Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Jan Nolte, May 15, 2020, Jewish Military Ministry


Jan Nolte
Jewish Military Ministry
German Bundestag, May 15, 2020, Plenarprotokoll 19/161, p. 20081

[Jan Nolte is an Alternative für Deutschland Bundestag member from the western German state of Hessen. He is a petty officer in the German navy. He here responds to a draft law proposed by the government for the purpose of establishing a Jewish rabbinate in the Bundeswehr.]

Right honorable Frau President. Right honorable ladies and gentlemen.

Jews have always been a part of the German armies. They helped break the power of Napoleon at Waterloo, fought in the Franco-Prussian [Deutsche-Französischen] War which ultimately ended in the founding of the Reich in 1871, and threw themselves into the material battles of the First World War. And even though the criminal regime of the National Socialists had seized control of the German states, a regime which in gruesome ways sinned against the Jews, 150,000 of them fought in the Wehrmacht, many so as to avoid a worse fate for themselves.

Yet even before, there was anti-semitism; that is clear. It was for a very long time in Europe a socially acceptable standard which today is scarcely to be explained. It is therefore good that today in Germany we have 180,000 brave men and women in the Bundeswehr – and some 300 of them are Jews – who defend our free, democratic fundamental order and who stand for a Germany in which no one can any longer be persecuted on account of his religion or his beliefs.

That in the infrastructure planning for the Jewish rabbinate there nevertheless must be consideration given to bulletproof glass shows that we in Germany today are not where we ought to be. On that account also is the return of military rabbis after nearly one hundred years an important signal. To anti-semitism will be opposed a clear message: That the Jews in Germany have our support, that they are strong constituents of the armed forces and of society, and that we will not tolerate attacks upon them.

            (A shout from Helin Evrim Sommer (Linke)).

I hear comment here. Anyone can readily put a question. That is no problem.

            Helin Evrim Sommer (Linke): No, we waive that.

Yet it ought not to stop at such signals. In debates like this, it also must be said that, on account of political correctness, the origins of anti-semitism unfortunately oftentimes have not been completely addressed. Obviously there is right-wing extremist terrorism, besides that of leftist extremism, and it is completely clear that there must be proceedings against that. But the fact is that for 81 percent of the victims of anti-semitism the perpetrator is a Moslem, and of that one does not speak so readily.

            Marcus Grübel (CDU/CSU): The criminal statistics unfortunately do not 
            coincide.

A deeply rooted hatred of Jews often prevails in Moslem societies, and if we seriously intend to fight against anti-semitism and really wish to help, then we first must have the courage to name the complete problem, and not only a portion thereof.     

That a religious military ministry is now to be available to our Jewish soldiers is a proper and important thing. The extreme experiences that a soldier can have during his time in the service requires that he defend not only his body but his soul against injury. The soldier needs someone in whom he can confide and who is also an adviser if – and this also belongs to the reality of being a soldier – he is confronted with the possiblity of his own death.

I dedicate the last part of my speech to Corporal Sergei Motz, the recent anniversary of whose death was May 11. Corporal Motz is the first German soldier killed in action since the Second World War; he fell in Afghanistan and he belongs to the Orthodox Church. In this regard, I wish to direct an appeal to you, Frau Minister –it may sound as if I was pushing on an open door: That perhaps we find as good a solution for the Orthodox soldiers as we here now put forward for the Jewish soldiers.

The AfD will vote in committee for this draft law.



[Translated by Todd Martin]



Sunday, May 24, 2020

Marc Jongen, May 14, 2020, German War Victims Memorial

Marc Jongen
German War Victims Memorial
German Bundestag, May 14, 2020, Plenarprotokoll 19/160, pp. 19942-19943

[Marc Jongen is an Alternative für Deutschland Bundestag member from the western German state of Baden-Württemberg. He is a philosophy professor. He here presents an AfD motion (Drucksache 19/19156) proposing the creation of a memorial dedicated to the German victims of the Second World War.]

Herr President. Ladies and gentlemen.

May 8 is the 75th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Corona urgencies, fine and well; yet it cannot be that the German Bundestag cannot find a half hour to discuss the proper relations of a date so important to remembrance policy.

Since nothing came from the government coalition, the AfD placed the theme in the orders of business. And in the meantime, ja, Bündes-president Frank-Walter Steinmeier, standing lonely as a ghost before the Neue Wache in Berlin, named May 8, 1945, as a “Day of Liberation”.

            Kathrin Vogler (Linke): He is right!

And he added: “Then we were liberated. Today we must liberate ourselves.” He then recounted of the “assay of a new nationalism”, of “partition” and of “hate and incitement”, which were nothing other than – quote – “the old, evil spirit in new clothes”.

This political exorcism by the Bündes-president culminated in the adage: If Europe fails, then fails the “never again”.

Ladies and gentlemen and worthy Herr Bündes-president, I call out to you from this podium! You are misusing the remembrance of a historical date to suppress necessary and legitimate debate in the present. Anyone who defends the nation as the guarantor of democracy, who rejects the scandalous policy of open borders, or does not want a centralized governing EU superstate, will be placed by you under the general suspicion of being a Nazi.

Marianne Schieder (SPD): No, no. That was much more differentiated. You quite well know that!

That is historically and politically perverse, it divides the society and it is unworthy of a Bündes-president!

            Marianne Schieder (SPD): What you are doing here is unworthy of a member!

And one thing more: You can certainly be of the opinion, Herr Bündes-president as well as many here in the hall, that Germany can “be loved only with broken hearts”.

            Martin Rabanus (SPD): Such rubbish!

I say to you: There are Germans – and not a few – who love their country with full hearts

            Armin-Paulus Hampel (AfD): With whole hearts!

and they will permit no other prescription from you.

            Martin Rabanus (SPD): Then who wrote down this idiocy?

We come to the key phrase “Day of Liberation” which Richard von Weizsäcker
used in his famous speech of 1985, though with more differentiation. The SPD and the Greens want such a holiday, as one hears; the Linke also, in the best DDR tradition whereby the day of liberation distracts from the un-free character of the SED dictatorship.

Yes, of course, ladies and gentlemen, Germany and the world were liberated on May 8, 1945: From the criminal NS [National Socialist] regime and from the emergency state of destruction which it unleashed in Europe. It was without mitigation a day of liberation for those of groups persecuted by the Nazis: The Jews of Europe, the conquered and abused neighboring peoples, and for broad portions of our own people as far as they found themselves safe.

However – and this historical ambivalence is worthy of being endured – it was plainly no liberation for the 2 to 3 million Germans who in the former German eastern territories died in 1945 on account of expulsion, flight  and deportation. It was no liberation for the nearly 11 million German prisoners of war, of whom 1.6 million were no more to return and most of the others only after years of inhuman captivity.

Marianne Schieder (SPD): That no one has maintained besides you.

And it was definitely no liberation for the estimated 2 million German women and girls raped after May 8, of whom 10 percent died, a portion of the remaining being severely traumatized.

Kathrin Vogler (Linke): When you present yourself here as women's rights advocate! That is really offensive!

For these who were in no way liberated, piety alone forbids elevating May 8 to a holiday, ladies and gentlemen, and it may then be that a collective guilt of all Germans, which had massive, cynical implications, comes to an end. It is in any case contradicted by Richard von Weizsäcker's dictum – listen, for once – which said, namely: “There is no guilt or innocence of an entire people. Guilt, like innocence, is personal.”

Allow yourselves therefore to take this anniversary as an occasion to finally raise up a memorial to the German victims of the Second World War. Located in the center of the capital city, it should tell of the several victims’ groups which I have previously named, but also of the victims of the bomber war, in a documentation center inclusive of the present-day state of research. A competition should be announced and an experts committee set up which is legally obligated to the German Bundestag.

This memorial should expressly be not in rivalry to but in a relation of fulfillment with the existing memorials to the victims of the NS regime, primarily with that for the murdered Jews of Europe, quite in the sense of the words of the former Bündes-president Herzog: “…Neither peace nor reconciliation can be found if the whole history is not presented.”

Marianne Schieder (SPD): That is what you should do for once, present the whole history!

We are doing that, in contrast to you. We also believe – I come to conclusion – that the friendship with the former wartime opponents has in the meantime been sufficiently strengthened so that this also may pertain to the Germans’ mourning for their own war victims if we adhere prudently, worthily and coherently to the historical facts. Our motion demands nothing more and yet nothing less.

Many thanks.



[Translated by Todd Martin]