| Termin:
20 Uhr: Mobi-Veranstaltung zu den Aktionen zum 13.2. im AZ Conni
/ Dresden
Showcase Dresden
- Anti-Americanism and Historical Memory in Germany
a funny report from last year's activities
[Originally written February 14, 2005.]
(...)
Shortly after my arrival in Dresden, I find myself at a Kundgebung—the
opening address of a day of counter-protest against the Nazi presence.
The central podium is bedecked with messages that one only informed
by the American media might hardly expect to find in Europe, especially
not in Germany. “Attack the anti-American consensus!”
“Solidarity with Israel.” Among the five or so hundred
demonstrators assembled before the new synagogue—the old
one was burned by the Dresdners themselves on the Night of Broken
Glass in 1938—several flags flutter in the relatively strong
wind. The Hammer and Sickle is one of them. So is the battle flag
of the Royal Air Force. So is Old Glory. For these people, the
Allies were unquestionably liberators, completely righteous and
justified in whatever means were necessary to smash Fascism. Someone
had explained to me that some German leftists support America
and Israel because they believe that anti-Americanism is most
often fuelled by anti-Zionism, which is in turn most often only
the same old anti-Semitism with a different name. For them, there
might have been arguments against Zionism, but Auschwitz proved
them all wrong. Never again Germany. No tears for Krauts, they
chant, in English.
As I listen to a speech about what to do if I get beat up by
the police, thinking “What have I got myself into?”,
a sudden and furious roar tears through the words coming from
the loudspeaker. A pair of skinheads had had the bad luck of finding
themselves in the wrong part of town, and while trying to find
their own ilk on foot, they happened upon our demonstration. Within
seconds, probably a hundred of the more “spirited”
among us tore off down the street after the two of them. Within
seconds, they disappeared down a side street. A few seconds more
and they were joined by a speeding procession of police vans,
each filled to bursting with decidedly unhumorous looking armored
police. I don’t know what happened. Sirens, phalanxes of
riot police running at full sprint and ambulances roaring by proved
to be a basic part of Dresden’s atmosphere that chilly afternoon.
Shortly, the voice on the loudspeaker wishes us good luck, and
the crowd sets off together. Within five minutes walk we find
ourselves on the Altmarkt—the Old Market—, where the
SS had burned thousands of bodies in the wake of the 1945 attack.
Another roar tears through the crowd. Suddenly I am running, but
I don’t know where to. One of my compatriots tells me we
should wait where we are. He wants a cheeseburger. He says there
will be plenty of action later. He was right.
Within a few minutes, the anti-Fascist mob reappears from a different
direction than they had disappeared to. A large white charter
bus appears in front of us. “It’s full of Faschos!”
my new friend shouts. Another roar. People come running from all
directions. Suddenly, trash cans start hurdling through the air,
striking the side of the bus and spilling their contents all over
the street. The Nazis inside try to remain cool. Some of them
can’t, and they start yelling at us through the glass. The
glass silently restrains their bullshit. It was at this moment
that I looked to my left, where I saw a twentysomething German
pull something out of his backpack and unfurl it. He holds the
flag of Israel wide across his chest, displaying it to the Nazis
in the bus. Then the battle-cry, shouted to the point of straining
and soon joined by many nearby. “LANG…LEBE…IS-RA-EL!”
Long live Israel. Given the grim historical context, something
about what was happening before me—fear, grief, guilt, and
hate—is simply impossible to explain. Although I could attempt
to impose words on it, I will simply say that I will never forget
the way I felt at this moment.
It is not long before the police arrive. They line up in front
of the bus. They charge at us, and we take to flight across the
Altmarkt. It was only the first such occurrence of the day. Though
many of the Antifa later complained that the police spent the
entire day protecting the Nazis, it is clear that they were there
only to prevent violence of any kind. It is also clear that were
they not there in such great numbers there surely would have been
violence. Skinheads do not seem to me to be the most likely people
to react magnanimously when struck with flying beer bottles and
trash.
From there I followed as my compatriots tried to find a way to
where the Nazi march would begin. Not that they didn’t know
where it was, just that the police proved quite adept at spotting
people likely to hurl instigative epithets—or solid objects—at
the Nazis. The bizarre, seemingly almost Brownian, fluctuations
of police barricades were a constant feature. One might find a
way blocked at the first attempt, then hear by word of mouth fifteen
minutes later that the "Bullen"—the equivalent
of "pigs"—had mysteriously disappeared. We could
hear vague, angry-sounding gibberish being shouted over a loudspeaker,
but it took us a while to find an open route. We eventually found
ourselves on the terrace of the Zwinger, a baroque pleasure palace
nearly destroyed during the war and then faithfully restored,
only to suffer serious damage again when the Elbe flooded in 2002.
From this vantage point we observed the Nazis’ own Kundgebung,
but from a distance. Our further progress was blocked by the police.
After a few minutes and a sombre playing of Wagner’s Twilight
of the Gods, the Nazis began to march. The police again mysteriously
disappeared. We made our way towards the group. It was at this
point that, if I had had any doubts about how much my companions
hated these people, they were quickly dispelled. They all knew
a series of chants designed to irritate the Nazis as much as possible,
including shouting, in English, “Bomber Harris do it again!”,
in reference to the British commander of the RAF bomber force.
I followed them up and down the line as they hurled insult after
insult at everyone alike. Hundreds of others join in. I just take
photographs nearby. Some skinheads notice us while I’m taking
a picture of him. One waves at me, then points and alerts his
friends. I get stared down by a bunch of them. They might have
been trying to remember what I look like so they could find me
later on. The police stand in an imposing line between us and
the Nazis. They simply look on, some apparently amused, others
by no means whatsoever.
Most interesting about this episode was the relative scarcity
of skinheads. The demonstrators looked like completely normal
people, many of them stylishly dressed teenagers. I even saw a
young mother pushing a stroller. Only their banners gave them
away. “Dresden: the German Hiroshima.” This particular
banner went further: “And the perpetrators keep bombing:
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran…” At the head of the column
of fluttering, black mourning flags and symbols of the National
Democratic Party we find the eye of the storm, a rather well-dressed
middle-aged man named Christian Worch. Known as the organizer
of the “Free Comradeships” that are the backbone of
the neo-Fascist movement, the only thing that would give him away,
apart from his presence there, is the throng of rather veteran-looking
skinheads that form his inner circle. He listens to what appear
to be reports from his top lieutenants, and otherwise watches
the scene emotionless. But this moment is a great accomplishment
for him. The size and influence of the Comradeships in Saxony
helped organize the National Democratic Party’s seizure
of twelve seats in the Saxon state parliament in September. They
do almost as well in Brandenburg and Saarland, and are expected
to make a showing in the upcoming elections in Schleswig-Holstein
as well. But that’s all in the future. As for now, Worch
and the NPD have organized the largest radical Right demonstration
since 1945.
A police officer tells us to scram before it gets “hot.”
After all, the Antifa turnout was somewhat disappointing. The
Nazis outnumber them at least five to one. We take the officer’s
advice, for the moment. Cell phone conversations with other Antifa
tell us that we should cross the river to find another open access
to the long train of Nazis that has already set into motion. As
we cross, we hear loud music echoing through the chasm formed
by the Elbe’s wide bed. More Wagner. The Flight of the Valkyries.
Slightly eerie. We can see that the procession of Nazis already
stretches across a good slice of western Dresden and all the way
across one of the long river bridges to the New City in the North.
When we arrive there, we find the police already waiting for us.
We can’t even get within a half-mile of the march. This
doesn’t stop throngs of people from lining up in front of
the police and singing their insulting songs at the Nazis who
probably can’t even hear them over their own blasting loud
Germanic music. The police charge the crowd, it disperses like
a flock of birds. Then back again. Another charge, really just
bluster. I find myself running several times. At one point, the
police charge breaks a raucous chorus of “You lost the war,
you lost the war.” I run, only to hear the song break out
again while I still think I’m being chased. These people
are relentless. They run right back to where they were before,
singing again without missing a beat. My compatriots decide it
would be best to cross the river again and find a place to shout
at the Nazis as they cross the river again.
Back in the old city again, we find ourselves in front of the
rebuilt Frauenkirche. Thousands of older people are gathered there,
some with candles, some praying. As we come near the crowd, several
police approach us and announce that we are being searched. Terror
seizes me. I have a rather large Swiss Army knife in my pocket.
I forgot I had it. I don’t know whether they’ll take
it away or arrest me. Just as they start to search me, their radios
all start to buzz. They immediately bolt into the crowd. Less
than a minute later, they re-emerge, indelicately dragging with
them four leftist demonstrators. One of them has a banner reading
“No Tears for Krauts.” Even the girl among them is
not spared the rough handling. A female officer drags her out
of the crowd in a headlock. One guy gets his face ground into
the cobblestone by two large policemen. One of them grunts at
the kid: “No placards!” One of my friends, Robert,
calls to them: “Name! Name!” The suspects call out
their names. Robert gets on the phone immediately, calling “Red
Help,” which provides legal assistance for demonstrators
who get mishandled by the police. A policeman sees us there. “You’re
still here? Raus! You look left-wing.” We start walking.
We come across the Elbufer just in time to find the end of the
Nazi procession crossing back to their starting point. Hundreds
of people are standing on the stairs, shouting at them. The British
and American flags appear again. So do the slogans. Bomber Harris,
do it again. The Nazis hold their ending speech. They say there
were 8000 of them. I think there might have been between six and
seven. The city itself later said five, only three of which marched,
but they have as much reason to downplay the number as the Nazis
do to exaggerate it. In any case, this demonstration, especially
in relatively democratically inexperienced East Germany, is not
a good sign.
On our way out we start hearing random reports of Nazis on the
hunt for their erstwhile hecklers after the rally disperses. I
never saw it myself, and had an instinct to doubt it for some
reason, but everyone told me it’s not uncommon. We begin
walking, and encounter an equally large demonstration, this one
against the radical Right. We decide to merge with it just to
be safe. It’s headed for our car, in any case. Along the
route, Robert sees a Dresdner woman, identifiable by the white
rose on her lapel—the acknowledged symbol for peace and
tolerance. He asks her, rather confrontationally: “Where
were you all day?” “At home,” she says. “There
are thousands of Nazis all over this city, why don’t you
Dresdners do anything about it?” She doesn’t know
anything about any Nazis. She hadn’t heard. Sixty years
later and people still think there are no Nazis in their town.
We reach the car, unwilling to risk sticking around. Apparently
even more Nazis are out looking for a fight because one of their
busses got trashed, and since we apparently look like leftists,
my more experienced companions think it’s not a good idea
to stay. All that’s left of the day is the candlelight vigils
and the church services. By this point, the center of Dresden
is filled with families from all over the country. The US Ambassador
is there. So is the British, and the Russian. The portion of the
event more extensively photographed by the press went off without
a hitch, I later heard. On the Altmarkt, Dresdners had laid out
a banner on the ground, with a message spelled out in candles.
It read “Diese Stadt hat Nazis satt.” This can mean
two things. First, it could mean that the city has had enough
of Nazis. It could also mean that Dresden is filled with Nazis.
I don’t know which is more true.
Quelle:
uglyantiamerican.blogspot.com
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