The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is facing criticism for selling T-shirts with designs from the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games. These Games were used by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis to spread propaganda. The T-shirts show a male figure with a laurel wreath, Olympic rings, the Brandenburg Gate, and the words "Germany Berlin 1936 Olympic Games." They carry the original poster by Franz Würbel and are part of the IOC's Heritage Collection. Klara Schedlich, a German Green Party sports spokesperson, said to the press, "The 1936 Olympic Games were a central propaganda tool of the Nazi regime." She called the T-shirts "problematic and unsuitable for a T-shirt" without proper context. The IOC responded to the BBC, saying it acknowledges the "historical issues of Nazi propaganda" but highlights that the Berlin Games had "4,483 athletes from 49 countries compete in 149 medal events." It said the Heritage Collection celebrates 130 years of Olympic art and design from all Games editions. The IOC mentioned Jesse Owens, the African-American athlete who won four gold medals in 1936, breaking Nazi racial myths. It also noted the historical context is explained in the Olympic Museum in Lausanne and that only a limited number of these T-shirts were made and sold. The Berlin T-shirts are currently out of stock but the debate on their sale continues in Germany.