Monday 14 January 2013

The Ugly German Returns



The Greeks, unhappy at the austerity regime imposed as part of the ongoing euro crisis, accuse the Germans of being Nazis.  Now the Germans are accusing the Germans of being Nazis!  The Germans here are the editors of Der Spiegel, the country’s leading news magazine.  For them the past is not a foreign country; it’s part of a living present.

Last month they published an article by one Dirk Kurbjuweit, lamenting that the ‘ugly German’ has once again reared his head, the ‘ugly German’ being racist, arrogant and in thrall to the nation’s Nazi past (Why Germany Can’t Shed Its Troubling Past, 10 December). 

It was so different a few years ago.  In 2006, when Germany hosted the soccer World Cup, the country was in a party mood.  It was all wonderfully inclusive; everyone was invited to join – “Sixty years after World War II and the Holocaust, the nation of perpetrators seemed to have come out from under its depression, and the world seemed prepared to take these Germans into its heart.”  Alas, no longer; now darker shadows have been cast along the land, at least according to Herr Kurbjuweit. 

This self-flagellation comes not long after the publication of I Sleep in Hitler’s Room: an American Jew Visits Germany by Tuvia Tenenbom, a theatre director in New York.  Actually the German title, Allein unter Deutschen (Alone among Germans), is a lot less controversial.  I’ve not read this but according to another piece in Der Spiegel it’s a “bold, funny and often outrageously absurd travelogue.”  Bold, certainly, in “outing the Germans as anti-Semites”, though the Germans in question seem to be fairly marginal, the sort of cranks and oddballs one might find in some dingy bar in, say, New York.

This makes no difference to the masochists of Der Spiegel.  Whip! Whip!; how awful we are, the magazine laments.  Germans are the gloomy Germans once again, it says, though what exactly has changed in six years I can’t quite pinpoint.  OK, there is the aforementioned crisis with the benighted European single currency but Germany seems to be riding that very well.  There is no parallel here with the Great Inflation of the early 1920s, which gave the Nazis an early boost, and the Great Depression of the 1930s, which brought Hitler to power. 

The simple fact is that Der Spiegel doth protest too much.  It casts its eye over 2012, uncovering “much that hints at the country’s Nazi past.”  If I tell you that one of the ‘hints’ was a lengthy debate whether a Russian opera singer with a swastika tattoo should be allowed to sing at the Bayreuth Festival, the annual Wagner Party Rally, that might just give a hint over how ‘obsessed’ the Germans actually are. 

The truth is simple enough, though far too simple for the editors of Der Spiegel.  There is indeed a neo-Nazi fringe in Germany but that’s exactly what it is – a fringe.  Contrary to what Kurbjuweit alleges, the Germans are particularly anxious to shed their horrific past, too anxious, it might be said, when it leads, as it has in the past, to a collective amnesia. 

Der Spiegel is certainly right in asserting that the Nazi story will be with Germany for a long time to come, but their story is, quite frankly, a lot of sensationalist rubbish.  The scandal, they say, is that young Germans in the twenty-first century “feel the need to be neo-Nazis”, thereby corralling all young Germany in a loutish, skin-head dead end. 

The one thing Der Spiegel has not rid itself of is a tendency to reach for tired old stereotypes, the same tendency clearly being demonstrated by Tuvia Tenenbom, a tendency, one might even say, to demonise people, which was indeed a tragic part of the German past.  It’s clearly been revived as part of a cynical attempt to increase this tiresome magazine’s circulation.  This is not serious journalism.  There may very well be more Nazis in New York than the whole of Germany, something Der Spiegel and Mister Tenenbom might do well to consider.  

13 comments:

  1. Herr Hitler was right about many things, the shame that Germans should feel, is having lost the war.

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    1. I sometimes wonder who really lost that war.

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    2. American president Eisenhower's speech on the rising influence of the "Military Industrial Complex" (Imported Ideology)

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  2. Germany purged itself of National Socialists, but it is still thick with statists of every stripe, from embedded Kremlin moles to Greens. It is the dark side of their desire to conform, and have others conform, too.

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    1. Yes, we of the Fourth Reich, those who are not completely deluded, recognise this sad truth.

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  3. Nazism was alive and well in East Germany until the fall of the Berlin Wall, as it was the only way people could protest against communist oppression. That brings things forward a bit - the wall fell only a generation ago.

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    1. Joe, did it exist before the fall of the Wall? I would have thought that the East German authorities would have come down quite heavily on any expression of far right sympathies.

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  4. 'Herr Hitler was right about many things'

    What are those things he was right about?

    Herr Hitler has done more damage to the European/White race than any PC multicultee statist.

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    1. Damo, Anthony has his own way of looking at these issues. Personally I think Hitler was wrong on just about everything. Claiming to be a champion against communism, he ended by bringing communism eight into the heart of Europe, a consequence of his ill-conceived and disastrously executed invasion of Russia. His offence was compounded by his racist dogmatism.

      A great many people in Stalin's Soviet Union, one of the great slave states of history, initially greeted the Germans as liberators. A great many of them were prepared to fight against their communist oppressors if only they had been allowed, until they discovered that they faced an even greater oppressor. What might very well have been a war against communism then turned into the Great Patriotic War.

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    2. Hey, Hitler was not perfect, just Great.

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    3. So much hinges on a definition of greatness. :-)

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