Adolf Hitler's watch has been sold in a controversial sale at the Maryland-based auction house to an anonymous person. Other items included in the sale were a dog collar belonging to Eva Braun’s terrier, Wehrmacht toilet paper, and cutlery and champagne glasses of senior Nazi figures. The auction has sparked intense backlash from Jewish leaders who called this action abhorrent.
The historical artifact, a watch belonging to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler has been sold for $1.1 million at a controversial auction sale in the US.
The watch was sold to an anonymous bidder at the Maryland-based auction house, Alexander Historical Auctions, and bore a swastika, Nazi eagle and the initials AH, Sky News reports.
The watch is said to be a Huber timepiece and was reportedly given as a birthday present to the Nazi leader back in 1933, the same year he became Chancellor of Germany.
Even though the documents supplied by the auction house stated that the auction house cannot provide if the fascist leader wore the watch or not, an appraisal by an independent specialist concluded that the watch 'in all likelihood' belonged to him.
Meanwhile, the sale of this watch has drawn intense criticism and an open letter signed by 34 Jewish leaders described it as 'abhorrent', before it was called upon to be pulled from the auction.
These were along with numerous other controversial Nazi memorabilia items for sale, including a dog collar belonging to Eva Braun’s terrier, Wehrmacht toilet paper, and cutlery and champagne glasses of senior Nazi figures.
Rabbi Menachem Margolin, Chairman of Brussels-based European Jewish Association (EJA), said in the open letter: "This auction, whether unwittingly or not, is doing two things: one, giving succour to those who idealise what the Nazi party stood for.
"Two: Offering buyers the chance to titillate a guest or loved one with an item belonging to a genocidal murderer and his supporters. The sale of these items is an abhorrence. There is little to no intrinsic historical value to the vast bulk of the lots on display.
"Indeed, one can only question the motivation of those buying them. Europe suffered egregiously because of the perverted and murderous ideology of the Nazi party."
He added: "Millions died to preserve the values of freedom that we take for granted today, including almost half a million Americans. Our continent is littered with memorial mass graves and the sites of death camps."
Regardless of the backlash, the auction house told German media that the aim of the sale is to simply preserve history.
"Whether good or bad history, it must be preserved," Senior Vice President Mindy Greenstein told Deutsche Welle, as reported by BBC News. "If you destroy history, there is no proof that it happened".
Adolf Hitler lead Nazi Germany between 1933-1945, orchestrating the systematic murder of approximately 11 million people – 6 million of whom were Jewish.
Hitler killed himself in 1945 at the end of World War II and this soon lead to Germany unconditionally surrendering to the Allied forces, thus ending the Nazi leader's dreams of a '1,000-year' Reich.