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Quisling's Castle Becomes Center For Holocaust

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  • Quisling's Castle Becomes Center For Holocaust

    QUISLING'S CASTLE BECOMES CENTER FOR HOLOCAUST

    Armenian Genocide to Be Represented There As well

    Azg/arm
    19 Jan 05

    The Deutsche Press Agentur news agency informed from Oslo, Norway,
    that the castle of Vidkun Quisling, former nazi ruler Norway, is
    rebuilt into the Center for Holocaust Studies. The castle is situated
    on the Bigdoy Island, in the west from Oslo. After long-lasting
    construction works, 25 historians and other scientists will move to
    the castle which has an area of 3 thousand square meters. In 1933-45,
    the former minister and the head of the former Norwegian nazi occupant
    government cooperated with Hitler. At present, only the study of
    Quisling and the jewelry parlor of her wife are left untouched in the
    castle and can remind of the former owners and the dwellers of the
    building. 735 Norwegian Jews were killed in the times of Holocaust in
    total and only 50 survived. According to the January 8 issue of The
    Armenian Mirror Spectator, that cites other newspapers, Quisling was
    arrested on May 9, 1945. He established Nacional Samling, Norwegian
    party of Nazi in 1933. His name became the synonym for the term
    "traitor." He was executed on October 24, 1945.

    It is envisaged that a permanent exhibition dedicated to the Holocaust
    will open in the castle in September, 2006. Photos and documents of
    the Herero genocide (South-Western Africa, 1905), the Armenian
    genocide in Turkey (1915), the Cambodian genocide (1975), the genocide
    in Rwanda (1994), the Balkan genocide (1995) will be exhibited at the
    center, as well.

    "Perhaps, we will also include historical documents concerning the
    events in Darfur (Sudan) in the exhibition, too," stated Odd-Bjorn
    Furen, 62-year-old historian, stated. The representatives of the Oslo
    Jewish community make the half of the center's administration.

    The idea of making the castle a center for genocide studies belongs to
    retired general Bjorn Egg, former prisoner of the Sachsenhausen
    concentration camp.

    "We are not going to appeal to the feelings. We will emphasize
    reasonable thinking and serious studies, to avert such tragedies in
    future," the head of the center said.

    By Hakob Tsulikian
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