Racism in Germany Part 2

Under German colonial rule, natives were routinely used as slave labourers, and their lands were frequently confiscated and given to colonists, who were encouraged to settle on land taken from the natives; that land was stocked with cattle stolen from the Herero and Namas.


When Germany struggled to become a belated colonial power in the 19th century, several atrocities were committed, most notably the Herero and Namaqua Genocide in what is now Namibia.


The German authorities forced the survivors of the genocide into concentration camps.


Many white Germans were afraid of miscegenation because they believed that it would “taint” the purity of German blood.


Many multiracial children were sterilized and taken from their mothers to become wards of the state.


There was a big push to get these multiracial German children adopted by Black Americans because they were seen as having no place in Germany.


A great deal of racial propaganda arose regarding the conception of these children.


Although there was only one confirmed case, it was said that the white mothers of these children were raped by Black French and American soldiers.


Eugen Fischer, a German professor of medicine, anthropology and eugenics conducted “medical experiments on race” in these camps, including sterilizations and injections of smallpox, typhus and tuberculosis.


He advocated the genocide of alleged “inferior races” stating that “whoever thinks thoroughly about the notion of race, cannot arrive at a different conclusion”.


The Herero genocide has commanded the attention of historians who study complex issues of continuity between this event and the Nazi Holocaust.


According to Clarence Lusane, an Associate Professor of Political Science at the American University School of International Service, Fischer’s experiments can be seen as testing ground for later medical procedures used during the Nazi Holocaust.


After the Nazis came to power in 1933, racism became a part of the official state ideology.

Shortly after the Nazis came to power, they passed the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service which expelled all civil servants who were of “non-Aryan” origin, with a few exceptions.


The Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws in 1935.


The first law known as the “Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour” forbade sexual relations and marriages between people of “German blood” and Jews.


Shortly afterwards, the Nazis extended this law to include “Gypsies, negroes or their bastards”.

Although the Nazis preached racial supremacy, in several books and pamphlets they stated that they were preaching racial consciousness rather than supremacy such as:


The fundamental reason for excluding foreign-race groups from a people’s body is not discrimination or contempt, but rather the realization of otherness. Only through such thinking will the peoples again become healthy and able to respect each other.

The Nazis believed that race determined everything and they told the Germans to be racially conscious.

In the 1930s and 1940s, Nazi Germany’s military conquest of Europe in the Second World War was followed by countless acts of racially motivated murder and genocide.

In its broad definition, the term Holocaust refers to an industrially run programme of state-sponsored murder by Nazi Germany, a genocide of different groups and the murder of individuals, whom the German authorities at this time defined as belonging to an “inferior race”, as having “life unworthy of life” or advocating beliefs that were disturbing to their politics.


The affected cultures use their own expressions such as:


The Shoah (Hebrew: השואה, HaShoah, “catastrophe”; Yiddish: חורבן, Churben or Hurban, in the Jewish context, the Porajmos [ˌpɔʁmɔs] (also Porrajmos or Pharrajimos, literally “devouring” or “destruction” in some dialects of the Romani language) used by Gypsies, or the Polish word “Zagłada” (literally meaning “annihilation”, or “extinction”) often used by Poles as a synonym of the word Holocaust.


The Holocaust was one of many outbreaks of antisemitism, a term coined in the late 19th century in Germany as a more scientific-sounding term for Judenhass (“Jew-hatred”).


Scientific theories on antisemitism are divided into what degree it can be subsumed under racism and to what degree it can be subsumed under other causes and mechanisms.


More than 130 people were killed in racist street violence in Germany, in the years between 1990 and 2010, according to the German newspaper Die Zeit.


Only some of the most publicly noted cases are listed below.


In particular, after German reunification in the 1990s a wave of racist street violence claimed numerous lives, with notable incidents including the arson attack in Mölln and the Riot of Rostock-Lichtenhagen in 1992, the Solingen arson attack of 1993, and the attack on Noël Martin in 1996.


In 2006, a black German citizen of Ethiopian descent named as Ermyas M., an engineer was beaten into a coma by two unknown assailants who called him “nigger” in an unprovoked attack that has reawakened concern about racist violence in eastern Germany.


He was waiting for a tram in Potsdam, near Berlin, when two people approached him shouting “nigger”.


When he objected, they attacked him with a bottle and beat him to the ground.

Also in 2006, German-Turkish politician Giyasettin Sayan, a member of Berlin’s regional assembly, was attacked by two men who called him a “dirty foreigner”. Sayan, who represents the Left party, suffered head injuries and bruising after his attackers struck him with a bottle in a street in his Lichtenberg ward in the East of the city.


In August 2007, a mob consisting of about 50 Germans attacked 8 Indian street vendors during a town festival in the town of Muegeln near Leipzig.


The victims found shelter in a pizzeria owned by Kulvir Singh, one of those being chased, but the mob broke through the doors and destroyed Singh’s car. All eight were injured and it took 70 police to quell the violence.

In 2009, the murder of Marwa El-Sherbini caused considerable public reaction in Germany and other countries. Al-Sherbini, a 32-year-old Egyptian national, was stabbed to death in a Dresden courtroom on July 1, 2009 by Alex Wiens, an ethnic German immigrant from Russia.


She had been in court to testify against Wiens who had previously racially insulted her for wearing a headscarf.


Her husband, Egyptian academic Elwy Ali Okaz, was critically wounded in the attack when he tried to take on Wiens, being stabbed by him and shot by court security who thought he was the attacker.


There is evidence that, in 2015, Professor Annette Beck-Sickinger at the University of Leipzig in Germany rejected Indian candidates on the basis of racism and stereotyping.

The incidents were so severe – amid shock that they were perpetrated by an apparently ‘educated’ woman – that Germany’s ambassador to India wrote a strongly worded letter condemning the professor, stating:


“Your oversimplifying and discriminating generalization is an offense … to millions of law-abiding, tolerant, open-minded and hard-working Indians,” he wrote. “Let’s be clear: India is not a country of rapists.”


Despite widespread rejection of Nazi Germany in modern Germany, there have been Neo-Nazi activities and organizations in post-war Germany.


At times these groups face legal issues.


Hence the Volkssozialistische Bewegung Deutschlands/Partei der Arbeit, Action Front of National Socialists/National Activists, Free German Workers’ Party, and the Nationalist Front were all banned.


The National Democratic Party of Germany has been accused of Neo-Nazi or Neo-Fascist leanings but historian Walter Laqueur writes that it cannot be classified that way.


Sources : DW.com and AfrisearchGh.com

One thought on “Racism in Germany Part 2

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