Most of the world is tired of hearing about the Holocaust. Especially Germany. So how does a country move on from genocide? Should it?
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
A Framework: Background of Post-Holocaust Communication
Communication
is one of the most powerful components of a nation’s identity. It fosters the
relationship between the people and their country, creating a shared common
identity among citizens. When viewed internationally, communication reflects
the image of a nation; it influences the perceptions of its local inhabitants,
while also projecting an image to the outside world. Failures in this
communication system can often occur and result in grave impacts on the people
and the nation as a whole. This paper intends to explore how history and
identity are constructed through communication. In this case, we focus
primarily on the communication issues within Germany and we identify how the
country’s biggest and most historical event, the Holocaust, is communicated
today. Our main focal points in Germany’s communication system will be German
media and national education. First, we
will illustrate the background of this subject, how the Holocaust became a
common topic of discourse in Germany and how it was initially perceived, as
well as the responses and perceptions German citizens today still feel about
the Holocaust and how it has distorted the national image. We will then explore
the responses and distortions of the media and broadcasting system and how
German and international media have depicted the Holocaust and influenced
public opinion. Next, it is important to look at the challenges to the
country’s educational system and how education is responsible for teaching and
shaping history and national identity. Lastly, we develop implications for
these communication issues, and apply them to an international context for
future recommendations. We will primarily analyze this study through Silvio
Waisbord with supplementary analysis from Karim H. Karim, and Manuel Castells.
Background
and History of Post-Holocaust Communication
Post
World War II Holocaust communication was primarily a political issue and there
was little discourse about it in the public sphere. In the early post-war
years, Germans did not confront individual guilt and collective wrongdoing;
instead, they repressed it. The main controversy with post-Holocaust
communication in Germany during this time was the issue of responsibility,
guilt, and the nation having to “come to terms” with their Nazi past. The
controversial phrase “coming to terms” became popular within the Federal
Republic of Germany in the beginning of the 1950’s and was used to address
Germany’s responsibility to deal with its Nationalist Socialist Dictatorship
and its crimes (Mayerhofer,
2009). However,
the term was extremely controversial and raised various questions, such as, “Can the past be ‘come to terms with?’”
and “Should it be come to terms with?”
It is arguably more reasonable for a new democracy to leave the past alone (Mayerhofer, 2009). The President
responded to these questions in a speech commemorating the 40th anniversary of
the German capitulation. He stated, “It is not a question of coming to terms
with the past. That cannot be done. The past cannot be retroactively changed or
made undone. But whoever shuts his eyes to the past will be blind in the
present” (Mayerhofer,
2009). In order for Germany to have proper communication about the Holocaust
through media, education, or simply public discourse, the nation must first
openly recognize its past and use communication as a way to reshape its
nation’s identity instead of evading it.
Much
of the German narrative about the subject of the Holocaust was very limited
throughout the country. For decades, the nation remained in a conspiracy of
silence. It wasn’t until the broadcast of the TV series “Holocaust” in 1979
that public discourse began to emerge. This TV series sparked a transformation
throughout the nation, changing the way in which Holocaust memory would be preserved
and initiating the first step to Holocaust remembrance and incorporation into
the historical and national German identity. One of the primary aftermaths of
the TV series was the conversation of “remembering and forgetting” and
“learning from the past.” These key concepts inspired much national debate and
were responsible for citizens to have a radical and direct confrontation with
their country’s past (Markovits, 2006).
Public rejections of responsibility, liability, and other forms of mitigating German
guilt were now in the forefront of public discourse, and the negative portrayal
of Germany was projected globally.
The
rise in Holocaust communication became more and more prevalent as the country
began to construct memorials and museums in commemoration. It additionally led
to the inclusion of Holocaust remembrance in the German educational system, one
that was previously ignored and neglected in the textbooks and curriculum.
Public discourse on the Nazi past further intensified after the German unification
in 1990. German’s reactions towards their nation’s history became more public
and it was evident that many citizens still harbored conflicting views
regarding the emerging attention of Holocaust remembrance. Right-wing extremism
and anti-Semitism have steadily increased since 1990. One survey found that 23
percent of the population are openly anti-Semitic and about 30-40 percent
harbor hidden anti-Semitism (Urban, 2008). In 2005, 48 percent of Germans said
Jews still “talk too much” about the “Shoah” and 65 percent would like to stop
dealing with the years 1933-1945 altogether (Urban, 2008).
Background
of Post-Holocaust Education
With
the inclusion of the Holocaust now in the German educational system, the
attitudes of the younger generations who were not around during that time were
largely influenced by public discourse and felt detached from their nation’s
past. Although the subject of the Holocaust is now present in the history books
of the German school system, the teaching of the subject still lacks
conviction. Scholars argue that the Holocaust is not accurately represented in
the educational system and teachers fail to bridge a connection between the
students and their nation’s past. This lack of substantial Holocaust education
further leads to misunderstanding and misrepresentation about German history and
responsibility in the event, best summarized by scholar Susanne Urban (2008) of
the Jewish Political Studies Review:
The mixture of a lack of knowledge, feeling fed up
with the subject, and the discomfort many students experience toward it leads,
together with the public discourse, to anti-Semitic stereotypes, comparisons
between Israelis and Nazis and between Israel and Nazi Germany, and to the
belief that Jews profit from the Holocaust.
The deficient education and communication
about the Holocaust during the decades of silence has resulted in a skewed
perception of German history by its citizens overtime. Most Germans now believe
there is too much talking and teaching about the Holocaust and want to set a
limit. At the same time, mainstream Germany has produced a fairytale about the
role of society at large during the Nazi period. In addition, the result of
deeply rooted German narratives, media portrayals and myths regarding the
nation’s history is that less than ten percent of Germans believe that their
relatives were members of the Nazi party (Markovits, 2006). This desire to be removed from responsibility
and guilt has played a major role in how the Holocaust has been communicated
within the country. Decades of silence have contributed to the recent rise in
discourse about the subject, but the way in which the Holocaust is communicated
and taught today is still being challenged.
Memory and Learning: The Education System’s Challenge to Create Empathy
Germany
has a unique relationship with nationalism. In “Media and Reinvention of the
Nation,” Silvio Waisbord states that the concept of nationalism originated out
of the disorganization born out of the political and socioeconomic factions of
the post-French revolution era. “Nationalists believed that culture, rather than
economics or politics, keeps societies together” (Waisbord, p. 376). After World
War II and the fall of the Third Reich, Germans were taught to be wary of
nationalistic views, lest they fall victim to the same ideologies of National
Socialism (NS) propagated by the Nazi party. How can a country reestablish its
national image and move forward from past injustices, but still operate with
enough caution to make sure those injustices are never repeated, in what some
scholars call a combination of “memory and learning?” This task has fallen to
educators in Germany, whose primary goal is reflected in the words of Theodor
W. Adorno, the co-founder of critical theory, who stated that the “very first
demand on education is that there not be another Auschwitz” (Meseth and Proske,
2010). Educators in Germany are supposed to focus on a human-rights education
of tolerance and democratic values. Studies show that they are failing.
As
illustrated, anti-Semitism did not end with the liberation of concentration
camps. Young people in Germany feel disconnected from the Holocaust, and much
of that can be traced to teachings in schools. Classroom education offers a
sterile approach and provides students with statistics that focus on histories
of deportations and anti-Jewish legislation. The approach largely lacks pathos,
or an emotional appeal; the most humanizing effect achieved, however, is a
negative one. Young Germans can often only see Jewish people as victims and are
left unable to empathize, identify, or relate to them as a people (Urban,
2008). “Most young Germans are able to understand what the Holocaust was, but
not who it happened to. In most German schools, there is very little talk about
Judaism, Jewish culture and history. Jews only appear in textbooks dealing with
the Crusades and with the Holocaust” (Fleshler, 2012). One of the key issues we
analyze in this paper is simple: there is a growing thy toward the Holocaust and
rising anti-Semitism in Germany. The government has given the education system
the responsibility to foster a moral conscience among students, but an inherent
paradox exists in this framework.
Ethics
in Education and the Negative Consequences of Moralization
In
terms of pedagogical ethics, an educator is required to remain objective and
cannot force feelings of morality and empathy in the classroom. The goal of
education in Germany specifically is two-fold; one side is reflective of German
culture as separate from National Socialism, and the second was created
directly because of it. German students are taught to reach independent
judgments, but they are also expected to find the history of National Socialism
morally reprehensible. A student is supposed to be a free and autonomous being,
a concept deeply rooted in German culture, which creates a contradiction one
study linked to the philosophy of Immanual Kant: “How do I cultivate freedom
through coercion?” (Meseth and Proske, 2010).
Essentially, education should exert emotional influence on the students
without compromising their self-determination.
Both
the conceptual structure and the tactics employed in the classroom are deeply
flawed; when moral empathy is created in the classroom, however, the effect is
no less troubling. Instances in which students achieve “appropriate” moral
reactions to their history lessons do not suggest Germany has effectively
communicated its history. For those students who have been emotionally affected
by classroom teaching on the Holocaust, a new form of trauma has been created,
called “NS-Traumatik.” The word “trauma” is applied to events that leave
psychological scarring, in which the pain of the past shapes the present
experiences of one’s life. “Trauma embeds the past into the present as an
involuntary memory that appears over and over again; it cannot be forgotten”
(Meseth and Proske, 2010). Discussions of trauma and the Holocaust are
naturally appropriated to the experiences of the victims. But experts have
discovered that the term can also be applied to the German conscience, and a
“collective trauma” has now become a part of German’s national identity, encompassing
the guilt and shame of the perpetrators and their descendants instead of the
suffering of the victims.
As
a result of this “NS-Traumatik,” studies are showing that while ignorance about
the Holocaust is a growing problem in German youth, focusing on the Holocaust
too much is contributing to the rise of anti-Semitism in Germany. “Education about
the Nazis often imposes ‘exaggerated moral expectations’ on students, who
respond with an anti-Semitism that is typified by ‘guilt denial’…they feel
accused of acts they had nothing to do with. Some hate the Jews for putting
them in this situation” (Fleshler, 2012). This over-education on the subject is
leading to what is known as “Holocaust fatigue.” Sixty-seven percent of Germans
find it “annoying that Germans are still held responsible for crimes against
the Jews” (Fleshler, 2012).
Questions
of Identity: Individual and National
German
youth are determined to develop a personal identity that is separate from the
Holocaust, and adults are weary of not having had the option themselves. They
are searching for a more normative German national identity. Many German
adolescents feel that the Holocaust is too much of a burden and that it has
been over-represented in public discussion. Moreover, those who seek to return
to a traditional German identity of nationalism attempt to rationalize the
Holocaust as a comparable crime of human history, similar to the American
treatment of Native Americans and African Americans. These individuals have a
predisposition to reject the notion that the Holocaust was unique and set apart
from other crimes against humanity. One study argued that German youth need to
understand the Holocaust as a part of the German collective identity, “because
you can neither rewrite history nor escape the fact that you are shaped by your
social and cultural background” (Meseth and Proske, 2010).
The creation and maintenance of a
national identity is central to discussions about communication in German, but
some scholars argue that focusing on national identity is also a key to
reducing anti-Semitism. Holocaust education focuses too much on the concentration
camps through which Jews were forced to suffer and not enough on their culture
and identities outside of the Holocaust.
“Of course they need to know
about Dachau and the Kristallnacht. The problem is that, especially for young
people, teenagers, the atrocities are hard to imagine, they seem unreal. But
they can easily learn about those who lived down the street, around the corner”
(Fleshler, 2012). If education stopped portraying Jews as an “other” and as
victims of German cruelty, then students would be able to understand Jewish
culture, especially in Germany, as a shared national identity.
While
there are many debates on how to improve holocaust education in Germany, some
countries believe it should be stopped altogether. In Britain, Lord Baker of
Dorking, who spent three years as Margaret Thatcher’s education secretary, has
argued that the teaching of Holocaust should be banned in British schools,
arguing that it causes British students to think “less favorably” of modern
Germans (Rowley, 2011). He argues that British students should learn British
history, not German. But experts from the Holocaust Centre argued that the
Holocaust was a European-wide crime, suggesting that the Germans alone cannot
be held responsible. Despite this argument, the Holocaust still remains central
to German national identity.
Case Studies in Education
Case Study 1,
Ineffective:
Teachers
used the contemporary or modern communication means to teach students about the
issue and its moralities. Teachers used recorded an episode called “Eyewitness”
displayed in history lessons discussing the topic entitled “(Everyday) Life in
Nazi.” Each video brings a witness who was involved in Holocaust during the Holocaust
to tell the story from his or her perspective. The pedagogical aim of these
videos was “to expose student to authentic and multi-perspective approaches to
NS as personally remembered history” ( Meseth and Proske, 2010, p. 209). Educators hoped that this narrative-style
teaching approach would succeed in transmitting the aspired knowledge and
values of the holocaust. This case shows the following:
1. The
video did not add to moral implications, as it did not provide symbolic
information of the lessons.
2. Students’
unpredictable reactions to the videos have not been dealt with and have not
been connected to the moral side of the testimonials.
3. The
students focused more on the details of the narrative itself, from their perspective,
while the teacher concentrated on his overall plan that preceded the lesson.
These findings
indicate that this approach did not help to foster mutual dialogue between the
students and the teacher about the moralities and values of the Holocaust.
Therefore this approach could be classified as an “under-morality approach.”
Case Study 2,
Ineffective:
Students
were given excerpts from Hitler’s Mein
Kampf in the hopes that they would underline
the immoralities and hate speech used by Hitler. However, the communication between
the teacher and the students was disconnected” (Meseth and Proske , 2010, pp.210-113).
This case shows the following:
1. The
teacher did not appreciate the moral evaluation of the students regarding the
excerpt from Hitler’s Mein Kampf and
considered the way they expressed their view of the text as under-moral.
2. The
teacher did not respect the students’ freedom to portray the moral side of
Hitler’s Mein Kampf.
3. He
went on over- moralization of the topic in order to make them grasp the
content.
The
over-moralization of the Holocaust without positive interaction between both
sides of the education process is counter-productive. This approach is top-down,
which does not allow full participation and expression of opinion from the
students’ side. This led to limiting the freedom of expression of the students,
leading to frustration and loss of interest in the topic.
Case Study 3, Moderately Effective:
Students
dealt with material and literature in addition to slideshows on the
concentration camps. The teacher delved deeper into the students’ spontaneous
and side comments, while the students expressed their opinion more freely
(Meseth and Proske, 2010). In this case, the teacher responded to under-moralization
without over-moralization. Instead of going through a long lesson on the
subject, he asked the students to visit the concentration camps memorial.
Case Study 4,
Effective:
Documentary films were introduced to the
classroom, leading a wide discussion and debate among students that even
touched the unresolved problems and did not need any direct instruction. This
method proved to be the most successful way of teaching the Holocaust in class,
as it allowed both teacher and students to play an equal role. There was no
superiority in this model from the teacher’s side and both the teacher and
students reached a natural conclusion. The discussion was open and teacher did
not put any restrictions or limitation for the provided materials on the topic.
Both
education and communication can help educate young Germans about the Holocaust
and shape their point of view if both are used strategically. Out of the
understandings that communication has the ability to reach society if the power
relationships are managed well by other power components, like the education
institution, as Manuel Castells (2009) illustrates: “Power relationships can be
altered by social actors aiming for social change by influencing the public
mind and building consent. Power relationships are constructed in a complex
interaction between multiple spheres of social practices” (p 3).
Using
different means of communication like videos, documentaries, materials and
literature in addition to slideshows on the concentration camps that reflect
the understanding of the importance of culture can make real change to the societal
attitude regarding the Holocaust (Waisbord, 2004). The problem was created by the political
elite; however, it necessitates a cultural solution that builds new national
and cultural identity. This requires multi-institutional involvement in the
process, especially ones that can reach vast masses, like education and mass
media. Media, however, have contributed to negative feelings toward the
Holocausr. “There are a reasonable number of students who are against Holocaust
remembrance, which exceed those from the previous generations” (Driel, 2010,
pp.127-128). They perceived the Holocaust as a burden, that prevents
"normal" German national identity, and the media pay too much
attention to the issue.
Waisbord
concludes that “ putting the media in the service of the nation-building did not
always result in the cultural unification “This has been emphasized by Urban
(2005) “Some Germans think the idea that Jews are still receiving money from
Europe and Germany as a compensation of the Holocaust till now is
inappropriate.”
Waisbord
offers a comprehensive discussion on the creation of a national identity. He
asks how a people come to share the same national culture and identity, and he
says that there are two basic answers to this question. The first is that
political centralization is crucial in developing a national identity; in this
process, nations aim to eliminate differences and impose one culture. The
second argues that centralization is not necessary in forming national identity
and suggests that nationalism preceded political centralization (Waisbord 376).
Ultimately, regardless of which view one adopts in determining what creates
nationalism or national identity, Waisbord argues that the mass media have a
prominent effect on creating culture. In the case of Holocaust remembrance and
education in Germany, this is exactly what has happened.
Media and National Identity: Reinvention of the Nation
The
concept of reinvention of the nation and its history through the media is
crucial for understanding the representation of the Holocaust in today’s
Germany. Waisbord covers some important aspects of this concept. The author
states that “the power of the media lies in making national feelings normal on
an everyday basis” (Waisbord, 2004, p. 386). He points out that “in devoting attention
to historical events, selecting news frames, or producing content to represent
national sentiments, the media shape the cultural repertoire used to define
nationhood” (Waisbord, 2004, p. 386).
Thus, media have a significant influence on constructing public discourse on
the cultural and historical issues. Media and education are the ways to store
the past and reconstruct or reinvent it.
Nations appeal to a sense of stored memories passed
from generation to generation. They are based on the idea of a historical
continuity between past and present. To accomplish this, nations need
institutions that permanently remind members of their commonality. Like educational
systems, official calendars, and state rituals, the media store cultural
elements that come to define nationhood.
(Waisbord, 2004, p. 387)
Waisbord
summarizes his research on the subject by saying that “the media are one of
those institutions that contribute to maintaining feelings of national
membership... Media can equally act as a source of exclusion and murder in the
name of the nation or as an ally of civic patriotism. Both possibilities are
similarly viable, particularly in societies where patriotism is a contested,
contradictory notion used to justify aggression and compassion, war and democracy.” (Waisbord, 2004, p. 387)
Waisbord's
findings suggest several key implications for our case. First, the
communication power of the media to shape the culture by selecting and framing certain
information may lead to the re-creation or re-construction of the history of a
nation. Therefore, any regular distortion or bias in the media coverage of the Holocaust
will inevitably lead to the distorted image of the nation and its history,
nationally and internationally. Also, we need to take into consideration the
fact that a strong national identity is only built when it is done on an
everyday basis and is strongly embedded into regular public discourses.
The
issue of mass media products distorting the information about the Holocaust is
becoming more and more sensitive and acute. Professor Alejandro Baer explains this
occurrence in “Consuming history and memory through mass media products:” “The
debate on the representation of the history and memory of the Holocaust – the
paradigmatic example of limitations and imperatives to representational
practice – has become a contemporary battlefield regarding the legitimacy and propriety
of mass media products” (Baer, 2001). The concept of representing the past
through the ‘culture industry’ was introduced by the Frankfurt School.
Baer
mentions several main critics and optimists of this concept. Critics (Adorno,
Hartman, Jameson) are concerned with the impact of TV dramas and Hollywood
films on public memory. They are worried that these films resemble advertising
or are “alienated from personal and active recollection, falling prey to the
effects of ‘information sickness’ in a world turned into a vast accumulation of
images, which have lost their referential value” (Baer, 2001). The optimists
argue that “an inevitable vulgarization was always preferable to indifference
and silence, and the culture industry did awaken an interest in people who were
previously ignorant of many important historical events.” He describes the ways
in which Holocaust is represented in the media. The NBC television miniseries
Holocaust (1979) has been fervently criticized and called “an example of
obscene trivialization of the Holocaust in popular culture,” especially by
survivors. Another controversial media product on the Holocaust was Art Spiegelman’s comic book Maus: A Survivor’s Tale.
“First censored as a superficial and tasteless
American product, it was belatedly considered by the audience and some critics to be even more authentic and convincing
than those ‘factual’ projects which aimed to represent the suffering of the
Holocaust survivors.”
Among some of
the famous examples of the Holocaust representation in media, Baer mentions
Roberto Benigni’s tragic-comic Holocaust fable, Life is Beautiful, and the Hollywood-style dramatization of the
Jewish genocide Schindler’s List.
“Schindler’s List has also shown that the culture
industry is capable of preserving (or reintroducing) the events of the
Holocaust in the collective memory and historical consciousness of globalized audiences Moreover, the
film was very effective in defining the shape and dominant imagery of that
memory.” (Loshitzky, 1997).
This film is an
example of the new memory and symbols constructed by the media. Its original
soundtrack, for instance, is used in various Holocaust commemoration ceremonies
all over the world. There are also three documentary films produced by the
Shoah Foundation – Survivors
of
the Holocaust (1996), The Lost Children of Berlin (1997), and the Academy Award-winning
film The Last Days (1998). “All of them weave together survivor
testimonies with archival footage, personal photographs and artifacts, which is
a well-established documentary film practice. But montage, composition of images
and choices of characters emphasize identification, drama and explicitness.”
Baer concludes his overview by stating
that, in contemporary society, “mass media, history and memory do not exist
within neatly defined boundaries.” They
overlap and influence each other. Instead of debating about truth or falsehood
of the history represented in the media, he recommends focusing on analyzing
their “far-reaching impact on the historical knowledge and memorial imagery of
an increasingly globalized public.”
Evolution of Research
When we first began this project, we wanted to study social media's role in national imaging. As research evolves, we narrowed our study to analyze post-holocaust communication in Germany, focusing on media and education, and its affect on German National Identity.
The following posts will summarize our findings.
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