- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Instagram Blogger Removes Insulting Post With Rubber Duck at Auschwitz After Drawing Outrage

© East News / Jan GraczynskiAuschwitz concentration camp Museum. 20.01.2015 in Oswiecim, Poland. In the picture: barbed wire fence surrounded the camp
Auschwitz concentration camp Museum. 20.01.2015 in Oswiecim, Poland. In the picture: barbed wire fence surrounded the camp - Sputnik International
Subscribe
A blogger who uses a yellow rubber duck placed in front of famous landmarks as their primary expression of art and character for their Instagram blog has been globally slammed by angry netizens after making a controversial post earlier this week while at the gates of the notorious Nazi death camp of Auschwitz, in Poland.
On Wednesday, the unidentified blogger made a "funny" travel post later condemned by netizens as “disrespectful” and “offensive” - on the railway tracks outside the gates of the largest infamous death camp in Europe where some 1 million people were tortured and slaughtered before it was liberated by the Soviet Army in January 1945.

​The Auschwitz Memorial and Museum immediately tweeted back at the controversial post, sparking discussion among netizens “What if someone who travels with a rubber duck & uses it as an artistic Instagram convention arrives at AuschwitzMuseum [...] Is the rubber duck in front of the Gate of Death disrespectful - even unintentionally? Or is it a side effect of the visual world we should accept/ignore?"

Twitter users were stirred by the insulting since-deleted post by the unidentified duck blogger, who later issued an apology after the Auschwitz Memorial and Museum recounted just a few of the many gruesome atrocities made by Nazis during World War II.

​The true identity of the person behind the Spanish-language Instagram account remains unknown.

Auschwitz-Birkenau was established by the German Nazis in 1940 and remained the largest Nazi concentration and extermination camp until the end of World War II. The site of the camp was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979. It is now a symbol to remind the world of the horrors of genocide and of the Holocaust.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала