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Conference taveng::bagels

Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
Notice:1.0 policy, 280.0 directory, 32.0 registration
Moderator:SMURF::FENSTER
Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1524
Total number of notes:18709

582.0. "Bundestag Resignation" by KIRKWD::FRIEDMAN () Fri Nov 11 1988 19:15

    The president of West Germany's Bundestag was made to resign recently
    because he turned out to be a Neo-Nazi.  The duly elected president of
    Austria is a Nazi.  Are these events isolated curiosities or has
    there been a increasing ascendency of such people to power?
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582.1Apparently notRABBIT::SEIDMANAaron SeidmanFri Nov 11 1988 20:1116

    RE: 582.0 

    >president of West Germany's Bundestag...turned out to be a Neo-Nazi.

    If you are referring to the incident that happened this week, the
    problem was not that he was a Neo-Nazi, but that he made a very
    inept speech to the Bundestag in commemoration or Kristallnacht.
    
    Apparently, he was talking about the way the Germans supported Hitler
    in the '30s and made it sound like it was a good thing.  Several
    members of the Bundestag walked out in protest.  He later said that
    wasn't the way he meant it and submitted an apology and his
    resignation.  To the best of my knowledge he was accused of
    insensitivity and stupidity, but not Nazism. 
582.2KIRKWD::FRIEDMANFri Nov 11 1988 21:035
    "And as for the Jews, hadn't they in the past, after all, sought
    a position that was not their place?  Mustn't they now accept
    a bit of curbing?  Hadn't they, in fact, earned being put in their
    place?" - excerpt
    
582.3KIRKWD::FRIEDMANFri Nov 11 1988 21:1310
582.4I think we're missing somethingMINAR::BISHOPSun Nov 13 1988 02:4120
    Those extacts would be a lot less alarming if they were preceeded
    by something like:
    
    It's not surprising that the German people, especially the naive,
    fell for what the Nazis were telling them in the middle thirties.
    Everthing Hitler told them fit their preconceptions, everything
    he claimed seemed reasonable to them.  From such a persons' point
    of view, it all made sense...<and follow here with the quotes,
    showing how, for example, the people had wanted to be led to a 
    glorious German future, and haden't Hitler started to do so, or
    claim to have started to do so, as far as the typical uneducated
    ethnocentric German was concerned, etc.>
    
    Long passages of rhetoric with a parallel construction are usually
    hammering in a point.  But it is some other passage which makes
    the point (consider Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech).
    Leaving out that introductory passage is removing the context, and
    thus (possibly) misrepresenting the quote.
    
    		-John Bishop
582.5kick ass leaders are popularMARX::ANDERSONSun Nov 13 1988 19:0812
>    It's not surprising that the German people, especially the naive,
>    fell for what the Nazis were telling them in the middle thirties.

	People weren't NAIVE. They condoned it. Supported it. Hitler
	made them feel good. If one looks throughout history, populations
	are generally predisposed to supporting KICK ASS leaders.
	It is one main reason why politicians make an effort to distance
	themselves from groups like the ACLU or why Margaret Thatcher
	can limit the freedom of press.

	Darryl
582.6Misplaced ironyMARVIN::SILVERMANMon Nov 14 1988 06:4922
   If you read the entire speech by the President of the Bundestag,
   you can see that all the part about why the Germans supported the
   Nazis is a piece of sustained irony. I agree that it was inept and
   insensitive to make such a speech on such an occasion; as (I think)
   the leader of the West German Jewish community said, "At the
   funeral of a murder victim, you don't make a speech analyzing the
   fascinating personality of the murderer." It would have been
   alright as an academic exercise.

   I believe that I read that the President's parents were anti-Nazis,
   and suffered for it, so I think it's a little unlikely that he's a
   neo-Nazi. 

   As for whether he was right in saying that the Germans were naive,
   rather than supporters of Hitler - I'm inclined to agree with .5,
   but if you're a German, you might find this too hard to face.


   Marge


582.7Inept but not a NaziTAZRAT::CHERSONZippy &amp; Leona in '88!Mon Nov 14 1988 11:458
    Jenninger was guilty of ineptitude in choosing to use irony in his
    speech to the bundestag.  I must admit that at first when hearing
    about it concluded that he was another of those "closet" nazis before
    I heard further clarification.
    
    At least he has more honor than the so-called president of Austria.
    
    David
582.8Marvin Kalb's AnalysisMISFIT::EPSTEINJMon Nov 14 1988 11:5812
       Marvin Kalb analyzed this speech on a PBS radio show. 
       
       Kalb prefaced his analysis by explaining that he was a Jew and
       married to a women who had fled the Nazis. 
       
       In Kalb's view, the reason this speech raised such a flap in
       Germany was that the Budestag President TOLD THE TRUTH. The
       quotes given in the previous replies to this note, as well as
       others Kalb gave, described prevalent German attitudes at the
       time of Hitler's rise to power. Today's Germans do not want to
       hear this. Thus the resignation. 
       
582.9For the recordBOLT::MINOWRepent! Godot is coming soon! Repent!Mon Nov 14 1988 12:174
I'm pretty sure this analysis was given by Daniel Schorr (on Weekend
Edition last Saturday).

M.
582.10whackMARX::ANDERSONMon Nov 14 1988 15:288

>	Budestag President TOLD THE TRUTH ...

	You hit the nail on the head. 

	Darryl

582.11.9 is rightTAZRAT::CHERSONalways on the squareMon Nov 14 1988 15:295
    re: .9
    
    Yes, it was Daniel Schorr.
    
    David
582.12DPDMAI::POPIKNOMADMon Nov 14 1988 17:507
    On the news reports of this "incident" I found it interesting that
    the only person(that was shown) even speaking to him was a West
    German Jewish leader. He shook his hand said something and left.
    Everyone else just walked by, leaving him brushiing his hair back
    and looking quite uncomfortable.
    
    
582.13Never attribute to malice what stupidity explainsMINAR::BISHOPMon Nov 14 1988 19:1414
    The Wall Street Journal of today has an editorial on this.
    
    Their point of view: the listeners knew the "offensive" remarks
    were not offensive (they had the context), but they also knew the
    media would go bonkers, and decided to act in a way which the
    media would approve of, rather than the right way.
    
    My point of view: I've had sufficient failures of audiences to
    catch on to irony or quoted speech or explications of a third
    party's views that I believe most of the audience didn't get it.
    Peoples' ability to understand complex ideas disappears when you
    hit a hot button.
    
        			-John Bishop
582.14After reading the speech...DELNI::GOLDBERGTue Nov 15 1988 12:225
    I have read the entire speech.  There is no question in my mind
    that the speaker was being ironic. He was, in effect, saying, that
    this was how Germans of the time had seen things; that this was
    how ready they were to be mislead; that this was how stupid and
    brutal they were; and that in this, they saw glory.
582.15i agree VAXWRK::ZAITCHIKExistence is SOMETIMES a PredicateTue Nov 15 1988 16:1813
re:	.14
I had exactly the same feeling about the speech as you did!

Moreover, if I were an ** average ** young German with little/no
particular feelings about the holocaust/Jews, I would
probably be incensed that all this fuss is made when
a speaker "errs" in his "style". Making a fuss
about such matters only increases antisemitic tendencies
or potentialities. Not only that but I think that making noise
about this sort of thing is a figleaf that certain anti-Israel
groups in Germany use to cover their own anti-semitism. They
say, as it were, "WE aren't anti-semitic; look how sensitive
we are to any TRACE of INSENSITIVITY about the Nazi period!"
582.16MARX::ANDERSONTue Nov 15 1988 18:196

	re: -1

	Good point.

582.17Some LEARN their lesson!SUTRA::LEHKYI'm phlegmatic, and that's coolMon Nov 28 1988 13:5811
582.18son of WeizsackerHYDRA::MCALLENMon Nov 28 1988 18:448
    
    re 582.17 by LEHKY
    
    Speaking of Weizsacker, is he related to (son of) the
    Weizsacker who was an important dipolmat (foreign
    minister, perhaps?) of the 3rd Riech during (or just
    prior to) WW2 ?
    
582.19Indeed, he is!SUTRA::LEHKYI'm phlegmatic, and that's coolTue Nov 29 1988 07:241