The Buchenwald Memorial, built on the grounds of the former Nazi concentration camp has drawn a hard line: visitors wearing a keffiyeh may be turned away. The ruling came Wednesday from the Thuringian Higher Administrative Court after a woman demanded the right to wear the scarf during April’s 80th anniversary ceremony of the camp’s liberation.
The memorial, consecrated in 1993 to honor the 75,000 Jews imprisoned there, 11,800 of whom were murdered, was not about to allow the site to become a stage for political stunts. The visitor admitted she wanted to make “a visible stand against Israeli policies.” The court said plainly that this creates “a threat to the sense of security of many Jews,” and upheld the memorial’s right to refuse her entry.
Judges stressed that freedom of expression does not mean hijacking a sacred site for propaganda. “The memorial’s interest in ensuring its purpose outweighs the applicant’s interest in freedom of expression,” the decision declared. The ruling is final.
The memorial’s rules already make it clear: clothing and conduct must reflect respect for the dead. Entry can be denied to anyone promoting anti democratic or racist agendas. Political banners, unrelated events, or symbols that distort the site’s history are also forbidden.
