German rappers who used anti-Semitic Auschwitz lyrics won’t face legal action
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German rappers who used anti-Semitic Auschwitz lyrics won’t face legal action

Controversial lyrics used by artists Kollegah and Farid Bang were not grounds for prosecution according to a Dusseldorf prosecutor

Auschwitz's infamous train tracks and death gate
Auschwitz's infamous train tracks and death gate

No legal action will be taken against two German rappers who created an uproar with their anti-Semitic lyrics.

The state prosecutor in the western German city of Dusseldorf announced Saturday that the controversial lyrics in the song “0815” that drew several complaints against hip-hop artists Kollegah and Farid Bang were not grounds for prosecution.

“The comparison of a concentration camp inmate with their own body may be tasteless, but it does not represent denial of the Holocaust,” the prosecutor said in a statement.

He acknowledged that the lyrics were “vulgar,” and “misogynistic,” and said that they are protected by rules regarding artistic freedom, according to the German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

Several complaints had been filed against the artists. Holocaust denial is illegal in Germany.

The artists made a private visit in June to the former Auschwitz Nazi camp in Poland on an invitation from the International Auschwitz Committee.

Kollegah and Farid Bang were the focus of a media firestorm in April after winning the prominent Echo Award in the hip-hop category for an album with lyrics boasting of physiques “more defined that those of Auschwitz inmates” and a call for “another Holocaust; let’s grab the Molotov” cocktails.

Numerous artists returned their awards in disgust, and ultimately the German Music Industry Association announced it was canceling the Echo Awards for good. Association officials said they did not want the award to be associated with anti-Semitism, misogyny, homophobia or the trivialisation of violence.

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