DJ aka GDR DJ Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 German youth uninformed about East German past Twenty-one years after the Wall fell, Communist East Germany is an enigma for young Germans. Some do not even know who built the Wall that divided Germany for decades, but educators are trying to change that. Germany's high school history curriculum allows little time to discuss East Germany, so teacher Nicole Abendroth decided to take her 10th-grade class to Berlin to visit the museum dedicated to the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and other important Cold War sites. "In the end, I think the GDR amounts to a feeling," said Abendroth. "What people experienced here, essentially confined to this place," she said. "And that is truly hard to convey. That's why I think it's important to come here, so that the students really get a chance to get to know what it was like." According to GDR Museum tour guide Hans-Michael Schulze, there's a need for knowledge - and he helps fill the gaps little by little. "When I give tours like this now, [two decades] after the end of the GDR, I'm amazed at how little is known about it," Schulze said. When showing the Trabant exhibit, he doesn't just explain the quaint charms of the polluting plastic car, but also talks about how long people in East Germany waited to get them, and why they were nearly the only cars available. Farther east in Berlin, the Stasi Museum explains to visitors how the East German secret service covertly documented every aspect of people's lives with hidden cameras - from daily commutes to children's birthday parties. Eighteen-year-old Kathrin Weiss was visiting the museum with a group of girls from Bavaria. She had just starting studying the GDR in school, but had also heard a bit about it from her godmother, who grew up there. The GDR wasn't so bad, her godmother said, as long as you didn't criticize the system; you could have a normal family life just like in the West. "It's not right what she said, but she probably just didn't know or never realized," Kathrin said. "And when you're not seriously confronted with it, you don't really deal with it." Democracy or dictatorship? In fact, a student's background is more important than where they went to school in determining their opinions and knowledge base about East Germany, said Uwe Hillmer, a researcher at Berlin's Free University, who also organizes educational programs with young people at the Stasi Museum. Hillmer and his colleagues spent three years talking to students about their knowledge of the GDR. Students like Kathrin, from southern Germany, often know more about the GDR than their eastern counterparts, he said. But in general, many young people are unfamiliar with East Germany: a majority doesn't know who built the Berlin Wall or whether Willy Brandt was a politician in the East or the West. "The division of Germany and the postwar period are probably some of the most documented times in history. There are endless shelves full of books on the subject," Hillmer said. "But the collective historical memory is at zero. All these countless anniversary events aren't changing anything." The country as a whole, both East and West, he said, has never really come to a full understanding of what life was like for East Germans, especially concerning the cruelly effective psychological and social manipulation by the Stasi and the ruling SED party. West Germans don't quite understand the comfortable sense of predictability and security that the Easterners lost after reunification, according to Hillmer. And the Easterners miss the way in which the state used to look after every aspect of social need; many are able to overlook the intensive state surveillance and control they may not have even been aware of at the time. "The main finding of our study is that young people today, from both the East and the West, are not really able to differentiate between democracy and dictatorship," said Hillmer. Laden with history In Berlin - a city that's a living history lesson, with constant reminders of the Wall, World War II and the Cold War - a shocking number of students are uninformed about what went on, according to Hillmer's study. The GDR is part of school curricula - at the end of the 10th grade, after the unit on World War II. For decades the educational system has grappled with how to teach the history of communist East Germany, let alone National Socialism. Some teachers say they just never get to the GDR, because their students need more time to digest all of the heavy history that came before it. Other teachers and parents simply don't want to relive their past. Not far from the Stasi museum, 16-year-olds Robin and Robert attend a special East Berlin school for athletes that, in GDR days, was synonymous with both world-level sports victories and the regimented doping of athletes. But they have never visited the Stasi Museum, the GDR Museum, the Stasi prison in Hohenschoenhausen near their school, nor the Berlin Wall Memorial. That's not uncommon for Berlin. Hillmer reported that 80 percent of visitors to the Stasi Museum are from the West - and the GDR Museum very rarely gives tours to classes from the East. Robert said he would like to visit the museum with his father - to give them a better venue to discuss GDR history than their car, or the breakfast table. Robin hasn't talked much about these things with his parents, but he does remember this: "My mother told me that it was a very socially-minded time," he recalled, "that there was work for everyone, not like today where we have so many unemployed people just sitting around. Actually, it wasn't such a bad time. I think it was good." Getting the bigger picture Leopold Grün, a filmmaker and educator originally from the eastern city of Dresden, said that it's not fair to ignore good moments that take place in bad decades. However, he admits that it's not always easy to recognize them. "There's still a wall even in the question: 'how can we talk about these things?'" Grün pointed out. Grün was a teacher in the GDR from 1989-1990, when the Berlin Wall fell and Germany was reunited. He is from the East, his wife from the West, and their family is intricately bound to the country's reunification, which he sees as inseparable from Germany's pre- and postwar history. "For me, the most important thing in relaying history is that you have to search for traces in your own biography, in your own family," he said. "Then, you can perhaps share that experience. Private histories are the mosaic stones, the pieces of a puzzle that can somehow be put together." As successive generations grow up in Germany, have their own children, and struggle to pass on their complex histories while also analyzing them, it's important not to forget what's been learned. Hillmer said that, in the end, teachers and educators need to make it clear to students that they must come to terms with the past, not just for good grades in history class, but so that they are prepared to recognize destructive tendencies when they arise. "If we don't deal with this modern German dictatorship, then we're closing our eyes to possible risks to our democracy today," he said. "And that's why we have to carry on with memorial sites and keep remembering what happened during this time period." Source Thanks say GDR DJ btw: History Quote
Ghostwind Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 That is always surprising to hear, particularly given the recentness of the fall of the wall. Anyways, happy German Reunification Day Quote
Gubbi Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 Even more surprising as there are so many documentaries and movies around in German television about this topic. (Yes, in Austria we also have receive German channels..) Quote
Ghostwind Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 Even more surprising as there are so many documentaries and movies around in German television about this topic. (Yes, in Austria Australia we also have receive German channels..) Just like we have Austrian Channels in Germany Quote
Ghostwind Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 Australia- worst country in europe.jpg by Saltation, on Flickr 1 Quote
MaKy Posted October 3, 2011 Posted October 3, 2011 Channel SBS here in Australia is almost dedicated in showing Documentaries on the Second World War, I believe it is blatantly obvious the dislike for Germans by the people who do the programming on that station. It infuriates me deeply. Happy German Reunification Day! Quote
Ghostwind Posted October 4, 2011 Posted October 4, 2011 Channel SBS here in Australia is almost dedicated in showing Documentaries on the Second World War, I believe it is blatantly obvious the dislike for Germans by the people who do the programming on that station. It infuriates me deeply. Happy German Reunification Day! just for the record, the Austrian/Australian bit Gubbi and I have going is an inside joke and/or running gag In Canada, we have the history channel to remind us of the "Greatest Generation's" triumph over the Germans as well. It runs pretty much 24/7 Quote
icky?/ Posted October 4, 2011 Posted October 4, 2011 I learned more about the Wall and East Germany in school then I did about my own country :S So do the Germans learn more about Belgium ? Quote
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