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Europe
Wiesenthal Center probing GrassÂ’s Nazi past
2006-08-22
BERLIN - The Simon Wiesenthal Center urged Nobel prize winning novelist Guenter Grass on Tuesday to come clean about his time in HitlerÂ’s Waffen-SS by waiving German data protection laws to enable the centre to investigate him.

Grass, one of GermanyÂ’s best-known writers and viewed by many in the country as a moral authority, has for half a century called on Germans to be open about their past. But last week the 78-year-old shocked admirers at home and abroad by disclosing he had volunteered for submarine duty at 15 but was rejected and was later called up to the Waffen-SS towards the end of World War Two.
Do as he says, not as he does ...
“We feel that there’s an incredible lack of clarity. His explanation has produced more ambiguity than clarity,” Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, told Reuters by telephone. ”The time has come to come clean,” he said.

Grass said that he had joined the SS in order to escape from his family and insisted that he never fired a shot. But some critics inside and outside Germany say that this explanation is too meagre and comes too late.

Zuroff, who has been hunting Nazi war criminals for the past quarter century, said the Wiesenthal Center has sent a letter to Grass asking him for details of his duty in the Waffen-SS. Among the questions the Wiesenthal Center has put to Grass are: in which part of the Frundsberg Division did he serve; was it Panzer Regiment 10; was he in the 2nd Panzer Division and did he know some specific members of the SS.

“We have started an investigation,” said Zuroff, though he said that Germany’s strict data protection laws prevented them from getting access to key archives. “We asked him for permission to get access,” he said, adding that only Grass himself could waive the data privacy rules to allow them to probe effectively his Nazi past.
Don't count on it. I think Herr Grass has said as much as he's going to say.
Posted by:Steve White

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