Secret Hitler, a Game That Simulates Fascism’s Rise, Becomes a Hit A new board game got a boost from a sudden surge of interest in fascism after the 2016 election. By JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH
Op-Ed Contributor The Test of Nazism That Trump Failed There are no “two sides.” If the president is not against Hitlerism, he is for it. By TIMOTHY SNYDER
Nonfiction Giving the Lie to the Notion That Warfare Is ‘Unwomanly’ Svetlana Alexievich’s “The Unwomanly Face of War” collects memories of the Russian women who fought against Hitler. By REBECCA REICH
Political Rage Over Statues? Old News in the Old World With its long history and shifting borders, and a bloody century marked by two World Wars, fights over public statues are nothing new in Europe. By RICK LYMAN
Chinese Tourists Arrested Over Nazi Salutes The two tourists were arrested in Berlin after snapping photos of each other doing a Hitler salute outside the Reichstag, the police said. By ALISON SMALE
Contributing Op-Ed Writer What if Hitler Had Invaded Britain? The question of whether the swastika could have flown over the Thames is much more than Hollywood fiction. By TIMOTHY EGAN
Opinion What to Do With the Swastika in the Attic? I knew I had to get rid of the artifact. The process was both harder and more hopeful than I expected. By JESSICA M. GOLDSTEIN
Austria’s Top Court Upholds Seizing of Hitler’s Birthplace Taking control of the building allows the government to prevent it from becoming a site for neo-Nazi activities, the court said. By DAVID SHIMER
Op-Ed Contributor American Fascism, in 1944 and Today My grandfather, a vice president under Franklin Roosevelt, wrote an essay in 1944 that predicted Donald Trump. By HENRY SCOTT WALLACE
Why ‘Sorry’ Is Still the Hardest Word The representatives of United Airlines and the White House both found themselves grappling with the increasingly common ritual: the public apology. By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
Riddle of Why Hitler Didn’t Use Sarin Gas Remains Unsolved Theories abound as to why the deadly nerve agent was not used during World War II, which could have dealt a major blow to the Allies, who didn’t know about the lethal arms. By WILLIAM J. BROAD
Sean Spicer Raises Outcry With Talk of Hitler, Assad and Poison Gas Mr. Spicer, the White House spokesman, apologized after incorrectly stating, in a criticism of the Syrian president, that Hitler had not used chemical weapons.
TimesVideo Spicer: Hitler ‘Didn’t Even Sink to Using Chemical Weapons’ The White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, in discussing President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, caused an immediate uproar on Tuesday after stating that Hitler had not used chemical weapons during World War II. By WHITEHOUSE.GOV
Op-Ed Contributor Why Authoritarians Attack the Arts It’s not about making the world a drab and miserable place. It’s worse. By EVE L. EWING
Candid Hitler Photos Sell for $41,000 to Unidentified Bidder The album was found in 1945 among possessions of the Nazi leader’s companion, Eva Braun, in the bunker where they killed themselves. By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Looking Back 1933 | The President Assumes ‘Dictatorial’ Powers. Quickly. President Trump’s first 10 days in the White House don’t seem as big a whirlwind after reading coverage of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first 10. By DAVID W. DUNLAP
Brunhilde Pomsel, Goebbels’s Secretary and Witness to Nazis’ Fall, Dies at 106 Ms. Pomsel was the private secretary of the propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and was one of Adolf Hitler’s retinue in his final days in a Berlin bunker. By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Op-Ed Columnist The Banal Belligerence of Donald Trump Americans will have to fight for their civilization and the right to ask why. By ROGER COHEN
Germany’s Latest Best Seller? A Critical Version of ‘Mein Kampf’ Historians say their annotated edition of Hitler’s manifesto has provoked a necessary discussion and sold 85,000 copies one year since publication By MELISSA EDDY
What in the World Berlin Attraction Reveals an Uneasy Phenomenon: Hitler Sells A commercial firm has recreated the bunker where Hitler committed suicide in 1945. By ALISON SMALE
Secret Hitler, a Game That Simulates Fascism’s Rise, Becomes a Hit A new board game got a boost from a sudden surge of interest in fascism after the 2016 election. By JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH
Op-Ed Contributor The Test of Nazism That Trump Failed There are no “two sides.” If the president is not against Hitlerism, he is for it. By TIMOTHY SNYDER
Nonfiction Giving the Lie to the Notion That Warfare Is ‘Unwomanly’ Svetlana Alexievich’s “The Unwomanly Face of War” collects memories of the Russian women who fought against Hitler. By REBECCA REICH
Political Rage Over Statues? Old News in the Old World With its long history and shifting borders, and a bloody century marked by two World Wars, fights over public statues are nothing new in Europe. By RICK LYMAN
Chinese Tourists Arrested Over Nazi Salutes The two tourists were arrested in Berlin after snapping photos of each other doing a Hitler salute outside the Reichstag, the police said. By ALISON SMALE
Contributing Op-Ed Writer What if Hitler Had Invaded Britain? The question of whether the swastika could have flown over the Thames is much more than Hollywood fiction. By TIMOTHY EGAN
Opinion What to Do With the Swastika in the Attic? I knew I had to get rid of the artifact. The process was both harder and more hopeful than I expected. By JESSICA M. GOLDSTEIN
Austria’s Top Court Upholds Seizing of Hitler’s Birthplace Taking control of the building allows the government to prevent it from becoming a site for neo-Nazi activities, the court said. By DAVID SHIMER
Op-Ed Contributor American Fascism, in 1944 and Today My grandfather, a vice president under Franklin Roosevelt, wrote an essay in 1944 that predicted Donald Trump. By HENRY SCOTT WALLACE
Why ‘Sorry’ Is Still the Hardest Word The representatives of United Airlines and the White House both found themselves grappling with the increasingly common ritual: the public apology. By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
Riddle of Why Hitler Didn’t Use Sarin Gas Remains Unsolved Theories abound as to why the deadly nerve agent was not used during World War II, which could have dealt a major blow to the Allies, who didn’t know about the lethal arms. By WILLIAM J. BROAD
Sean Spicer Raises Outcry With Talk of Hitler, Assad and Poison Gas Mr. Spicer, the White House spokesman, apologized after incorrectly stating, in a criticism of the Syrian president, that Hitler had not used chemical weapons.
TimesVideo Spicer: Hitler ‘Didn’t Even Sink to Using Chemical Weapons’ The White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, in discussing President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, caused an immediate uproar on Tuesday after stating that Hitler had not used chemical weapons during World War II. By WHITEHOUSE.GOV
Op-Ed Contributor Why Authoritarians Attack the Arts It’s not about making the world a drab and miserable place. It’s worse. By EVE L. EWING
Candid Hitler Photos Sell for $41,000 to Unidentified Bidder The album was found in 1945 among possessions of the Nazi leader’s companion, Eva Braun, in the bunker where they killed themselves. By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Looking Back 1933 | The President Assumes ‘Dictatorial’ Powers. Quickly. President Trump’s first 10 days in the White House don’t seem as big a whirlwind after reading coverage of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first 10. By DAVID W. DUNLAP
Brunhilde Pomsel, Goebbels’s Secretary and Witness to Nazis’ Fall, Dies at 106 Ms. Pomsel was the private secretary of the propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and was one of Adolf Hitler’s retinue in his final days in a Berlin bunker. By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Op-Ed Columnist The Banal Belligerence of Donald Trump Americans will have to fight for their civilization and the right to ask why. By ROGER COHEN
Germany’s Latest Best Seller? A Critical Version of ‘Mein Kampf’ Historians say their annotated edition of Hitler’s manifesto has provoked a necessary discussion and sold 85,000 copies one year since publication By MELISSA EDDY
What in the World Berlin Attraction Reveals an Uneasy Phenomenon: Hitler Sells A commercial firm has recreated the bunker where Hitler committed suicide in 1945. By ALISON SMALE