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Germans feeling nostalgic for their communist past
NYT ^ | Jan. 31, 2004 | Richard Bernstein

Posted on 01/31/2004 7:24:12 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

EISENHUETTENSTADT, Germany - This town is the perfect setting for the strange mood of nostalgia that seems to be taking hold in Germany lately, even if a Socialist utopia from the Stalinist former German Democratic Republic (otherwise known as East Germany) does not seem a natural inspirer of warm and fuzzy feelings about the past.

But, strange as it is, a wave of what is called ostalgie (ost meaning east in German) has become a phenomenon in this country.

People wear born-in-the-GDR T-shirts, or they collect Trabants, the rattling two-cylinder car that East Germans waited years to buy, or they go online to be contestants on the "Ossi-Quiz," all questions relating to East German pop culture.

Here in Eisenhuettenstadt -- Steel Mill Town -- a few miles from the Polish border, ostalgie has been provided with its own museum, officially known as the Documentation Center on Everyday Life in the GDR.

It is just down the road from the giant steel mill built here in the early 1950s as an industrial showpiece.

The museum is only a few rooms, mostly on the second floor of a former day care center, but it holds 70,000 to 80,000 objects from the former East Germany.

About 10,000 people a year come to look at Mikki transistor radios, jars of Bulgarian plums, schoolbooks, plastic water glasses that never seemed to come in the right colors.

Seeing these familiar objects clearly stirs warm feelings about the vanished and unrecapturable past.

"It's a very nice place when you want to remember your childhood," Thomas Blechschmied, a 29-year-old visitor, said the other day. "My parents still have those egg-holders," he continued, pointing to a bright yellow object inside a case of plastic kitchen utensils from the early 1970s.

There's no general wish for the East German state to be revived, Blechschmied said, explaining the limits of ostalgie.

It is more a recognition that millions of people made do as best they could for the 40 or so years between the end of World War II and the fall of the Berlin Wall, when the East Germans competed in all areas of life, from consumer products to Olympic ice skating.

A person might, looking at a jar of nougat, have a Proustian recollection of the shortages that plagued everyday life in East Germany.

"The products are genuine and the shelves are genuine," Blechschmied said, standing inside the well-stocked store, "but usually they were more spread out than you see here, and there were lots of empty spaces."

Ostalgie is complicated, made up of various ingredients. One is clearly the disillusionment felt by many former Easterners over German reunification, which took place 13 years ago.

Unemployment these days is commonly 25 percent in regions such as Eisenhuettenstadt. Rents are no longer subsidized. Doctor visits cost money. People can be fired.

In addition, as Andreas Ludwig, the West German scholar of urban history who started the museum a few years ago, noted, even capitalist products break down or are shabby and schlocky.

All this has given rise to a sort of East German post-mortem feeling that maybe the East had its good aspects after all, especially a certain economic security and stability, even if your best vacation option was Bulgaria.

Ostalgie got a huge lift during the course of the last year by the success of a movie, "Goodbye Lenin," which offered a poignant, very human image to life in the East.

Set in East Berlin just after the fall of the Berlin Wall, it's the story of a woman in such delicate health that she might die if she learns that her country has ceased to exist, so her loving children maintain an ever more elaborate charade aimed at persuading her that nothing fundamental has changed.

The mother, for example, asks for Spreewald Pickles, a highly valued East German product that disappeared from the market after the fall of the wall (and has since, by popular demand, reappeared).

When the children find a discarded bottle with the Spreewald label still on it, they treasure it as an item that can save a life.

Looking around Eisenhuettenstadt is to see that the Center of Everyday Life is a museum inside another sort of museum.

Built during the course of the 1950s, the town was one of four model communities East Germany created to embody in the here and now the futuristic promise of communism.

The steel mill still operates, one of the very few such socialist installations that still does so. The workers' housing blocks, with their sometimes Stalinist-classical facades, are actually rather attractive, painted in creamy or buttery or ochre tones.

There are parks, playgrounds, day care centers, schools. At the same time, the place imparts a feeling of emptiness; there is an absence of bustle, a quiet at the center of things, that is itself a legacy of central planning.

Ludwig, who comes from what was West Berlin during the divided years, proposed the museum to the state of Brandenburg, though his purpose was not then and is not now to provide props for national nostalgia.

He thoughtfelt that with the East German state dead, it had become appropriate to collect its artifacts and study them, just as one might have collected objects and testimonies about the American South right after the Civil War.

"There's no real reason to be nostalgic toward the GDR," he said. "It was a dictatorship and people couldn't get out."

People, he said, rarely come alone to the museum; more often, two or more generations of a family come together, or Ossis with Wessies, and they find that objects impart not only memories but lessons.

"The thing about everyday objects is that they don't say much about politics," Ludwig said. "But people start talking when they're in front of things. 'I remember that,' A says to B. People intervene, and that starts a discussion."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Germany; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: germany; nostalgia; ostalgie
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1 posted on 01/31/2004 7:24:14 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Where do I send my cinder block?
2 posted on 01/31/2004 7:25:16 PM PST by Texas Eagle
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To: Tailgunner Joe
If there was true socialism

nobody works, productions ends, people starve. end of utopia

3 posted on 01/31/2004 7:27:26 PM PST by GeronL (www.ArmorforCongress.com ............... Support a FReeper for Congress)
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To: Texas Eagle
ROTFLOL!!!
4 posted on 01/31/2004 7:28:00 PM PST by VaBthang4 (-He who watches over Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps-)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: VaBthang4
The Socialist Fantasy

Capitalism, Envy and the Inner City

6 posted on 01/31/2004 7:31:43 PM PST by GeronL (www.ArmorforCongress.com ............... Support a FReeper for Congress)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The workers' housing blocks, with their sometimes Stalinist-classical facades, are actually rather attractive, painted in creamy or buttery or ochre tones.

BARF! This fool from the NYT!!!! We need a Stalin-Disneyland we can lock these Stalin-lovers in and see how romantic it really was.

7 posted on 01/31/2004 7:32:54 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
bump
8 posted on 01/31/2004 7:33:22 PM PST by foreverfree
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Now imagine our own cradle to grave welfare state ending suddenly!
9 posted on 01/31/2004 7:34:35 PM PST by Revolting cat! ("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
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To: Tailgunner Joe
All this has given rise to a sort of East German post-mortem feeling that maybe the East had its good aspects after all, especially a certain economic security and stability, even if your best vacation option was Bulgaria.\

Bulgaria ?

10 posted on 01/31/2004 7:34:51 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi Mac ...... /~normsrevenge - FoR California Propositions/Initiatives info...)
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To: NormsRevenge
Great report from the always reliable CIA! Anything about the WMD's in Bulgaria? People don't vacation following countries' descriptions by the CIA semi-competent bureaucrats. In fact, they have some nice Black Sea resorts there, nice climate, Gypsy pickpockets everywhere!
11 posted on 01/31/2004 7:39:37 PM PST by Revolting cat! ("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Some of my family escaped from that DDR hellhole. That escape was the root of my familial abhorrence of communism, as well as the root of our current conservative ideology. Anyone who has nostalgic memories of those time is a nutjob.
12 posted on 01/31/2004 7:41:54 PM PST by yooper (If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there......)
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To: Revolting cat!
LOL... Hey,,just trying to get some bang for the buck out of the CIA intel is all. ;-]
13 posted on 01/31/2004 7:42:22 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi Mac ...... /~normsrevenge - FoR California Propositions/Initiatives info...)
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To: Revolting cat!
Now imagine our own cradle to grave welfare state ending suddenly!

we can dream.

14 posted on 01/31/2004 7:43:13 PM PST by GeronL (www.ArmorforCongress.com ............... Support a FReeper for Congress)
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To: yooper
Friends in that part of the world assure me that it'll take a generation or two to get over the Communist nightmare.
15 posted on 01/31/2004 7:43:20 PM PST by Revolting cat! ("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
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To: sam_paine
The reality was that the train bridges were supported on what appeared to be giant lab jacks, all the plumbing was above ground (and leaking), and the paint was about equivalent with the rooskie navy. Make a BIG L on your forehead and you will look like a hun in the mirror! This conclusion gives me no joy being a prussian, volga german kraut. But, facts are facts and the only comfort is that frogs are worse.
16 posted on 01/31/2004 7:43:37 PM PST by Righty1 (N)
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To: yooper
I say we privatize anything and everything.... if the free market cannot provide it then we do not need it...

FREE MARKET newsletter archives... very interesting stuff!

17 posted on 01/31/2004 7:45:25 PM PST by GeronL (www.ArmorforCongress.com ............... Support a FReeper for Congress)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The only real "ostalgie" comes from the demented minds of the New York Times reporters. They are so full of it. I will never forget how genuinely depressed their coverage was at the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe. They didn't even try to disguise it. Well, now they are recovering, taking up the Baathist cause.
18 posted on 01/31/2004 7:47:56 PM PST by speedy
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To: Tailgunner Joe
What's German for that wonderful French phrase, nostalgie a la bou (nostalgia for the mud)?
19 posted on 01/31/2004 7:50:32 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: yooper
Agree. If they love the days of Walter Ubricht so much, they can elect guys like that if they want. I have no doubt you could have gone to Munich ten years after Hitler was defeated and found people nostalgic for the good old days of torchlight parades and youth rallies. Wonder if the Times would have found that as cute as they find this.
20 posted on 01/31/2004 7:51:09 PM PST by speedy
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