Berlin, February 14 (RHC)-- The German tennis association has responded with outrage after the United States Tennis Association made the embarrassing error of playing the Nazi-era version of Germany's national anthem during a Federation Cup tie in Hawaii.
The version played included the first stanza, beginning "Deutschland, Deutschland uber alles," which was used as Nazi propaganda. It was dropped after World War Two.
"I thought it was the epitome of ignorance, and I've never felt more disrespected in my whole life, let alone in Fed Cup," Germany's Andrea Petkovic was reported as saying, adding that she considered walking off court before the singles match against Alison Riske.
German team coach Barbara Ritter said the mistake was "an absolute scandal, a disrespectful incident and inexcusable." The USTA tweeted its apologies, saying: "The USTA extends a sincere apology to the German Fed Cup team & fans 4 the outdated National Anthem. This mistake will not occur again." The Deutscher Tennis Bund responded on Twitter: "We hope so."
Germans Outraged as U.S. Plays Nazi-Era Version of Anthem

Related Articles
Commentaries
MAKE A COMMENT
All fields requiredMore Views
- Presidential candidate Luisa González commits to the right to education, health and social justice in Ecuador
- Cuba defends Africa-America shared future at UN Tourism Summit
- U.S. healthcare cuts spark nationwide protests
- Cuban foreign minister arrives in Honduras for CELAC Summit
- Massive anti-Trump protests take to the streets across the United States