Comedy

Grass opts for openness

Yahoo! News is carrying a Reuters story today reporting that Günter Grass is getting a pat on the back from the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem for his decision “to waive restrictions on his Nazi archives so the center could investigate his time in Hitler’s Waffen-SS.”

Apparently, Germany has very strict data protection laws, which would keep the details of Grass’s recently unshadied past on lockdown, but the center’s appeal last week for full access melted Grass’s heart.

According to the story, Efraim Zuroff, head of the Wiesenthal Center, said in a statement, “While access to archives will certainly make a historical investigation easier, documents by themselves will not deliver a clear picture of his war service.”

The center has found that “press reports on his past have been contradictory” and hope the author will speak out to set the record straight once and for all by “giv[ing] details about the unit or units he belonged to and about any operations and his role during this time,” according to Zuroff.

Related links:
Read the full Yahoo! News story here

Have your say:




The latest book pics from Flickr

Courage

Maher Arar - Dark Days

George Murray

Frieda Wishinksky

Shane Peacock

Audio Interview with Les Petriw: What Small Publishers and Authors should look for in a Distribution company

Audio Interview with Tosca Reno and Robert Kennedy: How to write and publish your own Book, successfully.

Justin & Colin

Colin & Justin

M'accuse

David Sedaris in Ottawa

Audio Interview with Author Harlan Coben

Free Books from BookExpo!

Chair Pummel

Throwdown In O-Town

View all photos