Germans are researching their Nazi past as the far right urges them to move on
7 hours ago
- #German History
- #Nazi Archives
- #Family Memory
- German political scientist Jürgen Falter discovered his mother was listed in Nazi party records, contradicting her known liberal Catholic beliefs and family silence.
- Recently launched searchable online databases now allow Germans to investigate ancestors' Nazi affiliations, reshaping family histories.
- The accessible archives encourage public reflection on ordinary citizens' roles in Nazism and challenge sanitized family narratives.
- The timing coincides with strong support for far-right parties like AfD, which reject Germany's culture of remembrance.
- Researchers note that the date of joining the Nazi party can indicate motivations—ideological conviction pre-1933 versus opportunism post-1933.
- Efforts at historical reckoning are shifting from national memorials to individual family levels, breaking down long-held family silences.
- As the last generation with lived experience of the Third Reich passes, younger generations are re-evaluating family lore against empirical data.
- The promotion of these databases acts as a civic response to far-right political gains, emphasizing democratic fragility and incremental radicalization.