Bangkok Post

Amazon bans, then reinstates, Hitler’s Mein Kampf

- DAVID STREITFELD

Amazon quietly banned Adolf Hitler’s manifesto Mein Kampf late last week, part of its accelerati­ng efforts to remove Nazi and other hatefilled material from its bookstore, before quickly reversing itself.

The retailer, which controls the majority of the book market in the United States, is caught between two demands that cannot be reconciled. Amazon is under pressure to keep hate literature off its vast platform at a moment when extremist impulses seem on the rise. But the company does not want to be seen as the arbiter of what people are allowed to read, which is traditiona­lly the hallmark of repressive regimes.

Bookseller­s that sell on Amazon say the retailer has no coherent philosophy about what it decides to prohibit, and seems largely guided by public complaints. Over the last 18 months, it has dropped books by Nazis, the Nation of Islam and American neo-Nazis David Duke and George Lincoln Rockwell. But it has also allowed many equally offensive books to continue to be sold.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n said in a statement on Tuesday that the platform provides “customers with access to a variety of viewpoints” and noted “all retailers make decisions about what selection they choose to offer”.

Mein Kampf was first issued in Germany in 1925 and is the foundation­al text of Nazism. The Houghton Mifflin edition of Mein Kampf, continuous­ly available in the United States since 1943, was dropped by Amazon on Friday.

“We cannot offer this book for sale,” the retailer told bookseller­s that had been selling the title, according to e-mails reviewed by The New York Times.

After disappeari­ng for a few days, Mein Kampf is once again being sold directly by Amazon. But second-hand copies and those from third-party merchants appear to be still prohibited, a distinctio­n that sellers said made no sense.

But on Amazon’s subsidiary AbeBooks, which operates largely independen­tly, there are hundreds of new and used copies of Mein Kampf available.

“It’s ridiculous how the greatest e-commerce company in the world has such lousy control of their platforms,” said Scott Brown, a California bookseller who sells on Amazon. “They somehow can’t prevent price gouging and they can’t prevent people from selling counterfei­t goods and they can’t manage to — or don’t want to — effectivel­y implement a Nazi ban.”

For years, Amazon took the attitude that it would sell even the most objectiona­ble books. Nazi books garnered a following and accumulate­d good reviews. That led to increased sales and prominence on the platform, which in turn prompted increasing demands from Holocaust memorial associatio­ns and other groups that the books be dropped.

Amazon has also been under pressure for how it depicts Nazis. In February, the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum criticised Hunters, an Amazon series showing a deadly human chess game at a concentrat­ion camp. The memorial said the fictional scene “welcomes future deniers”. The creator of the drama, David Weil, responded that he employed fiction because he did not want to trivialise reality.

Amazon also prohibited last week all editions of The Internatio­nal Jew, the anti-Semitic propaganda published by automaker Henry Ford in the early 1920s, as well as editions of The Protocols Of The Elders Of Zion, the notorious fabricatio­n from the early 20th century describing a plan for Jewish domination.

Karen Pollock of the Holocaust Educationa­l Trust, a group that works with students, schools and communitie­s in Britain, said Amazon should go further. She welcomed the dropping of Mein Kampf but tweeted that “surely @AmazonUK should also remove books by Himmler, Goebbels and Rosenberg too?”.

On an Amazon sellers forum devoted to the topic, quite a few merchants expressed queasiness about the retailer’s latest actions.

“When companies decide what you can and can’t read, the population is in for real trouble,” wrote one.

Another said the wrong books were being dropped.

“What I’d really like to see them ban are the books that are really hurting people, like ‘Stop seeing your doctor and cure your cancer the NATURAL way.’”

Perhaps it was the attention, or perhaps Mein Kampf is something people want to read as they hunker down around the country, but its sales rank on Amazon rose to 3,115 on Tuesday from about 50,000 a few weeks ago.

 ??  ?? A copy of Mein Kampf at The Documentat­ion Center in Nuremberg, Gemany.
A copy of Mein Kampf at The Documentat­ion Center in Nuremberg, Gemany.

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