Posted on 01/27/2006 9:43:45 AM PST by jalisco555
THE museum set up by the French authorities to commemorate the D-Day landings is struggling under a mountain of debt amid a sharp decline in the number of visitors.
The Memorial Museum in Caen, Normandy, has been accused of mismanagement for turning its back on the Second World War to concentrate on subjects from feminism to Father Christmas. In recent months the museum has focused efforts on transforming itself into a place of reflection on the contemporary world.
Its ridiculous, said Claude Quétel, who was sacked as the museums chief historian last year after protesting that it had fallen victim to political correctness. The vocation of this place was to become the great museum on the Second World War in France. Its drifting away from that idea, and its a dramatic error.
In the grounds, for instance, are gardens created as a homage to the British, Canadian and American soldiers who lost their lives so that freedom could triumph.
But the museums brochure talks in pacifist tones of the need to combat the violence around us . . . Peace begins at home, in the office, with our neighbours.
It is bizarre, said Alain Chesnel, who runs tours of Normandy battlefield sites for American visitors. I dont advise people to go there. They should be retracing a page of our history, not presenting exhibitions that have absolutely nothing to do with it.
Opened by François Mitterrand in 1988, Le Mémorial de Caen was designed to commemorate the Second World War, and notably the Battle of Normandy, in which 53,000 Allied troops lost their lives. The late French President described the museum as an act of vigilance, confidence and hope.
But there was an ambiguity because it was officially called a Museum of Peace and told to look at the whole of the 20th century and not just the war, said M Quétel. Thats where the problem comes from.
In 2002 the museum, which is run by Caen town council, opened a 13.72 million (£9.4 million) extension that includes sections on the principal disorders in the world today and the need for eco-responsibility.
Stéphane Grimaldi, who was appointed director in October, said that it had lost 400,000 when the number of visitors fell to 400,000 from 560,000 in 2004, the 60th anniversary of D-Day.He announced cost-saving measures, including cuts to the guided tours of the D-Day landing beaches. His rescue plan includes exhibitions on Living without Petrol and on Father Christmas.
M Quétel said: I think they are turning their backs on the war and thats a shame.
Well, what's a D-Day museum without Father Christmas, after all?
Allied soldiers storm ashore, holding hands, and singing Kumbaya....
And joining with the Germans to celebrate diversity.
Sounds about like the initial plans for the ground zero memorial.
Reminds me of the Fawlty Towers episode where Basil kept saying, Don't mention the War.
Everything a Liberal touches, he taints.
There is a nice small museum, basically a large garage about 2 miles back from the Omaha beach; very quite, lots of original "stuff"; also visited a friends friend that had barn that housed American officers and German officer prisoners; it was about 5 miles back from the beach, he had a number of original items and some wood carvings on the timber from the soldiers.
And I would guess that "Father Christmas" is headed for the dustbin (too Christian?)
The Frecnh really do suck. ROFLMAO
Really can't say I blame them for downplaying a war that (Vichy)France lost.
Cheese eatin' surrender monkies!
Is there really anything more totally insane than the death wish of political correctness and it's total denial of any reality whatsoever?
It really is a vast left wing conspiracy to destroy Western civilization.
Is this something new? We were there in Feb. 2005 and didn't see any of this stuff. It was a great museum.
Don't know. I just know what the article says.
One more reason to thank God that the "International Freedom Center" will not be constructed at Ground Zero (or anyplace else, it's looking like).
Fire Kofi at the UN and hire him as the museum director. Sounds like a job right up his alley given the museum's present direction.
In WWII the French were morally ruined by their quick collapse and fawning collaboration with Hitler. Had they paid for that collapse and collaberation with a couple of generations of vassalage to the Germans they probably would have learned their lesson and found the moral fiber to stand on their own feet again.
Instead they were rescued by the detested Anglo-Saxon powers. The lesson they learned is that a nation can duck the big issues, can fail to make the hard decisions, and still muddle through in the end. The D-Day museum is a reminder that they muddled through only because someone else faced the big issues, made the hard decisions and saved their sorry butts from their own failure to fight.
Well said.
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