'Nazi' row over Indian textbooks
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi
Gujarat is led by Chief Minister Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi
Human rights campaigners in India's Gujarat state have condemned school textbooks which they say praise Hitler.
The books are issued by the Hindu nationalist state government. One includes a chapter on the "internal achievements of Nazism".
A Jesuit priest and social activist, Cedric Prakash, says the books contain more than 300 factual errors and make little mention of the holocaust.
The Gujarat government has dismissed the charges as baseless.
A senior official from the state education department told the BBC that anomalies arose when the book was translated from Gujarati into English, and are being quoted out of context.
Troubled state
The books, used to teach students aged 13 to 15, were introduced last year and have been reissued for the current school year.
Father Prakash told AFP news agency: "We first researched the textbooks in 2004 and pointed out some glaringly distorted historical facts to the state education board.
"Despite protests from parents, peace activists and educationists, the updated school books still contain the same objectionable text this academic year."
He said it was time to take the matter to court.
In the chapter entitled "Internal achievements of Nazism," one textbook quoted by AFP states: "Hitler lent dignity and prestige to the German government within a short time, establishing a strong administrative set-up."
Communal feelings run high in Gujarat - once the adopted home of Mahatma Gandhi.
Religious riots in 2002 officially killed more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims. Human rights groups place the figure much higher.
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi
Gujarat is led by Chief Minister Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi
Human rights campaigners in India's Gujarat state have condemned school textbooks which they say praise Hitler.
The books are issued by the Hindu nationalist state government. One includes a chapter on the "internal achievements of Nazism".
A Jesuit priest and social activist, Cedric Prakash, says the books contain more than 300 factual errors and make little mention of the holocaust.
The Gujarat government has dismissed the charges as baseless.
A senior official from the state education department told the BBC that anomalies arose when the book was translated from Gujarati into English, and are being quoted out of context.
Troubled state
The books, used to teach students aged 13 to 15, were introduced last year and have been reissued for the current school year.
Father Prakash told AFP news agency: "We first researched the textbooks in 2004 and pointed out some glaringly distorted historical facts to the state education board.
"Despite protests from parents, peace activists and educationists, the updated school books still contain the same objectionable text this academic year."
He said it was time to take the matter to court.
In the chapter entitled "Internal achievements of Nazism," one textbook quoted by AFP states: "Hitler lent dignity and prestige to the German government within a short time, establishing a strong administrative set-up."
Communal feelings run high in Gujarat - once the adopted home of Mahatma Gandhi.
Religious riots in 2002 officially killed more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims. Human rights groups place the figure much higher.
In the chapter entitled "Internal achievements of Nazism," one textbook quoted by AFP states: "Hitler lent dignity and prestige to the German government within a short time, establishing a strong administrative set-up."
Has it got to the stage where it's impossible to be historically objective about the Nazi regime? Any objective historian will admit the Nazi leadership before 1939 turned Germany into a highly efficient and powerful economy, but it seems we can't mention an objective word about the regime internally without 1000 caveats.
It's a bit hard to see how making "Nazi = bad, no matter what it is" a fact and expecting people to understand "Germany brought Europe to its knees in 2 years".
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