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The German Democratic Republic. HI136: History of Germany. Totalitarianist interpretations. Popular in 1950s West German interpretations; revival post-1989 Comparisons drawn with brown dictatorship of NS Stress illegitimacy of Soviet occupation & East German ‘puppets’
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The German Democratic Republic HI136: History of Germany
Totalitarianist interpretations • Popular in 1950s West German interpretations; revival post-1989 • Comparisons drawn with brown dictatorship of NS • Stress illegitimacy of Soviet occupation & East German ‘puppets’ • State ideology of ‘socialist personality’ within collective • ‘Leading role’ of ruling party enshrined in constitution • Stasi secret police • State control of economy • Control of media • Control of economy • Berlin Wall as epitome of state control of individual • Breached UN human rights on freedom of travel • Klaus Schroeder, Der SED-Staat (1998) • Eckard Jesse (ed.), Totalitarismus im 20. Jahrhundert (1998) • Anthony Glees, The Stasi Files (2003) • Also popular with many former GDR citizens; but is this because it denies personal responsibility?
Modernising dictatorship? • Complex industrial economy required ‘rational’ not ‘ideological’ elite • More university graduates enter party apparatus from 1960s • Peter C. Ludz, The Changing Party Elite in East Germany (1968/72) • Economic reforms of 1960s (New Economic System) • Attempt at decentralisation and incentivisation of economy • Technological revolution • Special role of intelligentsia in GDR (see dividers on state emblem) • Precision engineering from Dresden & Leipzig • 1980s gamble on microchip technology (too high investment costs) • Welfare dictatorship (Konrad Jarausch) • Indirect use of ‘social power’ to predispose groups to choose socialism • Full employment, hospitals, education system > fond memories • Educational dictatorship (Erziehungsdiktatur)? • Party ‘in loco parentis’, knowing what was good for the people • Rolf Henrich, The Guardian State (1989); party man turned dissident
Collective biographies & everyday histories • GDR lasted more than one generation; post-1949 generation ‘born into’ socialism • Are we patronising GDR citizens by treating them all as ‘released prisoners’ & victims? • Gaus, Locating Germany (1983): ‘niche society’, relatively normal private life possible behind public conformity • Mary Fulbrook, The People’s State (2005) • Material culture: 1990s growing interest in popular culture of GDR • Ostalgie/’Eastalgia’: re-issuing of GDR brands (see the Spreewald gherkin episode in Goodbye Lenin); fight to preserve minor symbols of difference (traffic light man) • Danger of ‘commodifying’ the GDR past & relativising idealistic motivations The Children of Golzow (7-up TV biography, 1961 ff.) Born in Year One, Wierling’s 2002 collective biography Goodbye Lenin (2003): Alex with his allegorical mother/motherland who cannot survive the fall of the Wall GDR green man – is nothing sacred?
The Achievements of Socialism Katarina Witt, Olympic ice-skating champion & GDR ‘ice princess’: the GDR measured its success against the FRG in gold medals Charité hospital, Berlin: GDR polyclinics are one of the few legacies adopted by united Germany First GDR cosmonaut in 1976; from the 1960s astronomy was on all GDR school curriculums East Germany’s ‘honours system’: the state was adept at rewarding participation with a mania for badges
Walter Ulbricht, SED leader 1946-71 • Reliable but uncharismatic functionary • Weimar KPD leader in Berlin in 1930s • Nazi exile spent mainly in Moscow, avoiding purges of later 30s; viewed as Stalinist even after Stalin’s death • Favoured ‘hard line’ of constructing socialism in half a country rather than pursuing reunification; in 1953 under heavy fire from Politburo colleagues, but ‘saved’ by 17 June uprising • Activist role in pushing Khrushchev into aggressive stance over Berlin Crisis; WU devoted most of later time to foreign pol. • 1960s attempted to play the moderniser, with focus on technology • 1971 ousted by ‘palace coup’ by Honecker, with Soviet backing of Brezhnev; died in 1973
Erich Honecker, SED leader, 1971-89 • Spent most of Third Reich in prison • 1946 leader of Free German Youth • From late 1950s responsible for internal affairs in GDR • 1971 acquired Moscow’s backing to remove Ulbricht • EH formed an unwritten ‘social pact’ (the Unity of Economic and Social policy) which subsidised popular standard of living (at height in mid-70s); increasingly paid for by loans from West, turning GDR into loan junkie by 1980s • Gorbachev’s arrival as a Soviet reform communist leader in 1985 caused SED a succession crisis as ‘gerontocracy’ hung on to power; EH was hospitalised at crucial points of the 1989 crisis • Famous in GDR for panama hat & natty pale suits; died 1994 in exile in Chile
Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) • June 1945 Soviets relegalise political parties • Autumn Communists decide on merger with Social Democrats; local resistance from some SPD, but pressure from SMAD • United workers’ party of SED founded April 1946 (debates: was this the spontaneous will of workers, learning lessons of divided labour movement in 1933, or creature of Soviets?) • 1948-51: SED Stalinised into ‘New-Type Party’; purge of former Social Democrats & loss of parity principle • 1946 free elections: SED polls 48% • SED functions as hub of Antifascist Bloc including Christian Democrats and Liberal Democrats, and later National Democrats and Farmers; elections also fought as single Bloc list (aka National Front) • SED membership: rose from 1.3 (1946) to 2.3 million (1986), including many careerist members; women’s shared only reached 35.5%; functionaries (i.e. officials) liked to list themselves as ‘workers’ but had they functionally become middle-class? • ‘Politbureaucracy’ lived sheltered existence in Wandlitz compound, including all mod cons • ‘Foot soldiers’ often true believers, working hard & living frugally (see Landolf Scherzer, Der Erste/Number One, 1988, shadowing hardworked local party secretary) Wilhelm Pieck (KPD) shakes hands with Otto Grotewohl (SPD) on formation of SED, April 1946 Propaganda poster for unity
The Stasi (MfS): Shield and Sword of the Party • Founded as clone of KGB under Soviet occupation • Early on used mainly for counter-intelligence (to keep out or kidnap western spies) • Markus Wolf’s Foreign Section scored notable successes in planting moles with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt in 1970s • 1952 Stasi given control of border; later policed the border troops • Poor early warning for 1953 uprising & temporarily demoted from ministerial status • Central Evaluation & Information Group (ZAIG) monitored popular mood • Self-image as pro-active ‘social workers’ or agents of the ‘invisible frontier’; ‘operative missions’ included infiltration & decomposition from within of suspected dissident groups • 1960s MfS adopts more sophisticated techniques & ‘total surveillance’ • Informelle Mitarbeiter (IMs) (‘informal collaborators’ or informants: growing reliance for ‘total surveillance’ on coopted members of public • ‘Destasification’: prominent cases show difficulty of proving if suspect was indirectly reported or IM (Manfred Stolpe, minister-president of Brandenburg) • Timothy Garton Ash, The File (1997) • Mike Dennis, The Stasi: Myth and Reality (2003) Erich Mielke, Minister of State Security, 1957-89 Manfred Stolpe, dogged by IM accusations Stasi HQ at Normannenstrasse, Berlin
17 June 1953: A People’s Uprising? • March 1953: Stalin dies; power vacuum? • May: new Moscow leadership order more liberal ‘New Course’; Ulbricht criticised • But workers excluded from some reforms (ration cards, work quotas increased) • 16 June: building workers on Berlin’s Stalinallee strike for economistic reasons • 17 June am: spontaneous strikes in cities; Berlin strikers march on ministerial district • 17 June pm: more political demands (free elections, national unity); late afternoon Soviet tanks impose martial law • East German explanation: CIA-organised putsch (‘Tag X’) using teenager thugs • West German explanation: people’s revolt against Soviet tyranny ‘The People’s Uprising of 17 June’, West German poster
The Open Border • 1945 interzonal borders policed by Allies • Berlin: quadripartite city with access via U-Bahn & S-Bahn • Grenzgaenger (border-crossers): by 1961 50-60,000 E. Germans commuted to W. Berlin; others simply shopped there • Currency speculation across Berlin-Berlin border at 1:5 East:West marks • Republikflucht (flight from the Republic): defection by ca 1 in 6 of GDR population • 1952 Stasi fortify inner-German border; tourist visits to FRG cut drastically • 1953 travel liberalised, but abused for more defections; 1957 plans to leave criminalised with 3 years’ prison; Berlin became chief exit point • Hirschman’s ‘exit/voice’ model of flight & protest; remaining E. Germans could blackmail system for goods such as housing; regime unable to introduce conscription Potsdamer Platz, 1952, before the Wall Movements across German-German border, 1949-61: note peaks in 1953, mid-50s when tourist viasa available, & eve of Wall
The Berlin Wall, 13 August 1961 • Failure of 1958 economic drive to overtake West German consumer production • 1960 economic problems & growing E. European subsidies • 1961 Warsaw Pact states agree to seal off W. Berlin; initially fences were erected (see right) to test the West’s response; since the barrier was within E. Berlin territorial limits it was treated as internal affair • 1964 old age pensioners allowed to visit West • 1971 Berlin Agreement permits ‘grade-1 relatives’ to visit West; in the 1980s West German loans were tied to the human rights liberalisation • Shoot to kill: all told approx. 1,000 persons died at the inner-German border; it was also mined until 1984; after fall of the Wall border guards who shot received suspended sentences fro manslaughter; those higher up in the Army or Politburo received prison sentences Temporary barriers on 13.8.61 Border troops’ sketch of Berlin Wall (post-1975 version): a double wall with a sandy area between & alarmed fences & anti-grip final wall
Antifascism: a legitimatory ideology • Marxist-Leninist doctrine always interpreted fascism as an outgrowth of capitalism; therefore antifascism linked to anti-capitalism (big business as Hitler’s stringpullers) • Fascism also interpreted as a political class war (mainly v. KPD), rather than racial war (v. Jews); GDR paid no reparations to Israel & antisemitic attacks on graveyards persisted • West German Federal Republic viewed as haven of former Nazis, protected by Anglo-Americans (especially in 1950s/60s); antifascism thus had contemporaneous function of anti-westernism (e.g. Berlin Wall officially labelled ‘Antifascist Defence Rampart’) • SED leadership (mainly Soviet exiles) had ambivalent attitude to ‘real’ antifascist veterans (marginalised ‘inland’ resisters, dissolved veterans’ organisations) • Antifascism an affective moral argument for wartime generation; but younger generations increasingly indifferent to abstract antifascism; with unification to FRG’s public culture of atonement many East Germans had difficulties accepting ‘collective guilt’ Buchenwald memorial: unveiled in 1958, this group represents the KPD’s leading role in the resistance, with a (historically dubious) myth of the camp’s self-liberation; Buchenwald was the GDR’s main memorial site for school visits & veterans’ meetings
Socialist nationalism? Thomas Müntzer, leader of 1525 peasants’ revolt in a GDR biopic: a proto-socialist? • Early Stalinist/SED policy stressed national unity (Stalin 1945: ‘The Hitlers come and go; the German people remains’; Stalin Notes of March 1952 offering a neutral united Germany cf Austria) • GDR inferiority complex towards FRG (FRG’s ‘sole representation’ of German nation & refusal to recognise GDR in Hallstein Doctrine); all East German citizens reaching FRG automatically entitled to West German passport • ‘Peaceful coexistence’: 1955 Khrushchev signals two German states in one nation; from 1980s policy of ‘demarcation’ (Abgrenzung) from FRG • Socialist humanism stressed heritage of classical greats (Goethe & Schiller at National Theatre at Weimar) • 1980s GDR rediscovery of tradition (national poets Goethe & Schiller of Weimar; Luther anniversary; Bismarck biography; Frederick the Great statues in Berlin & Potsdam) • 1987: East Berlin celebrates its 750th anniversary, including historical reconstruction of Nikolai quarter & its church, as well as 19th-century Sophienstrasse GDR flag of 1949: identical with FRG! GDR flag of 1959: with added hammer, dividers & wheat sheaves East Germany rediscovers its Prussian heritage: statues of Frederick the Great come out of mothballs on Unter den Linden, 1980s
‘The Friends’: Relations with the Soviets • Official propaganda stressed the liberation in 1945, GDR ‘brothers in arms’ within Warsaw Pact; slogan: ‘Learning from the Soviet Union means Learning to Win!’ • Day-to-day relations tarnished by mass rapes of women lasting for years after 1945 • Dismantling of factories: ca. 30% of East German plant was removed • Russian was compulsory in schools but not pursued by many to a high level • Membership of the Society for German-Soviet Friendship was automatic in the mass organisations • Gorbachev: belongedto new generation ofreform communists • Renounced Brezhnevfor ‘Sinatra’ Doctrine • ‘If your neighboursre-wallpaperedtheir flat would youfeel obliged toredecorate yours?’Kurt Hager Communist poster: ‘This is how the Soviet Union is helping us to realise the New Course:Handing back SAG factoriesCancelling reparationsLowering occupation costsCancelling postwar debts’ Anti-communist poster: ‘Count me out’, alluding to rape of women by Red Army Mikhail Gorbachev, face of reform communism
Economic decline • Honecker’s subsidies at cost of western loans; increasing pressure to liberalise in return for loans • Microchip gamble: East Germany invested billions in flawed silicon experiment • Switch from Soviet oil to East German brown coal (environmental problems) • 9 November 1989: SED Politburo collectively resigns over exposed debt crisis • Crisis deepened into spring 1990 with emigration to West of key workers, including doctors • Key voting issue in March 1990 fast union with D-mark zone in West (occurred 1 July 1990) • Since reunification GDR suffered approx. twice unemployment rate of other FRG • Treuhand (Trustee) agency set to privatise East German industry; beset by corruption (even Chancellor Kohl indicted) • Validation of Adenauer’s 1950s ‘magnet theory’ that West Germany would draw GDR into its orbit? GDR’s ‘money man’, Schalck-Golodkowski, meets Bavarian minister-president, Franz Josef Strauss Bitterfeld, most polluted area of the GDR & heart of her chemicals industry
Civil society • SED state claimed monopoly of representation; even strikes illegal • Artists & writers as substitute ‘Öffentlichkeit’ (public sphere)? • Wolf Biermann case: singer-songwriter & left critic of SED (which he saw as travesty of socialism); 1976 effectively deported from GDR • Earliest civil disobedience over freedom of travel (1973 GDR joined UN – human rights issues); beginnings of illegal contacts & groupings; white as dissident colour • Churches as sanctuaries for alternative groups • Environmental issues: pollution • Political issues: vote-rigging exposed in May 1989 local elections • Sept. 1989: several citizens’ groups emerge, including New Forum, Democratic Awakening & Initiative Peace and Human Rights Umweltbibliothek activists Wolf Biermann, GDR’s enfant terrible ‘Namenlos’ punks perform in churchyard, 1983 Jens Reich & Bärbel Bohley, founders of New Forum in Sept. 1989 Round table between SED & opposition, Dec. 1989
The Fall of the Wall • May 1989: Hungarians breach iron curtain • Mass exodus begins; frustrated leavers seek refuge in Prague & Warsaw embassies of FRG • Leipzig peace marches from Nikolaikirche swell from hundreds, to thousands to hundreds of thousands; 9 October Berlin decides not to use violence • 18 October Honecker relieved for ‘health reasons’; successor Egon Krenz not trusted by most as genuine reformer • Planned staged opening of Wall mishandled & becomes stampede for border crossings; GDR border troops relinquish control Günther Schabowski, Politburo member, at the famous press conference, 9 Nov. 1989 GDR citizens seek refuge in West German embassy in Prague