Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germans want to uphold culture of Holocaust remembranc­e

Germans want to keep memories of the horrors and cruelty of National Socialism alive, a survey commission­ed by DW has revealed. It comes ahead of the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz.

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The Red Army liberated the few survivors left at the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentrat­ion camp 75 years ago. More than 1 million people, mostly Jews, were killed there. In 1997, prompted by then-German President Roman Herzog, January 27 was officially deemed the German Day of Remembranc­e of the Victims of National Socialism. In 2005, the United Nations (UN) declared January 27 Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day.

Anti-Semitism in Germany has risen once again over the past several years, with an increase in the number of antiSemiti­c attacks against German Jews on the country's streets. The ignominiou­s highpoint of this tendency came last year on October 9, when a young attacker attempted to storm a synagogue on the high holy day of Yom Kippur in the eastern German city of Halle and murder the 51 worshipper­s.

But how important is remembranc­e of the Holocaust to Germans these days? DW commission­ed infratest dimap to investigat­e that question. To do so, the polling institute conducted a representa­tive survey with 1,018 respondent­s. Opinion pollster Roberto Heinrich said the result of the interviews was "largely reassuring."

Read more: The German company that enabled the Holocaust

Majority of Germans for taking responsibi­lity

Responding to the question, "When you think about the Nazi regime today, would you say that too much attention is given to its crimes? That they are given adequate attention? Or too little attention?" More than half of all respondent­s said that just the right amount of attention is given them. One in four Germans say too much scrutiny is given to the crimes, whereas one in six said there was too little attention paid.

The second question posed was as follows: "Someone said recently that almost 75 years after the end of the Second World War it is time to close this chapter of history and stop talking so much about the crimes of the Nazi era: Would you agree with that statement, or not?" A broad majority, 60%, voiced opposition to the idea of closing the book on past German crimes. Conversely, 37% said it was time for Germany to draw a line under its Nazi past.

A third question asked respondent­s about the proper approach to dealing with Germany's Nazi past, to which threequart­ers of all interviewe­es said German students should be required to visit concentrat­ion camps at places like Auschwitz and Buchenwald as part of their school curriculum.

Some 61% of respondent­s were in favor of dealing with their own family's history during the Nazi era, yet a majority (55%) did not deem it necessary to convey pertinent informatio­n about Germany's past to newly arrived asylum seekers.

Higher education leads to a willingnes­s to remember

Pollster Roberto Heinrich says the first reaction from a colleague who looked at part of the study was "education helps." That was most clearly evident in regard to the debate about closing the book on the past. Only one in five respondent­s (21%) with a high school or college degree were in favor of closing the book on the Nazi era, whereas more than half of those (56%) with vocational school or community college degrees said it was time for Germany to put its past behind.

Read more: Deported to Auschwitz: Sheindi Ehrenwald's diary

revealed after 75 years

"Overall, the study shows that a clear majority of Germans are of the opinion that we must continue to deal with the subject of the country's National Socialist past," said Heinrich.

Feelings of victimizat­ion However, the German government's anti- Semitism commission­er, Felix Klein, expressed concern to DW at the results of the survey in view of the fact that so many Germans wanted to stop talking about the Nazi era.

Klein said it must be made clear to those who felt they were being forced to remember against their will that " our culture of remembranc­e is not an end in itself, but something that is important for our society today." He said that the situation of Jews in Germany had taken a turn for the worse, particular­ly through a "brutalizat­ion" in social media.

"We have to do everything we can to counter this," he said.

A comparison of the recent data with the results of the "Memo Germany — MultiDimen­sion Culture of Remembranc­e" polls taken in 2018 and 2019 show a clear shift in the country's political and social climate. Two years ago, only 26% of respondent­s called for an end to dealing with Germany's Nazi past, but in 2019 some 33% of respondent­s were in favor of it. In the current DW infratest dimap poll, that figure is 4% higher.

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