From DW:
“How the Nazis burned first books, then people”
In 2022, a pastor in the United States burned "Harry
Potter" books, awakening memories of Nazi book burnings. Ninety years ago,
bonfires in German cities were fed with books the Nazis deemed
"un-German." On a rainy night in May, German writer Erich
Kästner stands among Nazi SA officers and onlookers before a burning pyre that
illuminates Berlin's Opernplatz, now called Bebelplatz. Men in black SA
uniforms throw piles of books on to the fire. Kästner listens as his name is
shouted into a microphone: "Against decadence and moral decay! For
discipline and decency in family and state! I hand over to the flames the
writings of Heinrich Mann, Ernst Glaeser and Erich Kästner!"
A barbarous act that reverberates to this day It's the night of May 10, 1933. In
Berlin and in 21 other cities in Germany, bonfires are fed with books. It's an
act of barbarism that continues to reverberate to this day. "If there had
been no Nazism; if there had been no book-burnings, then certainly the cultural
diversity and innovative spirit that had developed in Germany in the 1920s
would have continued," says historian Werner Tress, author of several
important books on the subject. But the
Nazis' rise to power put a decisive end to the cultural blossoming that Germany
experienced during the time of the Weimar Republic (1919 to 1933). And the book
burnings on May 10 were an undeniable indication of that.
The Weimar Republic's cultural elite flees Many of the writers and intellectuals
whose books were burned had already left Germany by that point. Alfred Kerr,
Bertolt Brecht, the brothers Thomas and Heinrich Mann, the siblings Erika and
Klaus Mann, Albert Einstein, Else Lasker-Schüler, Irmgard Keun, Ernst Toller —
to name just a few — were among the cultural elite of the Weimar Republic who
fled the Nazis. By the time the Nazis seized power and Adolf Hitler became
chancellor, on January 30, 1933, it was clear to them that they had no future
in Germany.
Enemies of the Nazis: Jews, leftists, liberals In the years leading up to their
seizure of power, the Nazis had already demonstrated their readiness to fight
their opponents — which included all Jews, but also any artists who disagreed
with them politically. Anyone who did not toe the Nazis' ideological line was
defamed as being "un-German," their names and works added to
continually updated blacklists. By May 1933, more than 200 writers had been
blacklisted; a year later, more than 3,500 written works had been banned.
Condemned: 'All Quiet on the Western Front'
(The 1930 film version of Erich Maria Remarque's novel 'All
Quiet on the Western Front' (starring Lew Ayres, left, and Louid Wolheim) was
targeted by Nazi agitatorsImage: United Archives/picture alliance)
The Nazis especially despised the novelist Erich Maria
Remarque. His 1928 novel "All Quiet on the Western Front" is an
unsparing depiction of the horrors of the First World War, and it was first
adapted for film by Hollywood in 1930. German Nazis and conservatives had
previously attacked the book and its pacifist message, accusing it of
discrediting German soldiers, and when the film version was released in Germany
in 1930, SA thugs disrupted screenings and obtained a temporary ban on the
movie. By May 1933, Remarque, too, no longer lived in Germany. He had emigrated
to Switzerland shortly before the Nazis seized power in January of that year.
An open letter from a US icon
(The American author and socialist Helen Keller spoke out
against Nazi censorship.)
While Erich Kästner was possibly the only author to witness
the burning of his own books on the night of May 10, 1933, the New York Times
published an open letter directed at German university students. The German
Student Association had been dominated by the Nazis since 1931 and had been
instrumental in organizing the book burnings. "History has taught you
nothing if you think you can kill ideas," the letter read. "Tyrants
have tried to do that often before, and the ideas have risen up in their might
and destroyed them." Those words were composed by Helen Keller, the blind
and deaf American writer and activist, whose book, "How I Became a
Socialist," was among those to wind up being fed to the flames, along with
works by other international writers such as Jack London, Upton Sinclair,
Ernest Hemingway, Maxim Gorky, Alexandra Kollontai, Jaroslav Hasek and Sholem
Asch, to name just a few.
Kästner recognized among the crowd
(After World War II, writer Erich Kästner, known for his
children's books, supported the International Youth Library.)
Shortly before midnight on May 10, 1933, a young woman at the
Berlin book burning on Opernplatz called out, "That's Kästner over
there!" Erich Kästner became
"uneasy," as he later wrote. He left the square, but remained in
Germany, somehow keeping his head above water over the next years. As a non-Jew,
he was able to survive the period until the end of the Nazi dictatorship in
1945.
Persecution and death Others were not so lucky. Journalist
and novelist Carl von Ossietzky was arrested in 1933 and died in 1938,
following years of imprisonment and torture while under guard in a hospital.
The anti-militarist journalist Erich Mühsam was murdered in 1934 in the
Oranienburg concentration camp. And the German-Jewish poet Gertrud
Kolmar, who stayed in Berlin to look after her father, died in 1943 in the
Auschwitz extermination camp. Those who managed to go into exile abroad
had to start new lives, often in a new language. For many, that spelled the end
of their writing careers, as in the cases of Irmgard Keun, author of the 1932
novel "The Artificial Silk Girl," and Alfred Döblin, who wrote
"Berlin Alexanderplatz" (1929). Others were driven to suicide
by psychological or financial hardship, or by the horrors of escaping — such as
Walter Benjamin, Stefan Zweig and Ernst Toller.
Success in exile
(Film director Fritz Lang (left, with actors Paul Hubschmid
and Walter Reyer) was one of the few émigrés to continue their success in exile
from Nazi Germany.)
Only a few émigrés from Europe's cultural scene were able to
continue their careers, such as Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder, Bertolt Brecht and
Thomas Mann. "The influx of immigrants from Germany was a huge boon to the
American universities and cultural institutions," says historian Tress,
"one they still benefit from to this day. But I would say that we in
Germany have still not recovered from the loss that it meant for us."
Where books are burned, eventually people will also be burned
(The subterranean sculpture 'The Empty Library' is a memorial
to the Nazi book burnings.)
What is today Bebelplatz in Berlin features a memorial to the
book burnings, a 1995 work by Israeli sculptor Micha Ullmann titled, "The
Empty Library" — a subterranean room lined with empty white bookshelves,
visible through a glass set into the pavement. A plaque nearby says,
"Where books are burned, eventually people will also be burned." Those words, written by the German-Jewish poet
Heinrich Heine in 1820, became horrifying reality in Nazi Germany. "In
1933, the Nazis burned books, and in 1938 they burned synagogues," says
Tress. "And in 1942 and 1943, in the Shoah, the organized genocide of
European Jews, people were burned."
Not a Nazi invention Heinrich Heine wasn't clairvoyant; his words referred to book
burnings in medieval Spain. The Nazis were by no means the inventors of
this barbaric act, which has a long tradition. Books (and people) were burned
across the centuries-long histories of both Christianity and Islam, as well as
in ancient Greece and China, and in more recent times, in Iran and Russia. Authoritarian
regimes all over the world fear the power held by the free word to call their
dominance into question — and in the case of the Nazis, so much so that among
the works they burned on May 10, 1933, were those by Heinrich Heine, more than
70 years after the poet died in exile in Paris.
^ 90 years and the world is still dealing with Book Burning.
^
https://www.dw.com/en/how-the-nazis-burned-first-books-then-people/a-65518417
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