T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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923.1 | Uh huh! | SCHOOL::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Fri Apr 13 1990 00:10 | 6 |
| >> too late and wonder why politically it was mentioned today?
What's today? Hitler's birthday?
I agree - too little, too late. I also wonder if it's designed to assuage
concerns that a unified Germany is a threat.
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923.2 | First act of new government | DDIF::LUWISH | | Fri Apr 13 1990 00:19 | 15 |
| Today was the first day's session of the first non-communist government
in the history of the DDR. It is significant, that with all the
business that East Germany has to take care of, that it's very first
official act was to declare responsibility for the Holocaust, something
it never did under communist rule.
Of course it doesn't bring my relatives back from the dead. But it
makes me feel a little bit more comfortable about having a "united"
Germany in my future.
The DDR has previously agreed to pay reparations to survivors, and to
Israel as the representative of those families that have no surviving
descendants. Again, too little, too late, but better than not at all.
Ed
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923.3 | Ironic details | WAV13::STEINHART | Toto, I think we're not in Kansas anymore | Fri Apr 13 1990 21:12 | 17 |
| They also stated that the East German goverment was formed in reaction
to the Nazis and that the West German government should be held
responsible, or so I understood from the radio. Which leads to some
curious ironies:
- Why should they apologize if they are not responsible?
- As the next step is unification with West Germany, will the East
German states then become responsible?
- I doubt it was meant as a criticism of West German reparations, or?
But - at least the anti-Semites can't deny it happened, without
stretching credulity even farther beyond absurdity.
Be interesting to watch the repurcussions.
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923.5 | clarification | HPSPWR::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Sat Apr 14 1990 06:19 | 9 |
| Re: .3
It is a misunderstanding. Since 1945 East Germany claimed that the
communists were victims of the Nazis and for that reason they
were not responsible for the Nazi's crimes. The new non-communist East
German govt. accepted the guilt. I believe it is a significant step,
as .2 stated, considering all other events in that country.
Leo
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923.6 | credit where credit is due | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue Apr 17 1990 17:29 | 10 |
| I agree with .2. It's a good sign that this was one of the first acts of
the first freely elected government of the DDR. Neither Germany has
consistently been as responsible as it might have been for its own past,
but the new East German government is doing about as much as it possibly
could at this stage.
The offer to pay reparations shows sensitivity, as do the current talks
about normalizing relations with Israel. The DDR may not last long enough
to complete arrangements for either of those, but its behavior during its
final months deserves acknowledgement.
|
923.7 | to put things in perspective... | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | BIG Louuuuuuuuuuuu | Thu Apr 19 1990 01:25 | 20 |
| (the following comments were made by Rabi Yehuda Kelemer of the Young Israel of
West Hempstead NY on the last day of Pesach, as I recall them)
The Germans have apologized for the Holocaust and asked for our forgivness. But
do we (the Jewish people) have the right to forgive? Those of us who survived
the Holocaust are not the ones against whom the Nazis committed the greatest
crimes.
In Halacha, if one has wronged someone who has since passed on, one cannot
ask the deceased's family for forgivness. The family has no power to forgive.
One must go to the grave of the deceased and, in the presence of a minyan,
ask the deceased for forgivness. The 'sinner' will live out the rest of his
days never knowing whether he has been forgiven.
The only response we can have is to remember those who were lost in silence.
(the following comments are my own)
Let the Germans keep their reperation money. It always struck me as
putting a price on a human life so they can buy forgivness.
|
923.8 | I don't believe in "collective" guilt | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Apr 19 1990 17:59 | 10 |
| But the situation is more complex: the people apologizing are not
the ones who did the crime.
There are issues here which arise from the fact that it wasn't just
person A killing person B. Perhaps the reparations should be thought
of as a payment from an heir of the killer to the heir of the victim,
more because the heir of the killer does not want to be in the position
of profiting from the killer's crime.
-John Bishop
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923.9 | Sins of the fathers visited on the sons. | USEM::ROSENZWEIG | | Mon Apr 23 1990 21:52 | 23 |
| If the sins of the fathers be paid for by the sons, then the apology
is appropriate. They want to set the record right and do something
to comment on the past.
Has anyone read the statement? It is quite beseeching and decent.
Something had to be said and I respect them for doing it.
I'm not sure that the apology would be accepted by some of the
survivors that I know, but at least the East Germans acknowledged
what happened. It won't undo the past but it's a good move. Maybe
as children of the prime sufferers we can begin to talk to one another
about it. Had I witnessed my family killed, I might not be so open
to reconciliation.
My daughter has the statement posted on her bulletin
board and needs to go to Germany to-day for an international meeting.
We have always found it hard to be in Germany because 84 or 87 of
our family perished in the Holocaust. The German statement made
it easier for her to travel there.
I wonder if in the history of warfare if any nation has ever
*voluntarily* acknowledged its war crimes before?
RR
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923.10 | A partial quote from E. Germany | JAIMES::WAKY | Onward, thru the Fog... | Tue Apr 24 1990 17:39 | 29 |
| > Has anyone read the statement? It is quite beseeching and decent.
From the Jerusalem Post Int'l Ed of 21 April - "...exerpts from the East
German statement:
'We, the first freely-elected parliamentarians of East Germany, admit our
responsibility as Germans in East Germany for their history and their future
and declare unanimously before the world:
'Immeasurable suffering was inflicted on the peoples of the world by Germans
during the time of National Socialism. Nationalism and racial madness led to
genocide, particularly of the Jews in all European countries, of the people of
the Soviet Union, the Polish people and the Gypsy people.
'Parliament...admits joint responsibility on behalf of the people for the
humiliation, expulsion and murder of Jewish women, men and children. We feel
sad and ashamed and acknowledge this burden of German history.
'We ask the Jews of the world to forgive us. We ask the people of Israel to
forgive us for the hypocrisy and hostility of official East German policies
toward Israel and for the persecution and degredation of Jewish citizens also
after 1945 in our country.
'We declare our willingness to contribute as much as possible to the healing of
mental and physical sufferings of survivors and to provide just compensation
for material losses.
'We are for giving persecuted Jews asylum in East Germany.'"
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