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NAZIS

Video game swastikas stir unease in Germany

The first video game to depict Germany's 1933-45 Nazi era uncensored, showing the swastika and Adolf Hitler, has stirred up debate over whether it's an advance for artistic freedom or a new danger of radicalization.

Video game swastikas stir unease in Germany
Video gamers at Gamecom's visitor day

“Through the Darkest of Times” was presented this week at Gamescom, Europe's biggest trade fair for interactive games and entertainment.

Players slip into the boots of members of the “Red Orchestra”, a network of groups who resisted the Nazis before and during World War II with support from the Soviet Union.

In previous games the black swastika on a white-and-red background was replaced with other symbols like triangles, to comply with a German law that generally bans such “anti-constitutional” symbols.

The German edition of last year's alternative-history blockbuster “Wolfenstein 2” had renamed Hitler and sheared off his signature moustache.

But now regulations have eased and the virtual Nazis wear their authentic symbol on their armbands, and their leader's facial hair and name have been reinstated.

“Developers used to be afraid to say what they were talking about, they just made up fantasies,” said Jörg Friedrich, one of the developers of the new game.

“Hitler wasn't named Hitler but Heiler and had no moustache, there were no more Jews…That's problematic, because an entire facet of history has simply been hushed up.”

 'Artistic freedom'

Since early August, the taboo has been broken in Germany.

Pressure from publishers and video game players finally convinced Germany's entertainment software self-regulation body USK to grant the art form the same freedoms afforded to cinema or theatre.

“For the first time, games that take a critical look at the events of the past can be granted approval” in the name of “artistic freedom,” USK director Elisabeth Secker said.

A 1998 court ruling had blocked video games from using Nazi symbols, with judges fearing at the time that children “will grow up with these symbols and insignia and grow accustomed to them”.

Gamers have long chafed at the restrictions, which have often meant a different experience for German players than for those abroad.

“It's a past that we don't necessarily have to hide, it can also be a warning,” said Gamescom visitor Michael Schiessl.

Others argue that the swastika should remain taboo, fearing real-world consequences.

“We shouldn't play with swastikas,” Family Affairs Minister Franziska Giffey told the Funke newspaper group on Thursday.

Germans above all must “always be conscious of their particular historical responsibility, even today”, she added.

Stefan Mannes, who runs an online information portal on the Third Reich named “The Future Needs Remembrance”, was blunter.

He asked how one could explain to youths who are exposed to swastikas in video games “that they'll be prosecuted if they spray one on a wall?”

“One doesn't become a Nazi just by seeing a swastika,” countered Klaus-Peter Sick, a historian at Berlin's Marc Bloch Centre, a Franco-German social sciences research centre.

“Players are intelligent and know how to tell the difference” between fiction and reality, he added.

'No long wants to return'

What's more, the USK has only slightly loosened its rules.

There will be no general permission for Nazi signs, but case-by-case decisions on whether their use is “socially appropriate”.

Other art forms have already blazed a trail in recent years, with many movies for the first time daring to satirise the dictator.

Films like “My Führer: The Really Truest Truth about Adolf Hitler” (2007), “Heil: A Neo-Nazi farce” (2015) and “Look Who's Back” (2015), based on the best-selling novel of the same name, have packed cinemas.

And a new edition of Hitler's “Mein Kampf” – accompanied with reams of historical annotations – was published in 2016.

On the other hand, concern is growing over a resurgent and newly emboldened right-wing extremist and anti-immigration movement.

Leading figures of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party have attacked Germany's culture of remembrance of Nazi crimes and even sought to rehabilitate its soldiers of the two world wars.

Historian Sick nonetheless sees the video gaming move as another sign of “normalization” in Germany's relationship with its dark past.

“This society is able to read 'Mein Kampf' without becoming nostalgic. The dedicated Nazis are dead,” he argued.

“It's a generational question: society has transformed itself and is now far from this period to which it no longer wants to return.”

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NAZIS

German justice contaminated by Nazis in post-war years

Germany's justice system was still filled with former Nazis well into the 1970s, as the Cold War coloured efforts to root out fascists, according a damning official inquiry presented Thursday.

Professors Friedrich Kießling and Christoph Safferling present their report
Professors Friedrich Kießling and Christoph Safferling present their report "State Security in the Cold War". Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Uwe Anspach

In the 600-page collection of findings entitled “State Security in the Cold War”, historian Friedrich Kiessling and legal scholar Christoph Safferling focused on the period from the early 1950s until 1974.

Their research found that between 1953 and 1959, around three in four top officials at the federal prosecutor’s office, which commissioned the report, had belonged to the Nazi party.

More than 80 percent had worked in Adolf Hitler’s justice apparatus, and it would take until 1972 before they were no longer in the majority.

“On the face of it they were highly competent lawyers… but that came against the backdrop of the death sentences and race laws in which they were involved,” said Margaretha Sudhof, state secretary at the justice ministry, unveiling the report.

“These are disturbing contradictions to which our country has long remained blind.”

‘Combat mission’

It was not until 1992, two years after Germany’s national reunification, that the last prosecutor with a fascist background left the office.

“There was no break, let alone a conscious break, with the Nazi past” at the federal prosecutor’s office, the authors concluded, stressing “the great and long continuity” of the functions held and “the high number” of officials involved in Hitler’s regime.

Chief federal prosecutor Peter Frank commissioned the study in 2017. The federal prosecutor’s office is one of Germany’s most powerful institutions, handling the most serious national security cases including those involving terrorism and espionage.

With more than 100 prosecutors, it is “the central actor in the fight against terror,” the report authors said, underlining its growing role in the decades since the September 11th, 2001 attacks in the United States.

The researchers were given unfettered access to hundreds of files labelled classified after the war, and found that rooting out alleged communists was often prioritised over other threats, including from the far right.

“In the 1950s the federal prosecutor’s office had a combat mission – not a legal but a political one: to pursue all the communists in the country,” the daily Süddeutsche Zeitung said in a summary of the report.

‘Recycling’ Nazis

The fact that West Germany widely used former officials from the Nazi regime in its post-war administration had long been known.

For example, Hans Globke served as chief of staff and a trusted confidant to former conservative West German chancellor Konrad Adenauer between 1953 and 1963 and was responsible for recruitment to top posts.

However, Globke had also been a senior civil servant in the Nazi-era interior ministry and was involved in the drafting of the 1935 Nuremberg race laws that imposed the first dramatic restrictions on Jews.

In recent years, systematic digging into the past of key ministries and institutions has unearthed a troubling and previously hidden degree of “recycling” of Third Reich officials in the post-war decades.

A 2016 government report revealed that in 1957, more than a decade after the war ended, around 77 percent of senior officials at the justice ministry had been members of the Nazi party. That study, also carried out by Safferling, revealed that the number of former Nazis at the ministry did not decline after the fall of the regime but actually grew in the 1950s.

Part of the justification was cynical pragmatism: the new republic needed experienced civil servants to establish the West German justice system. Furthermore, the priorities of the Allies who won the war and “liberated” the country from the Nazis were quickly turned upside down in the Cold War context.

After seeking to de-Nazify West Germany after 1945, the aim quickly shifted to building a capitalist bulwark against the communist threat. That approach often meant turning a blind eye to Germans’ previous involvement in the Third Reich.

In recent years, Germany has embarked on a twilight attempt to provide justice for concentration camp victims, placing several former guards in their 90s on trial for wartime crimes.

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