoids. The cards stick to the historical record and also present information that might be less well known, Oppmann, 33, said.
 
For example, the card featuring Stalin explains that while in school he was repeatedly caught reading material that had been banned. The card on Romania's Nicolae Ceausescu reveals that he had a soft spot for Vlad the Impaler, said to have been the inspiration for Bram Stoker's "Dracula."
 
Lighter touch  
The cards have an ironic tone, and the authors use wordplay in some of the descriptive categories or have a lighter touch when presenting additional information about a figure. For Augusto Pinochet, the card says he destroyed a democratic system with help from the US, but rebuilt another one later, only to be toppled by it. "Somehow stupid," it says.
 
"I think we succeeded in finding the right mix of seriousness and fun," said Oppmann.
 
Bildunterschrift:  
The public appears to appreciate the game's ironic tone; the decks have been selling fast. Of the first print run of 2,000, Oppmann said more than half are sold out and a second printing is planned.
 
But not everyone thinks presenting war criminals as slightly risible figures is a positive thing.
 
Tasteless and inappropriate?  
Berlin Senator Ehrhart Körting, 66, called the deck tasteless. Historian Arnulf Baring said it played down the enormity of the crimes committed.
 
"The further back the Third Reich recedes in history, the more bizarre the way it is dealt with becomes," he told the
Bild newspaper.
 
Oppmann rejects the critique, pointing out that when the card game was released at this year's Leipzig Book Fair, employees from the
Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung , a democratic political education organization, found the cards hilarious and ordered five decks right away.
 
"If these people can laugh at it, I'm not worried," he said.
 
In fact, the goal of
Das Fuehrer Quartett , unlike in traditional
Quartett , is not to gather as many cards and dictators as you can. In this version, the winner is the first person to rid him or herself of all these despots. 


(Deutsche Welle)


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