From the DW:
“New Berlin museum confronts
fate of Germany's WWII refugees”
(Trekking refugees passed through
formerly German villages in northern Poland in 1946)
An exhibition is set to open in
Berlin dedicated to the 14 million German refugees from World War II. The
controversial project has had a tortuous birth. The Documentation Center is
about the flight and expulsion of Germans, but also about the many other people
Chancellor Angela Merkel is to open the Center for Flight, Expulsion, Reconciliation on
June 21, an exhibition that takes pains to put the experiences of Germany's 14
million World War II refugees in the context of Nazi atrocities, and of the
experiences of refugees throughout the 20th and 21st centuries.
The permanent exhibition begins
with eyewitness videos and information panels as well as exhibits. Visitors are
immersed in the global history of forced migration, up to and including the
expulsion of people from Syria and the Muslim Rohingya from predominantly
Buddhist Myanmar. The next section guides the visitors through the Nazi era,
the Holocaust and the role of the Allies at the end of World War II before
focusing on the fate of the millions of Germans who were expelled from Eastern
Europe at the end of the war, often after having lived in those areas for
centuries. The third section of the center's permanent exhibition puts this in
a larger context of millions of other Europeans from Poland and Hungary who
made their way westwards to the occupied zones of the four victorious powers.
The exhibition shows the stories of displaced persons in the Allied occupation
zones, such as those of the then 14-year-old Stefan Ferger, whose family had to
flee northern Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia, to escape the Red Army. In the
Soviet zone of eastern Germany alone, it has been estimated that about a
quarter of all inhabitants were refugees. At first they were mostly not
welcome; at a time when there were shortages and hunger everywhere.
'Understanding what loss
means'
(The exhibition includes a map
showing that after the war ethnic Germans were expelled from Eastern Europe)
It took some 22 years for the
museum to be opened to the public because it was driven by a difficult
question: How should Germany memorialize the
plight of Germany's WWII refugees? It's a question that became entangled
in contemporary German politics partly because one of the originators
for the center was Erika Steinbach, a long-time Bundestag member for Merkel's
conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), who has since switched her
support to the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD). From 1998 to 2014,
Steinbach was the influential president of Germany's Federation of Expellees
(BdV), an organization with some 1.3 million members that represent the
interests of the families of Germans who fled or were expelled from Eastern
Europe. Steinbach's campaigning and pronouncements about Germany's postwar
border and German families' claims on land outside it have often complicated
relations with the country's eastern neighbors. Many of the expellees in West
Germany later banded together in so-called Landmannschaften and other
associations, most of which were notably conservative and nationalistic in
political orientation. But they represented a major constituency: In the early
years of the Federal Republic of West Germany, expellees and refugees made up
more than 20% of the electorate. In East
Germany, displaced persons were called "resettlers" and initially received
integration assistance. But from around 1950 onward, the subject of expulsion
was virtually taboo in the GDR.
Endless dispute about
remembrance
(Berlin's Deutschlandhaus was
renovated at a cost of €63 million or $75
million)
That the exhibition can now be
opened is a small miracle. Disputes arose over the location, orientation and
organization of the project, and even led to diplomatic disagreements with
Czech Republic and, above all, Poland. Suspicions arose that the exhibition
would be used by the Germans to present themselves as victims and divert
attention from their guilt. The German Bundestag decided to
establish a foundation devoted to the project in 2008, which was
when Steinbach began to lose her influence. Still, she attended the symbolic
groundbreaking ceremony for the exhibition alongside Chancellor Merkel in 2013.
"The Documentation Center is about the flight and expulsion of Germans,
but also about the many other people," said Gundula Bavendamm, a scholar
who is the director of the center. She sees it as a place of learning and
remembrance where one principle guides everything: "Understanding what
loss means." The exhibition is housed in Berlin's Deutschlandhaus, a
1920s building that was renovated for the purpose. The Foundation Board of the
Documentation Center includes representatives of the government,
the German churches, the BfV, but also politicians like Stephan Mayer, a
Bundestag member for the conservative
Christian Social Union (CSU). Mayer said the center is particularly
close to his heart as a grandson of Germans from the Sudeten area in the Czech
Republic. He told DW that the memorial contributes to the "reconciliation
of the Germans with themselves." The expellees now finally have a place,
he said, "where their fate, which was shared by millions, is commemorated
and the process of coming to terms with this last chapter of World War II is
advanced." When he was asked at a press conference why it took so long to
establish the center, Bavendamm replied that for "painful chapters"
in their history," societies often need a certain amount of time." The Documentation
Center Flight, Expulsion, Reconciliation will be open to the public from June
23. Admission is free.
^ I have to say I don’t feel any
real sympathy or sorrow for the expelled Germans after World War 2 (the same
way I don’t feel any real sympathy or sorrow for the Germans inside Germany
after World War 2 ended.) Germany started World War 2 and the Germans committed
unspeakable war crimes on Soldiers and Civilians throughout Europe and North
Africa. The Germans lost the war and so had to deal with not only their own defeat,
but their own actions before and during the war that caused death and suffering
to millions upon millions of innocent Men, Women and Children. So yes we need
to know what happened to the German refugees after 1945, but we also need to
remember what those same Germans did before and during the war. Germans, in general,
try to now make themselves out to be the victims of Hitler and the Nazis when
in reality they were just as guilty of the war crimes as any top Nazi. I don’t
blame any German who was under 18 years old in 1945 or any German born after
1945, but all the other Germans are to blame for World War 2 and the Holocaust
and are not the victims. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/new-berlin-museum-confronts-fate-of-germanys-wwii-refugees/a-57959068
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