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German school shooting exposes widespread social tensions
19-year-old kills 17 in Erfurt
By Ulrich Rippert
29 April 2002
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As the full extent of the tragic shooting in an Erfurt school
in eastern Germany became clear last Friday, many people across
the country were stunned as they followed the news. Robert Steinhäuser,
a 19-year-old student who had been expelled a few months previously
from the Gutenberg-Gymnasium in Erfurt, the main city of the east
German state of Thuringia, shot dead 12 teachers, a secretary,
two students and a policeman before shooting himself.
The scene was repeatedly shown on special television broadcasts.
School students reported to journalists how the perpetrator, garbed
in a black mask and armed with a pistol and pump action shotgun,
moved from classroom to classroom, deliberately shooting down
his former teachers. Apparently, the former student sought to
kill even more victims, as an additional 500 bullets were later
found in the school.
Following the events in Erfurt, cultural and sport meetings
were cancelled in many German cities over the weekend and the
governing SPD (German Social-Democratic Party) also postponed
a national meeting it had arranged to discuss its programme for
forthcoming national elections in the autumn. A day of mourning
and reflection has been called for in all German schools
for Monday, April 29.
German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (SPD) was one of the
first politicians to make a statement on the incident. It was,
he said, a terrible, incomprehensible crime, adding
that it was an isolated event, which exceeds the imaginable
and defies any hasty attempt at explanation.
This is, in fact, the opposite of the truth. While many details
are still emerging, it is already clear that last Fridays
bloodbath can by no means be regarded as an isolated event.
There has been a steady growth in Germany of such explosions of
violence, expressing the deep frustration and lack of perspective
by young people, mostly school students or apprentices.
Two months ago, on February 19, a 22-year-old killed the director
of a technical college and seriously injured a teacher. Two years
ago, a 17-year-old student shot the head of a secondary boarding
school in Bayern, then shot himself in the head, remaining in
a coma ever since. In the autumn of 1999, a masked 15-year-old
forced his way into a classroom and stabbed a 44-year-old female
teacher a number of times in front of a classroom of students.
Just three weeks later, three youth were arrested in Bayern when
it became clear they had worked out a plan to kill the headmaster
and a teacher at their school.
Robert Steinhäuser, the perpetrator of last Fridays
attack, has been described as a student of average abilities,
but who was struggling academically. Fearful of pending examinations,
he falsified sick notes on a number of occasions. According to
press reports, he didnt tell his father, mother or any other
relative that he had been expelled from school.
He did not come from a particularly underprivileged background.
His mother worked as a nurse and his father for the Siemens concern.
His parents were separated, reportedly amicably, and the young
Steinhäuser lived in an apartment in the attic of a house
belonging to his grandfather.
Although schoolmates and authorities were apparently taken
by surprise by the young mans rampage, he had clearly manifested
a fascination with weapons. Details about his activities also
strongly suggest that he was influenced by extreme-right politics.
He was a member of two shooting clubsthe Domblick Shooting
Club as well as the official police shooting club. His mother
told the newspaper Bill am Sonntag, My son was a
weapons freak.
Through his membership in these clubs he learned how to shoot
and acquired his licenses for the pistol and long-barrelled pump
gun used in the assault. It remains unclear where he obtained
these weapons and the 1,200 rounds of ammunition found by police.
Such an access to weapons is rare in Germany, where strict laws
govern their possession.
In his leisure time, Steinhäuser frequently watched violent
videos and listened to music glorifying violence. Der Spiegel
magazine wrote that he had a tendency to listen to macabre
music and play blood thirsty computer killer-games. One
of his favourite games was the violent Counterstrike.
According to Bild am Sonntag, he described himself as Satans
son in Internet chat rooms. His favourite band was reportedly
the American group Slip-knot, whose latest CD is entitled People=S**t.
According to Der Spiegel, the bands musicians carry
armbands like the Nazis.
Despite Steinhäusers disturbing history, the media
and politicians have declared his actions beyond explanation.
German President Johannes Rau (SPD) declared: We have no
answer and mourn over an incomprehensible act. As in previous
cases, such violent incidents are explained as the isolated acts
of the mentally ill or psychopaths, based on the American
cult of violence.
In the Berlin Tagesspiegel, leading columnist Gerd Appenzeller
wrote: We are so clever, so reasonable. We can explain almost
everything ... but how small we are, and how desperate and helpless
when we are confronted with a catastrophe such as the ... shooting
yesterday in a school in Erfurt.
But such complacent talk serves to exclude any broader questioning
of the significance of this brutal act and its relationship to
prevailing conditions of life in Germany. The political elite
have attempted to use the shock over the tragedy, and sorrow for
its victims, in order to divert attention from their own responsibility
for the deteriorating conditions confronting the German population.
There can be no doubt that the cold-blooded murder of 16 innocent
people constitutes a despicable crime. But how is one to account
for the fact that a young man who had not reached his twentieth
birthday resorts to mass murder because he was twice denied permission
to take his school-leaving exams? What degree of desperation,
lack of hope and perspective is necessary to drive a young man
to such extremes? How sick is the society which produces such
levels of anger, frustration and destructive energy?
If one puts aside the current widespread moralising over the
depths of human cruelty involved in last Fridays
attack, and instead looks at the inter-relationship between social
development and the actions of an individual, then a clearer picture
emerges.
Robert Steinhäuser began school just 12 years ago, as
the former state of East Germany (GDR) collapsed and was integrated
into Germany as a whole. The formative years of his childhood
were characterised by the introduction of the laws of the market
economy into the eastern half of the country. The hypocritical
morality of the Stalinist GDR government was tossed aside, replaced
by an outlook which put forward no perspective for the future.
Numerous former Stalinist bureaucrats replaced their rhetoric
about socialism and solidarity with a capitulation to competition
and the free-market system. Success and social ascendancy favoured
those lacking any scruples.
The subsequent social decline in all the states of the former
East Germany, including Thuringia, took devastating forms and
was bound up with the spread of thoroughly reactionary social
viewpoints. Personal achievement was prioritised at the expense
of social responsibility, with egoism and a dog eat dog
attitude predominating. With the accompanying development of social
inequality, increasing numbers were destined to live in poverty,
condemned to unemployment or low-wage jobs.
This development is apparent throughout Germany, but above
all in the east of the country. In Thuringia, the official unemployment
rate stood at 16.5 percent last year. Many thousands of others
have abandoned the search for work as hopeless and have been reduced
to collecting social assistance. The unemployment statistics also
do not include the additional thousands of workers who travel
hundreds of miles weekly or even daily in order to work in west
German states such as Bayern and Hessen.
In addition, many thousands leave the eastern states every
year. The number of those employed in the state of Thuringia has
shrunk to less than half in the last 10 years. Unemployment has
also been deliberately used to deflate wages. In 2000 the average
gross wage of a worker in Thuringia was just 62.7 percent of that
of a worker carrying out equivalent work in the west of the country.
Youth are particularly hard hit. Since 1995, the number of unemployed
amongst youth under age 25 has increased by 25.5 percent. In many
regions, more than half of young people are without work and lack
any chance of gaining a decent job.
The states regional government, under conservative Prime
Minister Bernhard, has carried out cuts at every levelparticularly
in education, youth, sport and leisure facilities. At the same
time, social policies generously favour big business and a small
layer of social climbers.
Illusionary hopes of more democracy and improved living conditions,
widespread in the years immediately following German reunification,
have been dispelled and replaced by anger and bitterness. In the
neighbouring state of Saxony-Anhalt this same development led
last Sunday to record levels of abstention and the biggest loss
ever of votes for the ruling SPD in state elections.
In schools, this state of affairs means that the end of schooling
is not regarded as the beginning of possible new studies or a
profession, but rather as the beginning of the end. Many fear
the end of schooling as the start of an insecure future, with
long years of unemployment. For some years now, teachers have
been registering the growth of aggression and violence in their
schools.
The transformation of Robert Steinhäuser into a brutal
criminal cannot be explained merely in terms of his own personal
deficiencies. A large responsibility rests with the political
forces which have prevented widespread social opposition to the
existing social crisis from developing in a progressive direction.
This applies to the SPD and the Green Party, which were supported
in the east of the country in national elections four years ago
after promising peace and social harmony. It also applies to the
PDS (Party of Democratic Socialismformerly the SED, the
governing Stalinist party of East Germany), which has used its
influence in the east to support the German government. In the
case of Robert Steinhäuser, this vacuum of perspective apparently
opened the way for the development of a politically reactionary
and anti-social outlook.
Not only has the SPD-Green government pressed ahead with a
policy of enriching those already rich, and distributing wealth
from the poor to the well-off, it has also done away with large
portions of the German social system over the past four years,
praising the merits of individual responsibility while undermining
future prospects for the working population.
The terrible massacre in Erfurt exposes the real nature of
a society which is itself based on violence: social violence which
forces millions to live in poverty and desperation; state violence
designed to restrict democratic rights; and military force, whereby
the government collaborates with other governments that have organised
their own massacres in the Middle East or Afghanistan, and which
also prepares its own military aggression in future.
The time is ripe to counter the pastoral prattle over the incomprehensibility
of the massacre in Erfurt and expose the more profound social
roots which are capable of transforming desperate young people
into mass murderers.
See Also:
New school shootings in US:
social issues once again come to the fore
[22 January 2002]
The Columbine High
School massacre:
American Pastoral ... American Berserk
[27 April 1999]
15 dead in Colorado
school shooting
A nation at war ... with itself
[21 April 1999]
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