Forged Hitler diaries to become accessible to public
GERMANY: Thirty years after publishing what it believed were Hitler’s
diaries, a German news magazine said Tuesday it would hand over what it
still owns of the forgeries to the country’s state archive, making them
accessible to the public.
Stern magazine unveiled on April 25, 1983 excerpts from more than 60
notebooks purportedly written by the Nazi leader in a supposed world
exclusive, but a few days later the diaries were found to be forgeries.
“The forged diaries are a part of the history of Stern. We don’t want
to get rid of them but deal with them appropriately and, above all,
objectively,” Stern chief editor Dominik Wichmann said in a written
statement.
It was the federal archive in Koblenz in western Germany as well as
federal criminal police who had detected the forgery three decades ago,
according to Stern.
The incident became one of the biggest German post-war media
scandals.
Stern reporter Gerd Heidemann presented 62 notebooks supposedly
written by Hitler between 1932 and 1945, for which the magazine had paid
9.3 million deutschmarks (around 4.7 million euros today or $6 million).
But they turned out to have been the work of forger Konrad Kujau, and
he and Heidemann were prosecuted and sentenced to around four years in
prison each for the fraud.
“We’re rendering all the diaries that are still in the safekeeping of
the publishing company,” Stern spokeswoman Franziska Kipper told AFP.
AFP
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