The Asian Age

Fascism not re-emerging, claims eminent historian

Professor Ian Kershaw — the acclaimed biographer of Hitler — says Europe is not slipping into tunnel of hate that it did in 1930s

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Europe is not slipping into the same dark tunnel of hate and nationalis­m that it did in the 1930s, one of the continent’s leading historians told AFP.

Despite the rise of populist and extreme rightwing parties across the continent, Professor Ian Kershaw — the acclaimed biographer of Hitler — insisted that drawing parallels with the rise of fascism was off the mark.

In fact, it is thanks to a “liberal and peaceful” Germany, which unlike some of its neighbours, is “very clear-eyed about its past”, that Europe is far more able to resist “a slide into barbarism”, he argued.

However, the historian, whose new book To Hell and Back spans the period from World War I to the outbreak of the Cold War, warned that “democracy has deteriorat­ed on every level across the continent since 2014, and not just with (the return of a belligeren­t, authoritar­ian) Russia.

“This was a very upsetting book to write in so many ways,” he added.

“Like everyone else I am worried about what is happening now,” said the British academic, whose two-part biography of Hitler, Hubris and Nemesis, was a huge internatio­nal bestseller.

“Brexit, the rise of the far right, xenophobia and racism... are all extremely worrying to say the least, and naturally make one think back to pre-war period,” he said.

“But I don’t think we are returning to the dark ages of the 1930s because there are big difference­s as well as superficia­l similariti­es,” Kershaw insisted.

The biggest difference between then and now, he said, was that Germany is now a rich and stable beacon of social democratic values rather than an economic basket case “looking for revenge for (the Treaty of) Versailles. It is now probably the most pacific nation in the whole of Europe,” he said.

“Second, we now have a continent of democracie­s, admittedly flaky in parts when you look at Hungary and Poland,” Kershaw said. “While in the 1930s there were lots of authoritar­ian states and democracy was very much a contested system.”

Europe has also experience­d a major shift from “militarist­ic to civilians societies. Just look at the balance between military and social welfare spending of then and now,” he added.

And despite its current travails, Kershaw credited the EU with keeping the peace. “For all its weaknesses, the EU has got Europeans working through cooperatio­n and talking rather than immediatel­y resorting to threats,” he said.

“Those patterns of doing things through negotiatio­n developed by the EU have put us in a better place to withstand the sort of pressures Europe experience­d in the 1930s,” Kershaw added.

To Hell and Back — which the New York Times declared “should be required reading in every chanceller­y” — is the first of two books in which Kershaw will plot the history of Europe to the present day.

The historian, who is revered in Germany, said that the new populism “is different to that of the 1930s but of course it has echoes of it... with antipathy towards outsiders now directed at Islam and migrants arriving from beyond Europe”.

The big shift towards identity politics also made it easier to blame a faraway Brussels “for problems whose roots are much closer to home”, he argued.

Although personally “appalled” by Brexit, having voted to remain in Europe, the author said Britain was never emotionall­y committed to the concept.

“Britain joined in 1973 purely out of economic self-interest, there was no idealism at all involved. Trade with the Commonweal­th countries (of its former empire) had collapsed and we needed Europe to essentiall­y rescue Britain, which it did.

“Germans for their part cannot see why the British are so hung up on sovereignt­y given it lost its (own) completely in the defeat of 1945 and recovered through pooling its sovereignt­y,” Kershaw said.

He said the second, as yet untitled, instalment of his overview of Europe’s century is likely to be published in 2018.

 ??  ?? British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin at the Yalta Conference in February 1945.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin at the Yalta Conference in February 1945.
 ??  ?? Italy’s Fascist strongman Benito Mussolini with Germany’s Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler
Italy’s Fascist strongman Benito Mussolini with Germany’s Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler

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