As an American Jew, reading about the Holocaust, I am struck
by the current legal prohibitions in Germany against denying this genocide or glorifying
the Nazi government of 1933-1945. I live in a nation where expression of even
the most obnoxious, hateful view is protected, unless it incites physical
harm. Perhaps it is a failure of this writer’s imagination, but World War II’s
armistice is having its seventieth anniversary this year. On the eve of
this milestone, what is the wisdom of continuing these prohibitions?
I understand why Germany, divided and controlled by
post-war Western powers, submitted to censorship of free speech around Nazism
and (in 1985) Holocaust Denial. But a nation must periodically revisit restrictions on freedoms
to examine whether or not they are still relevant. If German society has
progressed enough that there is no threat of returning to totalitarian
nationalism and genocide, then the prohibitions are superfluous and constitute
a dangerous legal precedent to the stifling of other expressions. If strong
undercurrents remain that might lead to destructive results, isn’t it time to
recognize that a policy which has suppressed discussion has failed?
We won’t truly know the strength of totalitarian or
genocidal tendencies in Germany until this censorship is lifted. If the result
is that the voices favoring destruction are weak, then we can all celebrate the
progress of human learning and peace. If these voices are strong, it may be
time for Germans to face them directly in open, uncensored debate, aimed at
educating society.
Admittedly, it is easy to sit safely across the Atlantic and
ponder the consequences of lifting this ban. Even the presumption of safety may
be naïve, given the last two world wars. I could be wrong. Cautionary inquiry and
self-doubt propels frightening questions: Is Germany a Pandora’s Box of martial
and racist sentiment that once opened, could only be closed again by World War
III? Is Freedom of Speech such a sacred
virtue that we should risk the safety of non-German residents or neighboring
countries? But these questions are driven by an anxiety that is itself affected
by anti-German racism and the denial of present reality. Germany has been
reunited for twenty-five years within a European Union. The destruction of that
union would only harm Germany economically. It is unlikely that the opening of discussions
around Holocaust Denial or the Nazi period would result in another world war.
German society has evolved to the point where a Green Party regularly wins 10%
of the federal parliamentary seats. The forces of reason and peace appear to be
a strong counter-weight to neo-Nazi sentiment.
It is a truism, of both psychology and political history, that
suppressed desires tend to destructively explode. Conversely, expressed desires
brought into the open contain the possibility of being disarmed. If there are
suppressed, racist and martial impulses in Germany, these will only fester
until an economic failure forces a more rational leadership from power. So, is censorship of these discussions
wise? Seventy years after the armistice and twenty-five years after
reunification, Germany is again a nation that can determine her own course
through history. Outsider individuals and nations will undoubtedly express
opinions, but this is a question that only German citizens can collectively
answer.
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