Nearly 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a growing number of people are romanticising about what daily life was like in the former communist East Germany. Ostalgia, a pun of nostalgia and Ost (East), is on the rise and numerous businesses and individuals are cashing in on the trend.
Today, you can have your picture taken with a Soviet soldier look-alike at the former Checkpoint Charlie crossing in Berlin or rent a room in a sparsely furnished apartment that is a replica of 1980s East German accommodation.
You can also take a tour of East Berlin in a plastic-body Trabi car that East Germans had to wait for years to buy. "Ask the people who run those businesses if they would still want to live in an old, small, box-like flat in a concrete high-rise," says Dagmar Schipanski,president of the parliament in the eastern German state of Thuringia. "Most of them now own expensive apartments and drive nice cars."
Schipanski makes no attempt to hide her anger when talking about what she regards as "a deliberate exclusion of the real historical context." The 65-year-old former scientist, who grew up in the German Democratic Republic, the eastern part of divided Germany, heads a commission that drafted a position paper on eastern Germany's future.
The panel, which also reviewed successes and failures in the east since the Wall came down in 1989, was set up by Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Party (CDU).
The document, which has been criticised by opposition parties for failing to examine the CDU's own role in East Germany, also suggests strategies for future development. A central demand is directed at the education system. "We need to come to terms with the history of divided Germany in our schools, by reforming curricula and teaching practices alike," says Schipanski.
Her call is echoed by another recent study assessing the level of knowledge about East and West German history.
"Pupils know next to nothing," says Klaus Schroeder, the Berlin professor who headed the survey. "Fewer than one in two knows who built the Berlin Wall."
The little they did know they learned from their families or from television shows, which painted a distorted picture, Schroeder adds. Establishments like Die Firma (The Firm), a pub themed after East Germany's dreaded Stasi secret service, which a former Stasi informer opened in Berlin a few months ago, was "utterly tasteless," Schroeder says.
Many students confirmed the findings of the study based on their own experience, Jan Redmann, a member of the CDU's youth organisation, the JU, told dpa. "Pupils tell us that East Germany is often omitted in lessons," he says. "That's also because dealing with the German past for many teachers also means dealing with their own biographies."
Together with other JU members, Redmann started an anti-Ostalgie campaign three years ago when East German-themed shows first hit German TV screens. "On these programmes, celebrities go on about how much fun it was to drive a Trabi and to mix their own fuel," complains campaigner Peter Tauber. "But they never mentioned that you had to wait years to get a car in the first place."
Some 700 people have so far signed up to the online campaign, whose website is decorated with a banana, a symbol of the shortage of imported goods in the Soviet-guided East Germany.
"Citizens were never fully informed about the actual state of the economy," CDU politician Schipanski told dpa. The upheavals they faced in 1989 were very serious and often meant unemployment or starting a new career from scratch, she says. "We have to honour their achievements in adapting to a completely different environment."
She agrees with social scientist Schroeder that unemployment and economic deprivation should not be an excuse to paint a glossy picture of life in East Germany.
"We have to make clear that criticising the system does not mean criticising the people," Schroeder says. "But we must improve education about the second German dictatorship, because that's what it was." Daniel Helbig, who runs the East German-style Ostel guesthouse in Berlin, did not want to be drawn into the political aspect of the debate.
He pointed out another Ostalgie attraction which opened Friday in co-operation with his hostel - a 2,200-square-metre exhibition of artworks commissioned by East Germany.
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