'Tasteless'

Auschwitz museum slams ice cream stand

"The trailer, however, stands outside the boundary of the protection zone of the memorial designated by law, so unfortunately we have no influence over it."

The ice cream stand outside Auschwitz. Photo: Dagmar Kopijasz
The ice cream stand outside Auschwitz. Photo: Dagmar Kopijasz

Commemoration professionals in Poland have criticised the opening of an ice cream stand just outside the museum on the grounds of the Auschwitz-Birkenau former death camp.

The stand – its walls emblazoned with a drawing of an ice cream cone and a pink-coloured logo reading “icelove” as well as the words “waffles” and “ice creams” – opened this month about 200 metres away from – and in plain view of – the red-brick Auschwitz II Historical Gate, also known in Poland as the “Death Gate”, with its double train tracks and overhead watch post.

An official said that the stand had been erected without a permit and would be moved.

A spokesperson for the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum called the opening “an example not only of aesthetic tastelessness but also of disrespect for a nearby special historical site”, in an email to The Times of Israel.

“The trailer, however, stands outside the boundary of the protection zone of the memorial designated by law, so unfortunately we have no influence over it. We trust that the relevant authorities will solve this embarrassing problem,” the spokesperson added.

Dagmar Kopijasz of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial Site Foundation, a foundation that commemorates World War II and Holocaust-related sites that are near the Auschwitz museum but are outside the museum’s territory or jurisdiction, told the Gazeta Krakowska newspaper that residents were “upset because it looks awful”.

Paweł Kobielusz, a deputy county director in the city of Oświęcim near the museum, told the paper that the stand was erected without a permit and that officials had initiated proceedings to have it removed.

In some years, the site attracts more than two million visitors, whom the museum’s bylaws require to be appropriately dressed and respectful of the people who died there.

Still, perceived misconduct around the Auschwitz museum occurs regularly, ranging from visitors striking provocative or sexualised poses for selfies to the installation in 2015 of mist showers for relieving visitors from the summer heat, which some visitors found inappropriate because of the association with gas chambers that the Nazis disguised as showers.

TIMES OF ISRAEL

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