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East Europe's communist nostalgia
UPI ^ | 8/11/2004 | Gareth Harding

Posted on 08/12/2004 12:45:28 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

BRUSSELS, Belgium, Aug. 11 (UPI) -- The Berlin Wall may have been toppled 15 years ago and most of the countries that languished behind it are now fully-fledged members of NATO and the European Union, but this has done little to stem the rising tide of nostalgia for communist times in Central and Eastern Europe.

Only a handful of diehard Stalinists would prefer to trade in their Trabants for their Volkswagens and swap their hard-fought freedom for one-party rule, but from Estonia on the shores of the Baltic Sea to Slovenia on the Adriatic coast, there is a renewed interest in the region's communist past that ranges from ironic mockery to wistful regret.

Almost every capital city in the former eastern bloc has a monument honoring the victims of communist tyranny, and most have museums keeping the reality of Marxist rule alive. Prague has a Museum of Communism above a McDonald's restaurant and next door to a casino, Latvia's capital Riga has an Occupation Museum cataloging the barbarities inflicted on the Baltic country by Nazi and Soviet invaders, and Lithuania has a Museum of Genocide Victims housed in a former KGB barracks.

Visits to these memorials are serious, sobering affairs. The Occupation Museum, a black, bunker-like building in central Riga, recounts how Latvia lost 550,000 people -- a third of its population -- during the half-century of Nazi and Soviet rule. An inscription above the door reads: "In order to learn from history, we must know and understand it. Only then can there be hope that past evil will not be repeated."

However, some of the more recent communist "theme-parks" take a more light-hearted and hands-on approach to the half-century of one-party rule. In a small village in northern Serbia, local Blasko Gabric has created "Yugoland," an exact replica of the former Yugoslavia replete with statues of former president Tito and loudspeakers belting out cheery Soviet folk songs.

In southern Lithuania, 75 statues of Lenin, Stalin, Marx and Engels loom over passersby, guards stare down from watchtowers, and barbed wire fences prevent visitors from leaving. In the restaurant, waitresses dressed as Pioneers (communist scouts) serve cabbage soup "nostalgia" and pork chops "goodbye youth," while the Grutas Museum's souvenir shop sells vodka glasses emblazoned with mug shots of Marx and Lenin.

Viliumas Malinauskas, the founder of the popular tourist attraction, says: "This is not a theme park -- it is a deadly serious memorial for the victims of communism." But not everyone is happy with the park dubbed "Stalinworld" by its detractors. "The Grutas Museum is the peak of cynicism, a mockery of the thousands of totally innocent civilians who were murdered, tortured and deported to the gulags of Siberia," says Ona Voveriene, chairperson of the Lithuanian Women's League.

A similar battle about how to remember communism has been raging in the eastern half of Germany since last year's cinema hit "Goodbye Lenin," which tells the story of a young man whose communist apparatchik mother falls into a coma shortly before the reunification of the country. To prevent his sick mum from discovering communism's demise, Alex recreates the drab world of East Germany in her flat, going as far as to empty Dutch pickles into jars with local labels.

The highly successful film was followed by a popular series about life in the former German Democratic Republic hosted by Katarina Witt, an East German figure skater and twice Olympic champion. Cashing in on the trend for "Ostalgie" -- nostalgia for life in the former East Germany -- there are now plans to build a giant theme park celebrating communist days in a Berlin suburb.

Many people who suffered under totalitarianism are uncomfortable about what they see as the glorification of communist rule. "We really need to be careful that the GDR does not achieve cult status," said Berlin's Mayor Klaus Wowereit last year. He need not fear for the former eastern bloc's younger generation, who tend to view communism as an outdated ideology from a bygone age. But many of the region's older people take a more nuanced view of the four decades of communist rule.

"There are still a lot of people who long for the communist days, when everything was clear, black was black and white was white," says Oldrich Cerny, a Czech political analyst. "You kept your mouth shut, and the communist regime supplied you with shelter and bread."

Since the revolutions of 1989, communist parties have been voted back into power in most central and eastern European countries and regularly bag 10-20 percent of the vote in polls.

"Nobody is nostalgic for the Stalinist era," internationally acclaimed Czech novelist Ivan Klima told United Press International, "but many old people are nostalgic for their youth. They miss the security of communist times when they knew they would get a pension they could live off, prices were stable and they couldn't lose their flats or their jobs."

If politicians from the former Soviet bloc countries want to make sure the current fashion for communist nostalgia does not morph from tongue-in-cheek TV shows and theme parks into votes for far-left parties at the ballot box, they need to ensure stability, security and prosperity in addition to guaranteeing freedom and democracy.

This is not just the view of communism's opponents, but its supporters. In "Café Europa," a book of essays by Croatian journalist Slavenka Drakulic, the author stumbles across an improvised celebration of former Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's birthday in a Bucharest graveyard. Amidst the pensioners in their "thin, worn-out coats, rubber boots and fur hats," Drakulic spots Ceausescu's brother Flora and asks him about the gathering. "If the economy was better, there would be no need to revive him," he says, ever faithful to Marxist economic orthodoxy. "But the worse it gets, the more people will want to revive my brother."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eastgermany; ostalgie

1 posted on 08/12/2004 12:45:31 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
"Only a handful of diehard Stalinists would prefer to trade in their Trabants for their Volkswagens and swap their hard-fought freedom for one-party rule . . . "

So why is this guy writing a story suggesting the very opposite?
2 posted on 08/12/2004 1:12:34 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Steve_Seattle; ambrose

For the people who attend those theme parks, it's entertainment, not a real desire to go back. A Trabant is a pretty funny car if you don't have to drive it every day. When I visited Cuba in December 2002, there was a bit of a strange thrill in flying on a Soviet plane and riding in a Soviet car, even though both experiences were objectively horrible.

I saw 'Goodbye Lenin'. It was entertaining in parts, but the theme (that the security of Communism was something worth applauding) seemed betrayed by the content, where clearly people were a lot happier eating good quality food instead of swill and driving nice cars instead of Trabants.

In America, people are often nostalgic for simpler times, but I don't think many would truly want to wave a wand and go back.

D


3 posted on 08/12/2004 1:22:47 PM PDT by daviddennis (;)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
East Europe's communist nostalgia

From perspective of time, peoples always remember these good things, and these bad things sometimes seems to be even funny. I wouldn’t say that peoples feel nostalgia to communism as a political system but rather to those positive effects of communism. Communism system, it was BS, but also had some good things, for example unemployment didn’t exist…
4 posted on 08/12/2004 1:25:53 PM PDT by Lukasz (Don’t trust the heart, it wants your blood.)
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To: Steve_Seattle

These liberal media people have been writing articles about how East Europeans have been pining for communism to comeback since the Berlin Wall was taken down by Reagan. It is simply NOT TRUE.


5 posted on 08/12/2004 1:28:43 PM PDT by KC_Conspirator (This space outsourced to India)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

This is just a facet of human emotional memory....My grandmother chooses to only remember the nice things about her dead for the last thirty years idiot husband.


6 posted on 08/12/2004 1:47:05 PM PDT by Katya (Homo Nosce Te Ipsum)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

And most significantly, since the Iron Curtain was raised, *Western* Europe has in a number of countries turned substantially more to the Left, and, have opened themselves to Russian foreign influence in ways previously undreamt of.


7 posted on 08/12/2004 1:59:38 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Right makes right!)
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Tailgunner Joe
"East Europe's communist nostalgia" ?

This article is stupid.

"In a small village in northern Serbia, local Blasko Gabric has created "Yugoland," an exact replica of the former Yugoslavia "

So what ? This guy is just making money. I'm sure that it may be interesting for foreigners.
9 posted on 08/12/2004 6:39:40 PM PDT by Grzegorz 246
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To: Tailgunner Joe; All

I've had it with missing out on the jackpot. I mean, it seems that everyone and their uncle are making their daily bread by trading with the "ex" Soviet empire and the PRC, by outsourcing stuff to them, or, by helping them to penetrate our own economy. Enough is enough.

I have a proposal. Let us also join the fray. Here is how. Books, films, and music are the key. If, as claimed by those who say that the "ex" USSR is more conservative than we are, there is this pent up Rightism and kernel of free market Western thinking in the "ex" USSR, then, well, for crying out loud, let us exploit this apparent block buster market. Let us become rich, selling the wares of Rightism over there! Certainly, Putin, being a great friend of George W. Bush, and a true supporter of the West, against the only enemy we now have, the Islamofascists, would be supportive of this!

We could also work with the publishing industry to set up sales channels in the Great East, for the many other Rightist and conservative titles that populate our own shelves. Consider also films and music. Anything with a Rightist, pro-Western, conservative theme should be included.

What say you all? There must be a gold mine selling anything like this to all those wonderful lovers of the West and conservatives over in the "ex" Soviet empire.


10 posted on 08/13/2004 8:55:09 AM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Right makes right!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

it was so great when those soviet tanks came rolling in!

just like waco when comrade reno rolled tanks over women and children.


11 posted on 08/13/2004 8:56:52 AM PDT by ken21
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To: Tailgunner Joe; dighton; aculeus; general_re; L,TOWM; Constitution Day; hellinahandcart
And here's the entrance to the new Extreme Diet Theme Park in Germany ...

Auschwitzland


12 posted on 08/13/2004 9:01:27 AM PDT by BlueLancer (Der Elite Møøsënspåånkængrüppen ØberKømmändø (EMØØK))
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To: Paul Ross; Orion78; DarkWaters; Noswad; JudgemAll

;)


13 posted on 08/13/2004 12:51:32 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Right makes right!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe; GOP_1900AD
However, some of the more recent communist "theme-parks" take a more light-hearted and hands-on approach to the half-century of one-party rule. In a small village in northern Serbia, local Blasko Gabric has created "Yugoland," an exact replica of the former Yugoslavia replete with statues of former president Tito and loudspeakers belting out cheery Soviet folk songs.

Obviously this liberal has been fed KGB propaganda. The nostalgia is more into the upper spheres of the communists still in power, stoking it... they never went away as a matter of fact. This is FSB manufactured nostalgia and typical false currency that the leaders did not even believe because for them the end justified the means. Technicaly, the old days of communism were not communist at all, but a joke to feed the populace incapable of following the discipline... then again, who could blame a bunch of gltichy clones, as well educated as they could be.

14 posted on 08/15/2004 2:38:01 PM PDT by JudgemAll
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To: JudgemAll

Bump.


15 posted on 09/10/2004 7:58:47 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Right makes right!)
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