Entertainment

Auschwitz museum criticises scene in Hunters TV series

The museum said the facts should be adhered to.
The museum said the facts should be adhered to. The museum said the facts should be adhered to.

The Auschwitz Memorial has objected to a scene in a new TV series that shows a murderous game of human chess being played, insisting that no such thing took place at the camp.

The museum that guards the Auschwitz site, its historic facts and the memory of the victims tweeted about the scene in Amazon’s series Hunters.

It said inventing fake scenes is “dangerous foolishness and caricature”.

Museum spokesman Pawel Sawicki said on Monday that authors and artists have a special obligation to tell the truth about Auschwitz, and that the Hunters authors did not contact the museum for facts.

Hunters is about a post-war hunt in New York for Nazi war criminals. It includes a scene where inmates are figures in a chess game and are killed when they are taken off the chessboard.

“This is false. There was no such thing,” Mr Sawicki said.

“If anyone wants to show human tragedy in Auschwitz, it is enough to reach for the thousands of sources (survivors’ testimonies) that are deeply shocking, but creating fiction that distorts the history of this real place is disrespectful of the people who suffered here,” Mr Sawicki told The Associated Press.

The series’ creator David Weil stressed in a statement it was not a documentary but a narrative with largely fictional characters.

As a grandson of Holocaust survivors, Weil said he was careful not to “misrepresent a real person or borrow from a specific moment in an actual person’s life”.

In his statement, he thanked the Auschwitz Memorial for “keeping the memory of victims and survivors like my grandmother, Sara Weil, alive,” and expressed hope for a further dialogue to that purpose.