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Witt's nostalgia for Stasi days sparks fury
The Independent (U.K.) ^ | 08/30/03 | Tony Paterson

Posted on 08/29/2003 5:29:24 PM PDT by Pokey78

The Olympic skating champion Katarina Witt will bring to a climax a wave of Communist-era nostalgia sweeping Germany with a television show next week highlighting the bright side of life in a totalitarian state.

A batch of films, TV shows and series is cashing in on a wave of popular sentiment for the East German Communist era, and nearly all have avoided painful subjects such as the infamous Berlin Wall.

The programme's uncritical stance has angered those who suffered under Communism. Former dissidents who have studied East German Stasi secret police files say the shows are an insult to the more than 1,000 East Germans shot dead trying to escape to the West.

Walter Momper, Berlin's mayor during the fall of the Wall 14 years ago, has derided the programmes for making the former East German regime appear harmless. Erich Loest, an eastern German writer, said the producers of one nostalgia show should be sacked for their uncritical portrayal of a totalitarian era.

Günter Nooke, an eastern German conservative Christian Democrat politician, said: "What would be the reaction in Germany if television produced similar programmes about the Third Reich?"

Ms Witt, 37, who was among East Germany's great sporting heroines, will provoke more criticism next week when she appears on RTL television's GDR Show as the in-house expert on the former German Democratic Republic. Her show will kick off with shots of a socialist-made Trabant car spluttering across the screen, and footage of the former East German leader Erich Honecker waving at workers.

During the four-part series, she will interview former East German personalities but avoid politics.

"It is an entertainment show," Ms Witt said. "It is time to show we also had fun in the German Democratic Republic." To drive home the publicity message, the ice-queen sports a blue communist Free German Youth movement shirt.

The nostalgia or Ostalgie wave took off this year with the hit film Goodbye Lenin, which takes a satirical yet lighthearted look back at the former East Germany through the eyes of a teenager. It was followed by four nostalgia TV shows running concurrently.

The programmes have interviewed East Germany's first astronaut, discussed the problems of obtaining a car during Communism and praised East German cigarettes, sparkling wine and pickled gherkins. Even the questionable fun of being in East Germany's compulsory Free German Youth movement has been a topic. "Honni's happy world," is how Germany's Die Zeit newspaper described the phenomenon last week with a play on Erich Honecker's nickname.

German television has leapt to the defence of its Ostalgie output. Hans-Hermann Tiedje, the producer of a nostalgia programme on ZDF television, said: "Almost everything has been said about the totalitarian nature of East Germany, its indescribable Communist regime and its crazy secret police system. People want to remember how the East Germans coped with everyday life. It wasn't all bad. In fact, it was quite the opposite."

Ms Witt has her own reasons for not dwelling on politics. As a double Olympic gold medallist, she was East Germany's sporting icon and enjoyed numerous privileges. These included a red West German VW Golf and a passport enabling her to travel freely. She is widely suspected of having collaborated willingly with the Stasi. Once known as "Socialism's most beautiful face", Ms Witt now appears in advertisements for cosmetics and clothes. Two years ago, she posed nude for Playboy.

Eastern German intellectuals and politicians have vied to offer explanations for the Ostalgie boom. Stefan Liebich, an eastern German who is head of the reform Communist party for Democratic Socialism in Berlin, said: "Life in East Germany has been demonised and dramatised so much that the nostalgia wave appears an almost natural reaction."

Leander Haussmann, director of the Ostalgie film Sonnenalle, said: "The East German system was dreadful and I hated it. But people don't want to be permanently reminded of the bad things. When they die, they want to look back on a happy life. They look for the right life in what was essentially the wrong one."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Germany; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: berlinwall; communism; eastgermany; eussr; katarinawitt; ostalgie; stasi

1 posted on 08/29/2003 5:29:24 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
If Broadway can create a hit out of the Producers I guess Germany can make the Stasi a hit too.

Sick sick sick

2 posted on 08/29/2003 5:34:43 PM PDT by OldFriend ((Dems inhabit a parallel universe))
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To: Pokey78
Her show will kick off with shots of a socialist-made Trabant car spluttering across the screen,

Q. Why does the Trabant have a rear-window defroster?

A. So your hands won't stick to the glass while you are pushing it!

Miss Witt has a nice body (I've seen pictures of it) but she has shi'ite for brains and no morals.

Anyone who would defend communism is an heir to Stalin.

3 posted on 08/29/2003 5:41:05 PM PDT by LibKill (Heaven frowns on all things french, and democrat, AND ESPECIALLY CAT.)
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To: Pokey78
Kind of like "Honecker Heroes" will they have Shultz and Klink ?
4 posted on 08/29/2003 5:46:23 PM PDT by tophat9000
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To: LibKill
She was reportedly the mistress of the East German leader....got a nice convertible and all kinds of goodies.........now the whore has to buy her own goodies.
5 posted on 08/29/2003 5:50:12 PM PDT by OldFriend ((Dems inhabit a parallel universe))
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To: Pokey78
Why would Katarina Witt criticize East Germany? THe old regime was very good to her, after all. She's just nostalgic for the good old days when she was on top of the world.
6 posted on 08/29/2003 5:51:26 PM PDT by Mr. Jeeves
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To: Pokey78
My cousins in the Czech Republic have also remarked on how some things were very nice about growing up under socialism. While they missed freedom, travel, and prosperity, as kids they had a good life. There was a certain stability to their existence, and the comfort of knowing the rules for their constrained existence. They had a lot of community events and plenty of activities in which all local kids participated. Nobody was rich (except some elites whom they didn't mix with), yet nobody was hungry after the '50's.

None of them would trade the freedom they have now for what they had then, but they look back fondly on their younger years. When I visited them during those years, it seemed like there were a lot of kids, activities, and just plain fun. We were certainly aware of the oppressive politics, but there were also simple pleasures which are now somewhat squeezed out by the hectic pace of their new lives. People have less leisure time, and they feel the stress.

7 posted on 08/29/2003 6:39:35 PM PDT by Think free or die
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To: OldFriend
Now that the Stasi is out of business, she should check in with Homeland Security. The Ashcroft Nation needs a poster girl.
8 posted on 08/29/2003 6:47:19 PM PDT by eno_ (Freedom Lite - it's almost worth defending)
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To: Think free or die
Lots of blacks in South Africa said their life was better under apartheid...........

There are those who thrive on the chaos that follows change.

9 posted on 08/30/2003 4:32:03 AM PDT by OldFriend ((Dems inhabit a parallel universe))
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