UK museum accused of ditching war medals for trans tour โ€” RT Entertainment

UK museum accused of ditching war medals for trans tour โ€” RT Entertainment


The British Imperial War Museum has replaced a decade-old military honors gallery with an LGBTQ exhibit

The British Imperial War Museum has turned โ€œwoke,โ€ replacing an exhibition of military medals with an LGBTQ-themed tour, Lord Michael Ashcroft, who owns the historic collection, has said.

Until recently, the London museum had exhibited the โ€˜Extraordinary Heroesโ€™ gallery, which included a collection of Victoria Cross and George Cross medals, the highest British military and civilian honors.

However, earlier this year, the institution announced it would replace the gallery with a tour titled: โ€˜Exploring LGBTQ+ Stories in Times of Conflictโ€™. Around a third of the exhibits are related to transgenderism, according to the Daily Mail.

โ€œThis was part of the reason the Imperial Woke Museum kicked out over 200 Victoria Crosses telling the incredible stories of the bravest of the brave,โ€ Lord Ashcroft said in an X post on Friday. โ€œIt is beyond parody.โ€

According to some critics, the museumโ€™s decision is an attempt at re-framing history towards a more woke narrative.


Top UK womenโ€™s groups ban transgender members

โ€œWith this display, they trivialize true stories of bravery and courage,โ€ Buckingham University Professor Anthony Glees told the Daily Mail earlier this week. What is worse, they โ€œappear to be doing so in order to re-frame the lessons of history to make a woke appeal to young Brits on behalf of a highly controversial special interest group,โ€ he said.

The Imperial War Museum has defended its decision, arguing that Lord Ashcroftโ€™s 15-year loan of his medal collection expired in September, and maintained there was no connection between the lapse and the new LGBTQ tour.


British museum calls for โ€˜decolonizingโ€™ Santa

Another British museum faced accusations of โ€œwokeโ€ activism last week, after news outlets drew attention to a blog post from a leading figure in the Brighton and Hove Museums group, which called for โ€œdecolonizing Father Christmas.โ€ The post argued that a white Santa reinforced colonial assumptions of cultural superiority.

Alka Sehgal Cuthbert, director of UK-based advocacy group Donโ€™t Divide Us, told The Telegraph on Sunday that the people behind such proposals are attempting to rupture Britonsโ€™ โ€œsense of belonging to a common past and culture.โ€

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *