←back to thread

152 points doener | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | source
Show context
octaane ◴[] No.44416911[source]
Is anyone surprised by this? Europeans still vividly remember, and are reminded, of the cost of WWII. When the head of a company, no matter how trendy, sieg heils on stage (twice!) and then goes on to publicly appear at far-right german political rallies - europeans take note, and act accordingly.
replies(8): >>44416970 #>>44416972 #>>44417098 #>>44417214 #>>44417240 #>>44417249 #>>44417284 #>>44417289 #
v5v3[dead post] ◴[] No.44416970[source]
[flagged]
princevegeta89 ◴[] No.44417108[source]
I will give you some context here - in my high school (India) we were never taught any of the million horrible things Hitler did to people. We were only taught that Hitler was a very prominent leader and an icon of history that always won wars and held Germany and many other countries in his grip. It was only when I read about him on the internet that I found what kind of an SOB he actually was, many years later.

I was so stoned by all of that and the fact that our education and schooling hid that very fact from all of us. So it is up to us to teach kids when they grow up to allow them to know history as it exactly happened, without painting it, when the time is right.

replies(1): >>44417150 #
willvarfar ◴[] No.44417150[source]
What was the motivation for the curriculum to hide - or even glorify - Nazi Germany? And do those motivations keen the current students similarly uninformed?
replies(5): >>44417234 #>>44417264 #>>44417267 #>>44417291 #>>44418139 #
1. v5v3 ◴[] No.44417234[source]
I imagine most of history in India will focus on Britain being more evil than Germany.

More killed by British in India than Hitler killed. plus all the plundering of resources.

https://m.economictimes.com/news/india/independence-day-165-...