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Germany debates Mein Kampf legalisation

July 3, 2014 12:08

By

Toby Axelrod,

Toby Axelrod

1 min read

Almost everywhere in the world, Hitler's Mein Kampf is a dubious bestseller, even 70 years after the end of the war. But in Germany, it is illegal to publish it. That is, until next year.

At the end of 2015, the copyright - owned by the state of Bavaria - runs out and, strictly speaking, this notoriously antisemitic book is fair game for publishers of all kinds. It is something not all Germans are ready for.

But following last week's conference of Germany's justice ministers on the island of Rügen, the legal future of this extremely boring but chilling work seems set.

The upshot is that the ministers will seek to ban the publication in general but that a new law is not necessary to that end. They also said that a scholarly, annotated edition should come out as planned in 2016.