The Citizen (Gauteng)

Germany fixes Nazi-era laws

DE-NAZIFICATI­ON: PARLIAMENT TO WIPE SLATE CLEAN There are 29 legal texts using wording introduced when Hitler was in power.

- Berlin

Germany is moving to rid itself of a cluster of laws introduced by the Nazis still lingering on its books 75 years after World War II. There are 29 German legal or regulatory texts that still use wording introduced when Hitler was in power, according to Felix Klein, the government’s point man for fighting anti-Semitism.

Some of them have “a very clear anti-Semitic background”, Klein said.

Now, with the support of several parties in the Bundestag lower house of parliament, as well as Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, Klein wants to wipe the slate clean – preferably before the end of the current term in September.

But the question remains whether to introduce a single law to reform all the texts at once, or to approach them one by one.

Germany has already reformed several Nazi-era laws over the years, including the infamous Paragraph 175 that criminalis­ed sex between men and was repealed in 1994.

More recently, a

1933 ban on medical practition­ers “advertisin­g” that they carry out pregnancy terminatio­ns was partially scrapped in 2019.

But some pertinent examples remain, including a law on altering names introduced by Nazi interior minister Wilhelm Frick in 1938. From January 1939, a change to the law forced Jewish people to add the names “Sara” or “Israel” to their first names if they did not have a name that was considered typically Jewish.

The law “played a huge role in the exclusion and disenfranc­hisement of Jews”, said Thorsten Frei, deputy leader of the conservati­ve CDU party’s parliament­ary group.

The section on Jewish names was scrapped by the Allies immediatel­y after World War II, but the remaining text from 1938 was incorporat­ed into federal law in 1954. The remaining parts of the law, which deal with issues such as the right to change one’s name, are still “written as though the Third Reich still existed”, Klein points out.

Terms such as “German Reich”, “Reich government” and “Reich interior minister” are used, he said.

“It is absolutely unacceptab­le that Nazi language should continue to shape our federal law in 2021,” Social Democratic Party politician Helge Lindh told AFP.

“It is high time to send a clear signal with this long overdue form of denazifica­tion.”

The law should also be cleaned up so it applies to all foreign nationals living in Germany, not just Germans, Lindh urged. –

Laws still written as if Third Reich still existed

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