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  • German remembrance provokes the Poles

    German remembrance provokes the Poles

    Irish Times; Aug 12, 2006

    GERMANY: A new exhibition threatens to sour relations between Berlin
    and Warsaw, writes Derek Scally.

    The bronze bell that went on display in Berlin this week last tolled
    aboard the ship Wilhelm Gustloff when it was sunk by Soviet torpedoes
    on the night of January 30th, 1945.

    More than 9,000 people, including thousands of children, died in the
    icy waters of the Baltic Sea that night in history's worst maritime
    disaster.

    Compared to the sinkings of the Titanic and the Lusitania though, that
    of the Wilhelm Gustloff is largely unknown, because it occurred in the
    chaos of wartime and because the victims were German.

    It marked the beginning of a dramatic episode in German history: the
    westward march of 14 million Germans and ethnic Germans expelled from
    their homes in eastern territories handed over in 1945 to the
    countries who suffered the worst horrors of the Nazi regime and had
    lost territory further east.

    Between one and two million Germans died during the march, from hunger
    and disease and at the hands of victims of Nazism out for vengeance.

    However the story of the expulsion was played down in West German
    history books, denied in East Germany and ignored in the West.

    Now, four years after G'nter Grass published the novella Crabwalk
    about the Wilhelm Gustloff, the debate about German civilian victims
    of war has culminated in a new and controversial exhibition, "Enforced
    Paths: Flight and Expulsion in 20th Century Europe". The exhibition,
    dubbed the end of six decades of German penance, opened in a charged
    atmosphere on Thursday evening in Berlin.

    At least three different Polish and German groups protested outside
    and their bitter arguments showed how and why this issue above all
    others still taints German-Polish relations.

    Two dozen Polish protesters held their national flags in a silent
    vigil outside the museum. They see the exhibition as the thin end of
    the wedge, an attempt to spin history so that future generations will
    view expelled Germans as another victim group of the second World War,
    alongside Jews and Poles.

    "You cannot put German victims in the same pot with Polish victims,"
    said Krystian Kaminski, one of 20 protesters from the All Polish
    Youth, a far-right youth organisation.

    "These people are known revisionists. This exhibition is just the
    beginning for them: if we don't raise our voices now they will think
    they can say anything they like in the future."

    Near the Polish protesters, a left-wing German group held up banners
    reading "German Perpetrators are not Victims" while an extreme-right
    group held up banners that read "No Statute of Limitations on
    Genocide: Justice for Expelled Germans".

    Seen one way, the exhibition is a further step in Germany's new,
    unburdened exploration of its past, similar to another Berlin
    exhibition exploring 2,000 years of German history or even this week's
    Der Spiegel cover story on the Holy Roman Empire.

    There is a fine line though between taking a lighter approach to
    Germany's Nazi history and retelling that history by showing disregard
    for the feelings of Nazi victims.

    That's the line walked by Erika Steinbach, the chairwoman of the
    Federation of Expelled Germans and the driving force behind the
    exhibition.

    In Germany she is a Christian Democrat (CDU) backbencher little known
    outside political and media circles. In Poland she is public enemy
    number one.

    "We would like everything that is linked to the name of Erika
    Steinbach to end as quickly as possible because nothing good will come
    out of it for Poland, Germany or Europe," Polish prime minister
    Jaroslaw Kaczynski said on Thursday.

    He called the German expulsion "sad, even tragic", but said it was
    important to remember "who was the perpetrator and who was the
    victim".

    For Ms Steinbach, Poland's allergic reaction has become a means to the
    end of reviving interest in the fate of the German expelled.

    "We have to take note of [ Polish] concerns but we cannot do nothing
    as a result. For us in Germany there is a need to work through our
    history, in particular the expulsion that affected a quarter of the
    population," she said.

    "We have to find our identity and sooner or later they will have to
    realise this. I wouldn't over value the mood in Poland. I hope it will
    one day reach a moderate level where it is possible to discuss these
    things calmly."

    The exhibition, privately funded by the Federation for the Expelled,
    is a sober, modest affair that tells the stories of nine European
    peoples who were displaced as the consequence of the idea of an
    ethnically homogenous nation state.

    This broad historical approach was taken to counter criticism that an
    exhibition solely about the German expulsion would lack historical
    context.

    The exhibition frames the German expulsion as a consequence of Nazi
    crimes, but some critics have suggested that juxtaposing it with the
    Armenian genocide and the ethnic cleansing of Bosnians is an attempt
    to achieve a moral equivalence between all mass expulsions.

    Ms Steinbach is deliberately ambiguous when pressed on this point.
    "Expulsions have a completely different background but there's always
    the same reason behind them: wanting to get rid of a people who are
    stigmatised and then either driven away or simply killed," she says.

    The German government sees this as a no-win situation and has so far
    kept its distance.

    The temporary exhibition may be allowed to run beyond its October
    closing date and Ms Steinbach is optimistic that it will serve as a
    stepping stone to her long-standing goal of a publicly funded centre
    documenting the fate of the German expelled.

    If so, a new diplomatic ice age between Berlin and Warsaw lies ahead.
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