A board game based on Adolf Hitler's reign during World War II stocked on major Australian retailer shelves has left children of Holocaust survivors shaken.
The sight of the game, 'Secret Hitler', being sold in several major games retailers, has led to about 10 complaints to the Anti-Defamation Commission, a Jewish organisation combating anti-Semitism, in the past week.
A daughter of a Holocaust survivor shook when she saw the game in a toy store in Bright."I started shaking, I literally saw the Holocaust flash in front of me. I felt as if there were Nazis about to storm into the store. I could barely look at the shopkeeper," she wrote in her complaint.
A Jewish group has condemned retail stores for stocking the Secret Hitler board game. Source: Supplied
"I felt anti-Semitism alive. I couldn't wait to get out of there."
"I was absolutely horrified to see the atrocities of Hitler and his regime played out in a game," Simone said in a statement on Friday.The product states it is a social deduction game for up to 10 people to find and stop the "Secret Hitler" among the two teams of liberals and fascists.
In the game, Fascists and Liberals compete to either elect Hitler - or keep him from gaining power. Source: Supplied
Set during the short-lived German Weimar Republic in the 1930s, teams compete by voting on legislative proposals, with a team of closet fascists working to elect Hitler while the team of liberals seek to keep democracy alive.
But ADC chairman Dvir Abramovich told AAP the game had unsettled Jewish people.
"Everyone is revolted and disgusted that a board game bearing that name and revolving around Hitler, whose many victims live in Melbourne and in other cities, is being sold in stores here," Dr Abramovich said."Anyone who suffered under Hitler, or lost families at the hands of the Nazis, would not find this playful and amusing."
Adolf Hitler, as Fuhrer Of Germany , ordered the deaths of at least six million Jews, gypsies, Eastern Europeans, homosexuals and political rivals. Source: AAP
The ADC has called for retailers to pull the product from their shelves immediately.The game, created by the same group behind the popular Cards Against Humanity, has been available in Australia since 2017 and is also sold in the US and Canada.
Set during the Weimar Republic, two teams of five to 10 people compete by voting on legislative proposals. Source: Supplied
Game creators, Goat, Wolf and Cabbage acknowledges the board game is controversial.
Readers are urged to contact US President Donald Trump to complain, according to the company's Q and A section.Secret Hitler recently released a Trump administration booster pack, replacing Hitler with the US president.
Game creators have since released a Trump-era version. Source: Supplied
- with AAP