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Germans reject constant Nazi links
BERLIN, Germany -- Germans are tired of being confronted with the Nazi past, with many feeling neither guilty nor responsible for the Holocaust, according to a poll. With Germany worried about rising neo-Nazism, Sunday's survey in Der Spiegel magazine is a sign that the nation is less and less ready to be a prisoner of its past. The magazine's poll of 1,000 people revealed that Germans are tired of being judged in relation to the Holocaust, though it also revealed ambiguities. Asked whether one should "not always poke around in old wounds" of the Nazi era, 61 percent agreed. And 45 percent flatly said they were tired of hearing about the terror of the Third Reich. While 68 percent said Germans could use a little more national pride, 85 percent agreed that discussions about the Third Reich remain necessary to learn from the past. Yet the poll also found wide support for German compensation payments to Nazi-era slave laborers and said 80 percent believe that only a small minority of Germans are anti-Semitic. But about half of Germans, or 53 percent, refuse to agree that there is "no excuse" for the Holocaust, saying instead that Germans should be forgiven for crimes committed by their forebears under Adolf Hitler, the magazine said. Giving credence to concern by educators and politicians, the poll also found 57 percent believe that young Germans learn too little about the Nazi era in school. A full 46 percent said Nazism had not only bad but good sides, and 28 percent said Hitler would have been a great statesman had he not instigated World War II and the Holocaust. For more than 50 years, German politicians and media have upheld the Nazis' crimes as an inescapable point of reference for the nation -- most recently last week when Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder inaugurated his massive new office building in Berlin. Schroeder, who dislikes its grandiose proportions himself, portrayed it as a triumph of democratic Germany over the ghost of Nazism because Hitler wanted to build a huge dome at the site as part of his never-realised capital, Germania. RELATED STORIES:
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