Owner of Nazi cafe in Indonesia defends reopening
A NAZI-themed cafe in Indonesia that closed after sparking international outrage reopened yesterday with its walls still bearing swastikas and a painting of Adolf Hitler.
Henry Mulyana voluntarily shut down his SoldatenKaffee last year after media reports exposed his swastika-clad establishment, prompting death threats and accusation of inciting racial hatred.
Following the closure, his lawyer said Mulyana would reopen his business with a broad World War II theme and said he would remove all swastikas. But at the opening yesterday, three huge iron eagles bearing swastikas were on display, as were WWII propaganda posters bearing the Nazi symbol.
Several young men attended the opening dressed in military outfits, including one bearing a swastika on his arm, and some posed for photos as prisoners of war in a mock interrogation room.
Mulyana has tried to broaden his cafe’s theme by including images of other wartime figures to his collection, including Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin.
“From the beginning I have said that the SoldatenKaffee is not a Nazi cafe. This cafe’s theme is World War II,” Mulyana said at the reopening in the western Java city of Bandung.
“All aspects of the SoldatenKaffee are legal. We have a lot of customers from Europe and they don’t have a problem with the World War II theme, because it is seen here from a historical perspective,” he said.
Ninety percent of Indonesia’s 250 million people identify as Muslim, making the country home to the world’s biggest Islamic population.
The SoldatenKaffee (“The Soldiers’ Cafe”) was named after the popular hangout for soldiers in Germany and occupied Paris during World War II and had operated in Bandung for three years until it was exposed in English-language media.
The reports prompted criticism from abroad, particularly from Jewish groups like the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, which expressed “outrage and disgust,” and called for the cafe’s closure.
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