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  • Germany struggles with its Nazi past

    Canadian Jewish News, Canada
    June 8 2005

    Germany struggles with its Nazi past


    By SHELDON KIRSHNER

    ixty years after Adolf Hitler blew his brains out in a Berlin bunker
    and Germany surrendered unconditionally to the Allies in World War
    II, Germans are still grappling with the protracted, painful process
    of coming to terms with their past.

    Yet they are doing it better than anyone else. Japan still refuses to
    acknowledge the enormity of the atrocities it committed in China,
    while China tiptoes around the crimes of fanatic Maoists during the
    Cultural Revolution. Italy has not fully faced up to the fascist
    period and France has only begun to look fearlessly at the Vichy era.
    Until quite recently, Romania steadfastly denied Jews had been
    murdered on its soil during the Holocaust and for decades, Austrians
    insisted they were merely victims of Nazism rather than also willing
    collaborators.

    Germany, however, has not flinched from its historical
    responsibilities.

    Successive German chancellors, beginning with the conservative Konrad
    Adenauer and extending to his current social democratic successor
    Gerhard Schroeder, have vowed to keep alive the memory of the Nazi
    genocide.

    More recently, in light of a 1985 landmark speech in which
    then-German president Richard von Weizsacker warned his nation that
    `anyone who closes his eyes to the past is blind to the present,'
    Germany's elite has pledged to incorporate Nazi crimes into its
    national identity.

    On a practical level, Germany has tried to repent by funnelling
    billions of dollars of restitution payments to Holocaust survivors,
    fighting neo-Nazism and seeking a Europe-wide ban on Nazi insignia,
    encouraging the growth of a new Jewish community in Germany, forging
    a strong relationship with Israel, preserving former concentration
    camps such as Dachau and Buchenwald and building an array of sombre
    monuments dedicated to the Jewish victims of National Socialism. The
    Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, which was opened in Berlin
    last month after years of passionate debate regarding its size and
    form, is but the latest concrete expression of remembrance and
    Germany's first national Holocaust monument.

    That there are Germans who complain of Holocaust fatigue, of the kind
    archly described by prominent writer Martin Walser in the late 1990s,
    is beyond doubt. Micha Brumlik, the director of the Fritz Bauer
    Institut in Frankfurt, which studies the impact of the Holocaust on
    German society, said that more 50 per cent or Germans no longer wish
    to be reminded of the 12-year interregnum that tarnished their
    country's honour and integrity.

    This phenomenon goes hand in hand with clever but transparent
    attempts to `relativize' the Holocaust and, by implication, to wipe
    the slate clean. Last year, Martin Hohmann, a parliamentarian from
    the Christian Democratic Union party, claimed there is no essential
    difference between the horrors perpetrated by Jewish communists
    during the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and the horrors carried out by
    the Nazis after 1933. Hohmann's analogy brought to mind the so-called
    `historians' debate,' which roiled Germany in the 1980s. The basic
    but subliminally subversive question it raised was whether the crimes
    of the Nazis were indeed unique and whether they were comparable to
    Stalin's reign of terror or the slaughter of the Armenians.

    Nevertheless, judging by a survey published in a recent edition of
    the newsmagazine Der Spiegel, a plurality of Germans believe that,
    due to Hitler's anti-Semitic policies, they bear a special
    responsibility toward Jews.

    For approximately the first 10 years after the war, western Germany -
    notwithstanding its decision to compensate Jews for their suffering,
    to prosecute some Nazi war criminals and to dabble in de-Nazification
    - did not seriously deal with what was commonly referred to as the
    `unresolved past.' By contrast, the Communist regime in eastern
    Germany, which collapsed with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989,
    exploited the Nazi epoch within the context of Cold War tensions.

    In a new book published by Harvard University Press, Beyond Justice,
    author Rebecca Wittmann, a University of Toronto historian, argues
    that Adenauer's priorities were economic recovery and political
    democratization rather than a judicial confrontation with the Nazi
    legacy.

    Repression gave way to full-throated debate in the late 1950s. German
    students in Karlsruhe, the seat of the Supreme Court, mounted an
    accusative exhibition on the complicit judiciary during Nazi times.
    The Diary of Anne Frank galvanized an angry, questioning generation.
    Public figures ranging from novelist Gunter Grass to student leader
    Joschka Fischer, now Germany's foreign minister, demanded a frank
    accounting.

    According to Wittmann, Germany's first difficult confrontation with
    its past coincided with the 1963 Frankfurt trial of 20 former
    Auschwitz guards. The trial and execution of Nazi functionary Adolf
    Eichmann, plus the Six Day War, were also events of lasting
    importance in consciousness raising.

    In 1968, a university student named Beate Klarsfeld caused a
    sensation by slapping Georg Kiessinger, the German chancellor who had
    been a member of the Nazi party. Two years later, his successor,
    Willy Brandt, raised eyebrows by kneeling at the Warsaw ghetto
    memorial in Warsaw. The 1979 U.S. television miniseries Holocaust
    left a deep impression, as did Steven Spielberg's' 1993 award-winning
    film Schindler's List.

    As a result of these developments, Germany is intensely and
    resolutely conscious of its historical obligations, probably far more
    so than any other country, save for Israel.

    Last month, as I was strolling down Berlin's Unter den Linden on an
    unseasonably cold morning, I caught sight of a blue banner draped on
    a grey building on the campus of Humboldt University. It read: `We
    thank the Allies for liberating us from the Nazi dictatorship.'
    Across the road, at Babel Platz, opposite the faculty of law, there
    was a plaque attesting to Nazi book burning. Nearby, strung on a
    wrought-iron gate, was a sign: `Sixty years since the end of the war.
    What have we learned?'

    While exploring a gentrified corner of eastern Berlin known as the
    Hackische Hoefe, I literally walked on several small commemorative
    brass plates fixed flush with the pavement. The work of Cologne-based
    artist Gunter Demnig, they memorialize German Jews deported and
    murdered by the Nazis. By all accounts, there are 3,000 such
    stolpersteine throughout Germany.

    Although Germany has compensated Jewish property owners for their
    losses, new cases pop up periodically.

    Last year, the descendants of the Wertheim family, which lost its
    department store fortune under Nazi Aryanization laws, won a pivotal
    court battle that sets the stage for further legal wrangling. Four
    months ago, in a parallel case, a judge in Berlin ruled that a Jewish
    woman who had been forced to flee Germany was entitled to be
    compensated for furnishings in a medical clinic expropriated from her
    late parents.

    Similarly, reparation payments are a jolting reminder of former days.

    Last month, after talks with the Conference on Jewish Material Claims
    Against Germany, the German government announced it would compensate
    Jews who had been incarcerated in North African labour camps for at
    least six months. Vichy France, an ally of Germany, established some
    30 camps in Morocco and Algeria in 1941 and 1942. When Germany
    occupied Tunisia in 1942 and 1943, 32 camps were set up.

    In the wake of this announcement, Germany agreed to add an additional
    payment of $11 million (US) to meet the home care needs of survivors
    in 17 countries.

    Most Germans who personally or administratively killed Jews during
    the Holocaust have passed on. But occasionally, newly found
    perpetrators, all in their 80s and 90s, are arrested, thus reminding
    Germans of their ever-present past. Nearly a year ago, an
    unidentified man was taken into custody in Munich, charged with
    having organized a massacre of Czech partisans and civilians. In
    Gottingen, meanwhile, prosecutors opened an investigation against a
    former SS officer, identified only as Hans F., who participated in
    the mass shootings of Jews in Ukraine.

    Since 1945, 100,000 or so German citizens have been investigated for
    participation in war crimes, but only 6,487 have been convicted. Of
    these, 13 were executed, 163 sentenced to life imprisonment, 6,197
    given temporary prison terms and 114 subjected to fines.

    Not surprisingly, the past is also an issue in Germany's foreign
    ministry. In March, after Fischer banned posthumous tributes in the
    ministry's in-house magazine for diplomats who had been Nazi party
    members, he created a commission to study the matter.

    Clearly, the spectre of the Third Reich continues to haunt Germany.
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