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- <text id=91TT1482>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: Germany:Unity's Shadows
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- GERMANY
- Unity's Shadows
- </hdr><body>
- <p>One year after the jolt of economic merger, a somber nation
- realizes that the east will be a burden for a long time to come
- </p>
- <p>By James O. Jackson/Berlin--With reporting by Daniel Benjamin/
- Bonn
- </p>
- <p> Finally it has come together for the Germans. After years
- of waiting and praying, Germany is one nation again, a people
- united. The Berlin Wall, once the ugliest scar on a wounded
- country, has been knocked down, its pieces carted off to a huge
- depot for resale as art or to be crushed for use as roadway
- ballast. The border fences marking the Iron Curtain that for so
- long divided Europe have been dismantled.
- </p>
- <p> All across the country, families have been reunited and
- people have rediscovered homes they thought they would never see
- again. In the former German Democratic Republic, the secret
- police have melted into the night. There are no more prying
- wiretaps. Numbing political regimentation has come to an end.
- Germans, all 80 million of them, are free to read, watch, hear
- and say what they please and travel wherever whim takes them.
- For the first time in more than a half-century, easterners can
- choose--and criticize--their leaders, and make their own
- economic decisions: quit a job, sell a house, start a business,
- buy a car.
- </p>
- <p> Germans are turning their faces to the future, after a
- unification that came sooner and easier than they or anyone else
- could have imagined. Only a year ago, on July 1, 1990, monetary
- union made the Federal Republic and the Democratic Republic a
- single economic zone. Three months later, on Oct. 3--henceforth to be the national day--the raising of the black,
- red and gold flag above the Reichstag in Berlin made Germany a
- single political entity. It should have ushered in a prolonged
- period of rejoicing, a time for rebuilding.
- </p>
- <p> Yet there is little joy in Germany today. The mood is
- subdued, as if, at a time that should be reserved for quiet
- satisfaction, a shadow has fallen on the land. A few years down
- the road it will all work out, Germans assure one another, but
- most are aware that unification has proved--and will continue
- to be--a more difficult task than anyone expected amid last
- year's euphoria. There are times when it seems that Ossis and
- Wessis, as they sometimes contemptuously call each other, are
- growing further apart, not closer together.
- </p>
- <p> There is as much tearing down, of old truths as well as
- old structures, as of building up. The industrial plant of the
- east turned out to be so outmoded and run-down that most of it
- is beyond salvation. The east has awakened from a 40-year
- socialist sleepwalk to the devastating realization that
- countless lives have been wasted on the communists' failed
- experiment. The west achieved its dream of unity and freedom for
- "our brothers and sisters" only to discover that those siblings
- will be an expensive burden for some time. Dependence breeds
- resentment on both sides of a relationship, and that has
- produced ugly stereotypes: Wessis as arrogant, bossy
- moneygrubbers; Ossis as lazy, whining freeloaders.
- </p>
- <p> Such feelings did not exist, or were not visible, before
- unification, when all but the iron-minded leaders in the east
- accepted that the two German states were culturally one nation.
- "For 40 years we did not talk about differences, only about
- similarities," says Volker Ronge, a sociologist at the
- University of Wuppertal. "We were all Germans together, and we
- thought we would be able to understand each other perfectly. But
- now we realize that the influence of Western values here, and
- of Stalinism there, created differences that will last a long
- time."
- </p>
- <p> In the east, Ronge says, competition among ideas and
- movements was suppressed and decisions came down from above. As
- a result, some people there are uneasy now with the
- rough-and-tumble of Western-style political debate, preferring
- consensus or passive acceptance of authority. Wessis are
- exasperated by such attitudes. They remember their own postwar
- economic miracle, which transformed a bombed-out war zone into
- an economic superpower, and wonder why the same isn't happening
- in the east.
- </p>
- <p> Easterners labor under their own set of misconceptions and
- disappointments. They expected substantial help from their rich
- western cousins, and virtually instant elevation to a comparable
- standard of living. They discovered that wealth is not
- synonymous with generosity. Among the first west Germans they
- met were property owners with eviction notices or investors with
- dismissal notices. A western-run agency, the Treuhandanstalt,
- was installed to salvage the state-owned assets of the east; to
- Ossis the Treuhand looks more like an undertaker appointed to
- dispose of the country's paltry remains. By the beginning of
- this year, easterners were pouring into the streets by the
- hundreds of thousands to demonstrate against job losses and
- policies imposed by the government of Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
- </p>
- <p> Most disappointed of all are the former dissidents who led
- the 1989 rebellion against Erich Honecker's regime but who
- found themselves left out of post-unification politics. New
- Forum, the umbrella organization that served as a catalyst of
- protest, failed to transform itself into a political party; many
- of its former leaders now regret that. "It's not so much that
- the west made mistakes or failed to do anything," says Jens
- Reich, 52, a molecular biologist who was one of New Forum's most
- eloquent spokesmen. "We were the ones who did nothing. We failed
- to defend and preserve what we wanted to keep."
- </p>
- <p> One major disappointment is the loss of control over the
- mass media. The entire eastern publishing industry has been
- taken over by such western giants as Burda and the Axel Springer
- group. One result is an outpouring of sensationalist and
- sometimes sleazy newspapers and magazines targeted specifically
- for the east. The western quality press is barely penetrating
- the new market. "They don't have anything to say to us," says
- Marion Fischer, an east Berlin translator.
- </p>
- <p> No wonder that the image of the Wessi is a fat man with
- alligator-hide shoes and a Mercedes-Benz, a Goldgraber, best
- translated as carpetbagger. "They are unbelievably arrogant,"
- says Stephan Engelberger, 24, an east Berlin hairdresser who
- recently opened his own salon. "They have plenty of money, but
- they come over here because everything is cheaper. They behave
- as if everything belongs to them, as if they know it all and we
- are stupid."
- </p>
- <p> The criticism is partly self-fulfilling. "The westerners
- tell us, `You're dumb. You can't do anything right,' " says
- Jorg Richter, a psychologist in east Berlin. "That makes people
- emotionally ill." The sense of psychic distress is so widespread
- that politicians often use the language of clinical psychology
- to discuss Germany's problems. Zukunftsangst is fear of the
- future. Wendekrankheit--turnabout sickness--describes the
- general malaise that has accompanied the sharp dislocations
- associated with unification.
- </p>
- <p> Ossis certainly have good reason for distress. Of an
- eastern work force of 9 million, 840,000 are officially jobless
- and 2 million are being paid to do little or nothing on a
- government-subsidized system of "short-time work." When these
- job-protection agreements end, as many as 4 million easterners
- will lose even short-time work. That level would be catastrophic
- in any society, but is even more so in one with a deeply
- ingrained work ethic.
- </p>
- <p> Hans-Joachim Maaz, in a newly published book titled Der
- Gefuhlsstau (The Emotional Bottleneck), asserts that the chief
- obstacle to normalization of the east is psychological, not
- political or economic. "All of these people were formed by
- repressive relationships almost from the moment they were born,"
- says Maaz, head of the department of psychotherapy at Deaconess
- Hospital in Halle, a dingy industrial city near Leipzig. "The
- authority of the father was replaced by the authority of
- teachers and then by the authority of the state." The result is
- a society of spiraling violence. "The lid is off," says Maaz,
- "so now the repressed violence can escape. It will get worse
- because of new social problems--a crisis of identity, of
- confidence, of authority and of security."
- </p>
- <p> The violence is showing itself most ominously in scattered
- eruptions of neo-Nazism. Swastikas are turning up on the walls
- of Berlin and Cottbus and Leipzig, put there not by elderly
- lost-cause Nazis but by teenagers with crewcuts and black boots.
- The neo-Nazism is mostly an eastern manifestation, but it shows
- up in the west as well. In Bonn, the municipal symbol of a
- reformed and repentant Germany, a sidewalk last month blossomed
- with a childish scrawl: (swastika sign) IST GUT.
- </p>
- <p> Hostility to foreigners is widespread in the east. Gangs
- have chased and beaten Vietnamese who were imported by the
- communist regime as "guest workers" but were the first to be
- fired last year when factories lost subsidies and began cutting
- oversize work forces. Berlin's police chief has warned blacks
- to avoid subways in the eastern part of the city, and foreign
- workers are seeking refuge in asylum camps in the western part
- of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Such rebellions might also be called nascent anarchy.
- Authority in the east, ubiquitous until the revolution, has all
- but disappeared, and what is left is ineffectual. The scofflaw
- is pervasive. Drivers in newly purchased Mercedes and Audis
- routinely ignore speed limits even when overtaking the rare
- police vehicle. One reason for the lack of law enforcement is
- that eastern policemen are unfamiliar with the federal laws now
- in effect. The problem is compounded by a lack of manpower:
- thousands of police quit their jobs before unification or were
- dismissed because of party or Stasi connections.
- </p>
- <p> One benefit of unification that should gladden even the
- gloomiest German heart is the reduction of superpower forces and
- an end to the crises and tensions of cold war. Yet there too
- unexpected problems have arisen. The withdrawal of the Soviet
- Union's 380,000 troops in the east, due to be completed in 1994,
- is turning out to be costly and messy. First there is the more
- than $15 billion that Bonn promised to pay Moscow for
- transportation, new housing and the purchase of vacated bases.
- But it could cost nearly that much again to clean up oil,
- munitions, radioactive wastes, chemicals and other pollutants
- left behind.
- </p>
- <p> Slowly, the east is beginning to look much like the west.
- Colorful storefronts and advertisements have covered some of the
- east's shabbiness. VWs outnumber spluttering Trabants. Blackened
- buildings are disappearing behind scaffolding as workers scrape
- away a half-century of grime. The air is cleaner.
- </p>
- <p> Germans are beginning to show a sense of qualified
- optimism--a certainty that the country will prosper, tempered
- by an equal certainty that there will be difficult years to
- survive before it does. "1990 was a year of good news; 1991 is
- a year of bad news; but 1992 will be a year of good news again,"
- says Gunter Albrecht, chief economist of the German Association
- of Chambers of Commerce and Industry. "In the autumn we will
- see the start of an upturn, and things will improve day by
- day." He cites harbingers of recovery: small businesses in the
- service sector to generate consumption, a rise in construction
- and a growth in banking to finance it.
- </p>
- <p> Politicians are learning, to their dismay, just how much
- time and money will be needed. As little as a year ago, they
- talked of closing the gap between east and west in two or three
- years. By this spring they were saying four or five. Lutz
- Hoffmann, director of the German Institute for Economic Research
- in Berlin, puts the recovery time at a decade: "We calculate
- that about $705 billion of investment will be needed to bring
- the east up to western standards. That cannot possibly be
- accomplished in anything less than 10 years."
- </p>
- <p> But the initiatives are there. Eastern entrepreneurs,
- including former communist managers, are adapting with
- surprising speed and energy to the market system. Detlef
- Naujokat, 49, a former food and beverage manager for an East
- Berlin hotel, has launched a $30 million real estate development
- in the village of Sommerfeld, 19 miles north of Berlin, as full
- of promise--and risks--as any dreamed up in the west. "This
- is the first time in our lives that we have been able to do
- anything like this," he says. "We'll subdivide and install the
- infrastructure first, then sell the plots and help the buyers
- get financing to build houses on them." Naujokat's personal
- commitment to the project is $23,000, representing his life
- savings, and a five-acre plot of Sommerfeld farmland that had
- been part of his wife's inheritance. The rest of the money is
- coming from the Dresdner Bank and a credit line backed by the
- German Unity Fund.
- </p>
- <p> "There's nothing wrong with this country," says Rudolph
- Sommerlatt, 64, who recovered control of his family's
- industrial-insulation business on the day economic union took
- effect. "Just give the middle class a chance. We have a lot to
- make up for after 40 years of socialism when we could not
- function. We don't have anything against good, healthy
- competition. We'll make it."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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