I own a long dagger/short sword. The hilt is in the design of the German eagle with its wings spread out as the hand guard and in the middle of the hand guard is a swastika. The scabbard is also adorned with swastikas on the top, mid section, and bottom.

I don’t want to own this piece as I don’t want to be seen as a Nazi sympathizer or anything of the sort, but I don’t want to sell it to someone who actually is a Nazi sympathizer or something like that.

What do I do with it besides trash it? I don’t want to trash it because it’s decent quality. It’s not historic in any way (which disturbs me to think about) but it’s well made.

What can I do with it?

*The item in question is not historical

  • @some_guy
    link
    87 months ago

    Donate it to a museum with a sterling reputation or destroy it. Sounds like there’s no value to a museum, so that leaves one option. Take it to someone who can melt it down in front of you to make sure it’s not sold on a black market.

    • HonkyTonkWoman
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      fedilink
      37 months ago

      My mom & her brothers were arguing over family silverware. The older of my two uncles just took the silverware case & disappeared with it.

      That year for Christmas, every immediate family received a custom made ring made from the melted silverware.

      They’re not anything valuable. They look handmade & some of the pieces were outright ugly, but it worked.

      We all still have that silverware & it means a lot to all of us.

      To OP, completely understand you might not want jewelry made from a nazi knife, but maybe there’s an option to do something worthwhile while that melted metal, rather than just scrapping it?

      If nothing else, you could encase a copy of mein kampf in the metal & have a fancy ass doorstop you can kick around.

      “Is that a brick of silver holding your door open?”

      “Nope. It’s a deactivated copy of that hitler book.”