It is true that the neo-Nazis, their support adds more and more delusional German blood to German society every day, however, their efforts and pure experience to overcome the mind and spirit of Nazism during the decades after the Second World War ca ...
It is true that the neo-Nazis, their support adds more and more delusional German blood to German society every day, however, their efforts and pure experience to overcome the mind and spirit of Nazism during the decades after the Second World War cannot be considered among the greatest achievements of modern man. Looking at this society, right after the fall of the Third Reich, we see the internal and multifaceted conflict of individuals and nations who bear a large part of the blame for World War II and at the same time are immersed in a deep sense of innocence. German adherence to the exemplary national spirit that, during the reign of Nazism, according to Karl Jaspers, created a "good conscience drowned in evil deeds" and at the same time reminded us of the fact that again according to Jaspers' idea, we can say: "... commitment to the fatherland, a depth much greater than obedience It is blind to the rule of time. A fatherland is no longer a fatherland when its soul is destroyed. These and the fact that they are always called Nazis, make the German society not a support to pass fascism, but an accurate example to watch and touch. Germany, which fought in a purified union, was defeated, split into two, and united after the Berlin Wall, accurately shows us the experience of understanding horror and horror after the fall of horror. Considering the necessity of learning from the Germans, Susan Nieman recovers the experience of a white Jewish woman born in the south of the United States in the path of race and the memory of evil. "There's an old saying that says if I'm Catholic and I live in the South, I'll find heart. If I am a Jew, I will pack my belongings. If I am black, I will go"; This author's quote at the beginning of the book is from a relative of "Emmett Till", a black teenager from Chicago who was lynched in a horrible way on August 28, 1955, when he went to visit his friends in Mississippi! This is an example that clarifies how being an American has always been immersed in the aura of a caste and racial society. The book "Learning from the Germans; The Memory of Evil and the Problem of Race" took the narratives of Nieman's experience of birth and life in the racially segregated South of America to his reflections on Nazi Germany and after, and in a proper return, the American slave before and after the civil war and the legal abolition of slavery in a conversation with the German after It places the Reich and after the Cold War, and of course, considering all the uses and abuses of historical comparison.
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