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WSWS : News
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Right-wing historian Ernst Nolte receives the Konrad Adenauer
Prize for Science
By Stefan Steinberg
17 August 2000
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In Munich on June 4 right-wing historian Ernst Nolte, the main
figure in the Historians debate of 1986, was awarded
the Konrad Adenauer prize from the Germany Institute. The latter
was set up in 1966 and has close links to the right-wing of Germany's
Christian Democratic Party (CDU.)
The prize was handed over to Nolte by Horst Möller, the
director of the Institute for Contemporary History in Munich,
which has traditionally had a good reputation as a centre of serious
historical research. Möller fulsomely praised Nolte's contribution
to historical studies, while at the same time attempting to distance
himself somewhat from Nolte's most controversial theses.
Other historians, such as the Berlin-based Heinrich August
Winkler, acknowledged their deep concern at the prize ceremony
for Nolte. Even current CDU party head Angela Merkel commented
that she had personal difficulties with the award
for Nolte. It is of note that in his speech acknowledging Nolte's
work Möller emphasised the importance of the publication
of The Black Book of Communism in confirming many of Nolte's
theses. Möller himself has published a volume entitled The
Red Holocaust which takes up similar themes to those advanced
in The Black Book of Communism.
The 1986 Historians' debate
Ernst Nolte first came to the attention of the general public
in 1986 when he published an article in the Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung and in the same year his book The European Civil
War. The article and book drew parallels between the fascist
death camps and the Stalinist Gulag from the standpoint of relativising
the crimes of the Nazis. Nolte's thesis was that the rational
core lying at the heart of the Nazi extermination of the Jews
was a defensive reaction on the part of the fascists to the threat
of Bolshevism in the East. He wrote in 1986: Is not the
case that the Archipelago Gulag preceded Auschwitz? Was not the
class murder [according to Nolte ... of the bourgeoisie in the
Soviet UnionS. Steinberg] the logical and factual precedent
for the race murder conducted by the National Socialists?
Nolte deliberately obliterated the distinction between genuine
communism embodied in the initial strivings of the Bolshevik Party
in the October Revolution and the counterrevolutionary crimes
of Stalinism. He was unable, of course, to account for the fact
that the principal victims of the Stalinist show trials and Gulag
did not belong to the class of the Russian bourgeoisie,
but were rather left oppositionists and old Bolsheviksprecisely
those who inaugurated the October Revolution.
Nolte's article and book constitute the opening shots in what
was to become known in Germany as the Historians' debate,
initiated when other historians and philosopher Jurgen Habermas
took issue with Nolte's position and opened up a discussion on
the origins of National Socialism and the Holocaust.
Since 1986 Nolte has made unmistakably clear his role as an
apologist for Hitlerite fascism. Nolte was a pupil of philosopher
Martin Heidegger, who for a period in the thirties was himself
a member of the Nazi Party, the NSDAP. Nolte's defence of his
mentor has already been dealt with in a recent WSWS article
[see link below].
A comment by Nolte in 1994 in defence of Nazi policies is typical:
When the propagation of a soldier-like nature in the people
[Volk] is a legitimate highest aim, then one must concede that
the SS with its positive population policy [i.e., the mass deportations
and murder carried out by Hitler's SchutzstaffelS. Steinberg]
represents the first serious attempt to prevent a development
which today appears overpowering (Streitpunkte, 1994).
In his own speech to the assembled historians as he accepted
his prize in Munich Nolte repeated his main thesis in the usual
roundabout formulations that he reserves for public occasions:
Whoever takes seriously the world historical phenomena of
Bolshevism as the most violent form of appearance of socialism,
cannot reduce the most powerful of counter-movements [i.e., fascismS.
Steinberg] to merely crazy ideas'. Nolte then declared
that it is wrong to think that the opposite of national
socialism must always be correct, and finally expressed
his opposition to plans to build a memorial to the Jewish victims
of the Nazi dictatorship. His comment: To remember completely
is just as inhuman as to forget completely.
Nolte's most consistent advocates are periodicals such as the
newspaper Junge Freiheit which describes itself as a newspaper
in Germany for patriotic right-wingers. In tones reminiscent
of the NSDAP, recent editions of Junge Freiheit have criticised
German politicians as decadent windbags who no
longer possess an ounce of honour. In its columns Junge
Freiheit calls for an end to the self-hatred on the
part of the Germans. The same article goes on to hope for
better times in which notorious right-wingers such
as Franz Schönhuber (former head of the extreme right Republican
Party) and Horst Mahler (a former left-wing radical associated
with the German Red Army Faction, now an extreme right-winger)
can emerge from the back room to political centre stage.
In a recent article the paper applauds the professional recognition
of Nolte involved in the award ceremony in Munich and makes the
same point as Horst Möller, i.e., the crucial role of The
Black Book of Communism in rehabilitating Nolte's theses.
Ernst Nolte, Stéphane Courtois and the
Black Book of Communism
Le Livre noir de communisme (The Black Book of Communism)
was published in 1997. Its chief editor is Stéphane Courtois,
a former Maoist who, together with a number of other authors,
published an 800-page diatribe against Marxism and the Russian
Revolution. Based on the supposition of an unbroken continuity
between the Russian Revolution, Leninism and Stalinism, Courtois
lumped together in a completely ahistorical fashion the victims
of diverse Stalinist, Maoist and national liberation movements.
Together with victims of various wars Courtois assembled a total
sum of 100 million dead which he argued could all be attributed
to Communism. His conclusion: the Communist movement was even
worse than fascism.
Drawing on parallels already made by Nolte in 1986 Courtois
described Communism and fascism as forms of mass murder aimed
in the first case at a class (the bourgeoisie,) in the second
at a race (the Jews). Despite the hysterical way in which he posed
many of his arguments, involving such an abuse of historical method
that some of the collaborators of the Black Book sought
to distance themselves from Courtois' conclusions, implicit in
his 1997 book was a hostility towards fascism and Hitlerism.
This antipathy towards fascism on Courtois' part now appears
to be a thing of the past. In the spring of this year Courtois
collaborated with Nolte on the occasion of the first French edition
of the latter's The European Civil War. The new introduction
to the French edition was written by Courtois.
In his own introduction to the French edition Nolte returns
to Courtois' thesis of the Black Book. Marxism,
Nolte writes, is an ideology of destruction and Bolshevism
is its practical realisation. Nolte and Courtois not only
agree in their assessment of Marxism. Both of them trace what
they regard as the evils of the twentieth century to the French
Revolution. Nolte writes: It was the French Revolution which
for the first time turned into reality the concept of the destruction
of groups and classes. The Bolsheviks were inspired by the
therapy of destruction which had been previously worked
out in the French Revolution. In his own introduction Courtois
agrees that the Jacobin mass murder of counterrevolutionary
elements in the Vendée in 1793 was the model for Bolshevik
policy in the civil war following the October Revolution.
A review of the writings of Ernst Nolte reveals that already
in 1986 he had worked out most of the fundamental theses which,
following the collapse of the Soviet Union, were to be most explicitly
laid down in The Black Book of Communism. Now Nolte's award
in Munich and his recent collaboration with Courtois reveals the
thoroughly reactionary stance of a layer of French and German
intellectuals.
There is an inexorable logic to the pathological anticommunism
of such figures as Courtois and company. Whether he and others
are completely aware of it or not, their ideas are being taken
up and used by the most consistent opponents of democracy and
progress. After all, it was no less than Nazi propaganda minister
Josef Goebbels who commented after the fascist taking of power
in 1933: With a stroke we have now obliterated 1789 from
the history books.
See Also:
The Case of Martin Heidegger,
Philosopher and Nazi
Part 1: The Record
[3 April 2000]
Part 2: The Cover-up
[4 April 2000]
Part 3: History, Philosophy
and Mythology
[4 April 2000]
A political
evaluation of Schwarzbuch des Kommunismus [The Black
Book of Communism]
[15 July 1998]
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