Three museums were attacked in Berlin after rumors of human sacrifice



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The attacks on the Pergamon Museum, the Neues Museum and the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin have damaged a large number of objects since they were doused with a sticky oily liquid. According to the Berlin police, stone sculptures from Egypt, an Egyptian sarcophagus and some paintings from the 19th century are among the damaged objects.

The police still don’t know who or who was behind the attacks that occurred on October 3 but that “for strategic reasons” have been kept secret until now.

One of Germany’s most famous conspiracy theorists, Attila Hildman, and a well-known advocate for vegans, has singled out the Pergamon Museum as a center of devil worship. According to Hildman, there is the “throne of Satan” and he has described the museum as the center of a worldwide conspiracy by a group of “crown criminals.”

Hildman, who spreads rumors and false information about the coronavirus to his more than 100,000 followers, has written, among other things, that human victims and child abuse are carried out in the Pergamon Museum.

If the attacks had someone The connection to these statements is something that the police are investigating. So far, a review of surveillance cameras in museums has yielded no clues, write several German newspapers.

Christina Haak.

Christina Haak.

Photo: Stefanie Loos / AFP

According to Christina Haak, Deputy Director General of Museums, 63 objects have been attacked and have received various types of damage.

Christina Haak also said at a press conference on Wednesday that the object could be largely restored to its original condition. All three museums are located on Berlin’s Museum Island, an island in the River Spree, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

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