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- <text>
- <title>
- German Editorial Views Rise Of Nationalism In Russia
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Foreign Broadcast Information Service, June 15, 1992
- Germany: Editorial Views Rise of Nationalism in CSFR
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>[Hansjakob Stehle editorial: "Flight Into Nationalism". Hamburg
- DIE ZEIT in German 12 Jun 92 p 1]
- </p>
- <p> [Text] There is a great temptation not to want to see it
- because it is unpleasant. That Fatherland Europe, however, where
- the nation state would be "abolished"--that is, preserved and
- overcome--is increasingly proving to be a chimera. The
- nightmare of nationalism obviously frightens the politically
- minded less than the allure of a historically embroidered, new
- patriotic glory tempts them. With it many complexes can be
- compensated for, both social and national--particularly in the
- postcommunist East.
- </p>
- <p> Europe? One can try to steer toward it by contributing--like the Germans--the reunited nation state from Mecklenburg
- to Upper Bavaria with all the skids that result from its
- problems. One can turn one's back on this Europe in a civil and
- gentle way, like the Danish; in a brutal way like the Serbs; or
- in the way that the Slovaks are doing. In their parliamentary
- elections the majority voted for those parties that are striving
- for the fastest possible separation from the Czechs. The Czechs,
- for their part, voted for parties and politicians who are not
- quite so unhappy about that, because they hope that the Czech
- Republic might reach "Europe" all the faster on its own because
- it is economically stronger.
- </p>
- <p> Prague and Bratislava are not Belgrade and Sarajevo. The
- "Balkanization" that threatens to plague the Europe of the
- difficult fatherlands has many faces. The socialist "spring" in
- the Czech Prague under the Slovak Dubcek had a human face--and
- the anticommunist revolution was made completely "of velvet."
- Even here, however, the "turn" toward the national aspect
- strikes the democratic-idealist nerve of all renewal very
- strongly.
- </p>
- <p> It was no coincidence that Vaclav Havel, the poet who sits in
- Prague's presidential chair, put his official impartiality at
- stake on the eve of the elections and on television "pleadingly"
- asked the people to vote only for those politicians who advocate
- "the just coexistence of Czechs and Slovaks"; this is the only
- way in which the CSFR could become a "solid stone in the
- European building."
- </p>
- <p> Against all expectations, more than 80 percent of those
- eligible to vote went to the polls, despite widespread apathy.
- They even resisted the temptation of hopelessly splitting their
- votes among the 42 parties and small groups. More than was
- expected, they supported the two main favorites, the Czech
- conservative Civic Democratic Party (ODS) of liberal economic
- reformer Vaclav Klaus and the Movement for a Democratic Slovakia
- (HZDS) of Vladimir Meciar, the leftist liberal-nationalist
- people's tribune. Each won more than one-third of the vote--enough so that both can now pretend to be the masters of the
- political game, but not enough to put their foot down.
- </p>
- <p> Both Klaus and Meciar basically realize that it has now
- become possible for each to achieve what he wants in his way:
- They will agree to disagree without wasting one shot of powder,
- first probably in a transition government (which will preside
- over the downfall). Then, after a referendum--which will, if
- possible, be held separately in the two republics--they will
- separate. Even if some sort of commune results from the divorce,
- the CSFR as a marriage of convenience will hardly continue to
- exist--only in the heaven that is called Europe, some say
- mockingly.
- </p>
- <p> Regardless of the close relationship between the two peoples,
- their example shows how the burden of historical fate can
- continue to hinder common paths in Europe and toward Europe even
- today. In the 19th century the Czechs landed on the ground of
- "Austroslavism" after a pan-Slav flight of fancy--in the same
- Habsburg Empire in which Slovakia felt suppressed as "Upper
- Hungary." Then, after World War I, Tomas Masaryk's
- "Czechoslovakism" turned "two tribes into a nation": a state
- that was finally dominated by the Czechs and where there were
- more Germans than Slovaks.
- </p>
- <p> Until these Germans returned home to the Reich, thanks to
- Hitler. Or were they Austrians? No, they are "the fourth
- Bavarian ethnic group," the Munich government still says today.
- It threw its "no" to the neighborhood treaty, which healed old
- wounds, at the feet of the Czechs and Slovaks precisely for
- election day.
- </p>
- <p> A European spirit? Only disguised as a ghost from the past,
- if it exists at all. It frightens our neighbors, who are already
- uncertain anyway. Old fears and new uncertainties have, however,
- also promoted that tough, yes, radical realism which is
- represented by a politician like Vaclav Klaus and which led him
- to victory. His liberalism, his market economy without a social
- adjective hardly take the weak into consideration but feed them
- with hopes of tomorrow--in Europe.
- </p>
- <p> No wonder that Klaus is unaffected by the predictable end of
- the unified Czechoslovak state. He does not want a loose
- confederation--nor does he want any kind of third path. If the
- Slovaks want to follow their own path, let them!
- </p>
- <p> The tanks and guns, which are built in Slovakia, can still be
- used and, in particular, exported, Meciar, for his part,
- emphasized in the election campaign. Perhaps he was as little
- serious about that as in his tirades against the privatization
- of the state economy, which ensured him applause from the
- communists and the nationalism.
- </p>
- <p> In a serious moment one could consider this dishonest
- scenario as an unavoidable phenomenon of democratic
- Westernization. As such it could be watched calmly, if it were
- not, at the same time, the symptom of a crisis that is seducing
- everyone in the postcommunist societies to choose a popular but
- fatal way out: the flight back into the old way of thinking in
- terms of national states. Or is it not quite so old? Is it
- contained--forever young--in the idea of the right to
- self-determination, which threatens to deteriorate into a new
- ideology?
- </p>
- <p> It is easy to rage against nationalist perversion when it
- becomes obvious in such a bloody way as it does in the Balkans.
- However, it should give us food for thought and alarm us if--as in the CSFR--it emerges in countries that are part of the
- heart of Europe. The times are gone in which--as Masaryk once
- said--one just had to stand on top of the trash heap and swing
- one's whip in order to bring the people to "reason."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-