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- <text id=90TT1782>
- <title>
- July 09, 1990: Ambivalence Amid Plenty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 09, 1990 Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions
- The Reunification of Germany
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GERMANY, Page 74
- Ambivalence amid Plenty
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The horror of the past is ever present for the minuscule Jewish
- community
- </p>
- <p>By Howard G. Chua-Eoan--Reported by James L. Graff/Berlin and
- Rhea Schoenthal/Frankfurt
- </p>
- <p> "Without Jews, there is no German identity," writes the West
- German historian Michael Wolffsohn, "without the Germans, no
- Jewish one." One of the paradoxical results of the Holocaust
- is that Jews and Germans are forever tied to each other in
- linkages in which guilt, recrimination, memory and
- forgetfulness convulse and contend.
- </p>
- <p> For most of the Jews who survived the concentration camps
- of Europe--as well as for many who lived abroad--the
- solution to trauma was distance from Germany and things German.
- How could they live and work in a country that had sought their
- very destruction? How could they allow themselves and their
- children to be German when that word had become their very
- antithesis?
- </p>
- <p> Yet Jews remain in Germany today. Their number is minuscule,
- their presence barely visible--certainly nothing like the
- vibrant and bustling pre-Hitler communities centered in Berlin,
- Frankfurt and other cities that accounted for nearly 1% of the
- population before 1933. Those who have chosen to live in
- Germany explain their presence in several ways: a continuing
- sense of a shared culture, a mission to prod German conscience
- and memory, and business opportunities.
- </p>
- <p> Most Jews residing in Germany are refugees or emigres from
- Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, who see life in West
- Berlin and the Federal Republic as a vast improvement over
- their previous existence. Many are baffled that anyone should
- think their presence worthy of comment. "Living as a Jew in
- Germany is just like living in America," says Alex Kozulin, 31,
- a Russian-born pianist who came to West Berlin via Israel
- twelve years ago. "I don't feel I have any enemies." Heiner
- Ulmer, 40, the son of Polish concentration-camp survivors who
- settled in Bamberg after the war, is more emphatic. Says the
- high school teacher: "I'm a German. I was born here, I studied
- here, all my friends are German."
- </p>
- <p> Jews who lived in Germany before the war form a minority of
- the 28,000 who make the Federal Republic their home. One of
- them is Alfred Moses, 70, a semi-retired West Berlin watchmaker
- who left Europe for Israel in late 1948 after living through
- the horror of the concentration camps of Theresienstadt,
- Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Finding life in the Middle East
- intolerable, he and his wife Inge returned to Germany in 1954.
- In Berlin the couple's friends are all Christians. Says Inge:
- "We do not go to synagogue, and there are few Jews, if any, in
- our neighborhood." She adds, "We're treated normally, and we can
- live like other people."
- </p>
- <p> Living a pleasant life, however, does not erase ambivalence
- about the past. The Moseses, for example, are concerned that
- Germans gloss over guilt for the Hitler years and the Holocaust
- by focusing on their own suffering during World War II. The
- feeling transcends the generations. Says Ariel Karmeli, 25,
- born in Frankfurt to Jewish parents hailing from Syria and
- Iran: "My culture is German. Frankfurt is my city. Germany is
- my country. But here I must constantly justify myself to
- others. When I get on a bus and see an old man, I ask myself,
- </p>
- <p>would he do now?" Convinced that Jews cannot live normal lives
- in Germany, Karmeli has decided to emigrate to Israel. Says his
- friend Deni Kranz, 25, born in Cologne to Israeli parents:
- "Here you are exotic as a Jew, like the way mangoes are exotic
- to East Germans. I am a mango here."
- </p>
- <p> When the war ended, Ralph Giordano, the son of a Sicilian
- musician and a German-Jewish woman, debated whether he should
- stay in Hamburg. The humiliations suffered during the Hitler
- years were fresh in his mind. He had been dismissed from an
- elite school because of his background; his father had lost his
- job for refusing to divorce his wife. But Giordano decided to
- stay. He loves the language, he says, the culture, the country.
- He wanted to be part of cleansing Germany of residues of
- Nazism. "If I had gone away," he explains, "be it to the
- antipodes, I would still be on earth. And then I would have
- learned about the continued existence of National Socialist
- thinking in this country. It would have been intolerable for
- me not to have at least tried to combat it."
- </p>
- <p> An acclaimed author, Giordano has spent his life waging war
- on what he calls Germany's "second guilt," the subconscious
- denial of responsibility for the Holocaust. Others share that
- mission. Says Kranz: "I have an obligation to discuss the
- Holocaust and the future with Germans, non-Jewish friends and
- the press. I want to go to bed at night with a clear
- conscience."
- </p>
- <p> Werner Bergmann, a researcher at the Center for Research
- into Anti-Semitism, estimates that 5% of Germans are hard-core
- anti-Semites. "Anti-Semitism," he says, "is roughly as
- prevalent in West Germany as it is in other Western European
- countries." Heinz Galinski, the chairman of the Central Council
- of Jews, the umbrella group of all Jewish congregations in West
- Germany, agrees. Says he: "We've always had anti-Semitism here.
- But we cannot say that it has increased in recent months or
- years."
- </p>
- <p> History makes every anti-Semitic incident resound more in
- Germany than perhaps anywhere else. In Frankfurt a year ago,
- the windows of a Jewish school were shattered by a bomb. A girl
- from Frankfurt remembers her father being called a Saujude
- (Jewish pig) at a football match. Jews were appalled at the
- insensitivity of those who wanted to designate Nov. 9 as a
- holiday marking the fall of the Berlin Wall; that date is the
- anniversary of Kristallnacht, the violent outburst in 1938 that
- launched the Nazis' all-out campaign against Jews.
- </p>
- <p> Prejudice may grow with unification because antiforeign
- sentiment has surged visibly in East Germany. During the March
- election campaign in the G.D.R., small groups of ultra-right
- demonstrators sometimes supplemented the cries of "One German
- Fatherland!" with "Germany for the Germans! Out with the
- foreigners!" and "Jude verrecke!"--"Drop dead, Jew!" Says
- Irene Runge, a Jewish professor of cultural anthropology at
- East Berlin's Humboldt University: "Never for a moment do I
- forget that I am in Germany."
- </p>
- <p> Under the cloak of calling itself an antifascist state, East
- Germany would not acknowledge responsibility for the crimes of
- the Hitler period until the Volkskammer did so April 12. The
- years of silence may have stunted public awareness of the issue
- and, coupled with the unpopularity of the ousted Communist
- regime, have led to fears that the old Nazi caricature of
- "Jewish Bolsheviks" may be revived.
- </p>
- <p> East German politicians of Jewish descent have been assailed
- during demonstrations, among them Gregor Gysi, chairman of the
- Party of Democratic Socialism, the successor to the Communist
- Party. GYSI IS NOT A GERMAN! and OUT WITH THE JEW GYSI! read
- some banners at one rally. Earlier this year, vandals defaced
- the grave of the playwright Bertolt Brecht with graffiti that
- read JEWISH PIG and OUT WITH THE JEWS. Brecht was a Marxist,
- though not a Jew. Says Michael Czollek of the Jewish Cultural
- Union in East Berlin: "That attack is evidence of an
- anti-Semitism that considers anything that's seen to be somehow
- un-German to be Jewish."
- </p>
- <p> Until 1933, Jews could be unequivocal about being German.
- Says Michel Friedman, 34, a Frankfurt lawyer: "Jews were so
- convinced that they were part of Germany that they failed to
- see the danger signs." Today they live in a country with two
- geographies--one a visible landscape of prosperity; the other
- a terrain traversed by way of a metaphysical atlas that lies
- embedded in memory. Obstacles protrude, preventing a seamless
- match with the world as others see it. While no one expects the
- terrors of the past to be repeated, the scars are present. Yet
- some see signs of renewal, of a sense of place, of belonging.
- Living in two worlds, they look for reconciliation.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-