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“Blood Is a Very Special Juice”*: Racialized Bodies and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2010

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The 1999 plan of the Social Democratic government to adjust Germany's 1913 nationality law has generated an intensely emotional debate. In an unprecedented action, the opposition Christian Democrats managed to gather hundreds of thousands of signatures against the adjustment that would have granted citizenship to second generation “immigrants” born in Germany. At the end of the twentieth century, Germans still strongly cling to the principle of jus sanguinis. The idea that nationality is not connected ot place of birth or culture but rather to a “national essence” tJiat is somehow incorporated in the subject's blood has been strong in Germany since the early nineteenth century and has been especially decisive for the country's twentieth-century history.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1999

References

1. The 1913 law grants the right of naturalization to “ethnic Germans”, who have lived outside of Germany for generations, while “ethnic foreigners”, who have lived within Germany for generations, are denied the same right. Thereby, an evergrowing number of “cultural Germans” is created, who are treated as foreigners solely because they miss the qualification of “German blood”. See Brubaker, Rogers, Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany (Cambridge, MA, 1992).Google Scholar

The Christian Democrats' action had no direct political consequences since German law does not allow plebiscites on national issues. Nevertheless it has proven decisive, because the government was forced to compromise after losing the majority in the Bundesrat (representing the German states) in elections that centered on the issue of nationality.

2. See e.g. Goldberg, David T., Racist Culture. Philosophy and the Politics of Meaning (Cambridge, MA, 1993)Google Scholar.

3. For the post-World-War-II-period, this article concentrates on the federal republic, the political system transferred to the reunified Germany.

4. The period of National Socialism with its explicit connection of nationality and race will therefore not be considered here.

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21. There were numerous personal and ideological correspondences between the race scientists and the nationalist organizations, mainly the German Colonial Society (Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft) and the Pangerman League (Alldeutscher Verband). The colonial department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in its turn, relied heavily on the expertise of both the colonial society and individual race scientists. See: Bundesarchiv Berlin (BAB), R 1001 Reichskolonialamt, Bd. 5418, “Rechtsfragen bei Mischehen und Mischlingen”.

22. See Benninghoff-Lühl, Sybille, Deutsche Kolonialromane 1884–1914 in ihrem Entstehunp- und Wirkungszusammenhang (Bremen, 1983). The country's most popular teenage novel, selling half a million copies up to 1918, wasGoogle ScholarFrensen's, GustavPeter Moors Fahrt nach Südwest (1906), describing the colonial war in Southwest AfricaGoogle Scholar.

23. See: Noske, Gustav, Kolonialpolitik und Sozialdemokratie (Stuttgart, 1914), p. 56Google Scholar. The international socialist congresses of Amsterdam, 1904, and Stuttgart, 1907, also principally supported colonialism (ibid., p. 223).

24. Rohrbach, Paul, Deutsche Kolonialwirtschaft (Berlin, 1909), p. 17. Rohrbach, a colonial inspector who published several “scientific” books on life in Southwest Africa, became the “voice” of German settlers.Google Scholar

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29. Sometimes as literal as in the case of Sarah Bartmann from South Africa. After being publicly displayed in several European cities as an example of black females' pathological sexuality (symbolized by her enlarged buttocks), she died in 1815. Her genitals were first scrutinized by several scientists and then donated to the Musee de I'homme in Paris, where they are still exhibited. See Giddings, Paula, “The Last Taboo”, p. 445Google Scholar.

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31. Or, as contemporary sociobiology puts it, as “carriers of genes”.

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33. Colonial law for Southwest Africa defined each person as a “native” that had an African ancestor, however far removed. See: BAB, R IOOI, Bd. 5418, pp. 364–379.

34. Accordingly, many settlers married to African women sent their children to Germany.

35. See: Evangelisches Zentralarchiv Berlin (EZB), 5/3016: Die deutsche evangelische Gemeinde in Windhuk, p. 117; “Stärkung des weissen Rassenbewubtseins”, PAR 1906/7, p. 423. Between 1906 and 1908 similar laws were introduced in the other German colonies.

36. The image of the wicked, but smart mulatto who incites the passive “natives” to rebellion was very vivid in the German imagination. See PAR 1905/6, p. 112 and 469; 1906/7, p. 256.

37. At least three such institutions, limiting education to gardening and cooking, existed in Southwest Africa. See EZB, 5/3016, p. 99 and pp. 198–199.

38. Indeed, the numbers were not quite in relation to the reactions. In 1909, there were fifty “mixed marriages” and 4,284 “mulattos” registered in Southwest Africa. See Gentrup, Theodor, Die Rassenmischehen in den deutschen Kolonien (Paderborn, 1914), p. 32.Google Scholar

39. Twenty-five years later, fascist laws introduced this change by severely punishing all sexual relations between “Aryans” and members of “foreign races”.

40. Fischer, Eugen, Die Rehobother Bastards und das Bastardisierungsproblem beim Menschen (Jena, 1913), p. 303, (italics in original). Fischer, who in the Weimar Republic became head of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute center for all eugenic and anthropological research, and who successfully continued his career under the National Socialists and in the federal republic, had built his reputation on publishing “the first scientific study” of racial mixing (conducted 1908 in Southwest Africa). Using new methods, namely Mendel's laws, he came to the same old conclusions: “bastards” were inherently inferior, dangerous and unnatural. Interestingly enough, up to this day his work on racial mixing is considered groundbreaking.Google Scholar

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44. MP Gröber of the Center-Party in Gentrup, Theodor, Die Rassenmischehen, p. 42.Google Scholar

45. Ibid., p. 41–42.

46. See EZB, 5/340: Reichs- und Staatsangehörigkeitsgesetz, pp. 3, 7, 8 and 28.

47. An example of continuity in spite of political changes is the “Society for Racial Hygiene”. Founded in 1905 as a politically and religiously neutral organization (only open to whites, though), by 1916 it included virtually all important biologists and anthropologists in its ranks. By 1920 lectures on racial hygiene were part of the curricula of all German universities and in 1926 the state-financed Kaiser Wilhelm Institut for anthropology began to co-ordinate all research in anthropology, biology and eugenics. See Weingart, Peteret al., Rasse, Blut und Gene. Geschichte der Eugenik und Rassenhygiene in Deutschland (Frankfurt a. M., 1988)Google Scholar.

48. A parliamentary motion to grant citizenship to children of German women married to stateless men (aimed at Danes in Northern Germany) failed out of concern that it would cover those mixed marriages. See BAB, R 1001, 61 Kol DKG 1077/1, p. 230.

49. BAB, RKA-4457/7, p. 64.

50. See e.g. , Bauret al, Erblichkeitslehre und Rassenhygiene, p. 412Google Scholar.

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53. See BAB, R 1001, 61 Kol DKG 1077/1, p. 86.

54. See BAB, R 1001–1077/1, p. 219 and DKZ 1909, p. 593/4. As a consequence of the scandals the Ministry of Foreign Affairs prohibited the immensely popular public exhibitions of “natives”. See Gilman, Sander L., “Black Sexuality and Modern Consciousness”, in Grimm, Rheinhold and Hermand, Jost (eds), Blacks and German Culture (Madison, WI, 1986), p. 36Google Scholar.

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56. For an overview of the campaign and the decisive role e.g. the British socialists played in it see Reinders, Robert C., “Racialism on the Left: E.D. Morel and the ‘Black Horror on the Rhine’”, International Review of Social History, 13 (1968), pp. 128CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57. An inquiry conducted by die British Foreign Office in 1920, diat showed die unfoundedness of the accusations against the black soldiers, did not have any influence on the continuous propaganda. See Ibid.., p. 10.

58. Friedrich Rosenberger, Arztliche Rundschau, Nr. 47/1920, in Distler, Heinrich, Das Deutsche Leid am Rhein. Ein Buck der Anklage gegen die Schandherrschaft des jranzösischen Militarismus (Minden, 1921), p. 56Google Scholar.

59. Lang, Joseph, Die Schwarze Schmach, p. 16.Google Scholar

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62. Pommerin, Reiner, Sterilisierungder ‘Rheintandbastarde’: Das Schicksal einerfarbigen Deutschen Minderheit 1918–1937 (Düsseldorf, 1979), p. 23.Google Scholar

63. , Pommerin, Sterilisierung der ‘Rheinlandbastarde’, pp. 9495.Google Scholar

64. See Kesting, Robert W., “Forgotten Victims: Blacks in the Holocaust”, The Journal of Negro History, 77 (1992), pp. 3036CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

65. In 1952, “Mach nicht so traurige Augen, weil du ein Negerlein bist” by Leila Negra, a black German teenager, was a Top-Ten hit song in Germany. See Fremgen, Gisela, und wenn du dazu noch scharz bist. Berichte scbwarzer Frauen in der Bundesrepublik (Bremen, 1984), p. 110.Google Scholar

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70. Several studies conducted in the 1950s show the population's negative attitude towards “the niggerlovers’ and their bastards”, Frankenstein, Luise, Uneheliche Kinder von ausländischen Sobiaten mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Mischlinge (Genf, 1953), p. 29Google Scholar; see also , Eyferthet al, Farbige Kinder in Deutschland, pp. 7478. Magazine articles and stories of the 1950s had a less aggressive attitude towards the children, rather portraying them as “tragic mulattos”, but presented their fathers in “black horror” tradition as drunken, animal-like rapists. SeeGoogle ScholarLester, Rosemarie K., Blacks in Germany and German Blacks”, in Grimm and Hermand, Blacks and German Culture, pp. 122128Google Scholar.

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72. , Lester, “Blacks in Germany”, p. 121.Google Scholar

73. Eyferth et al., Farbige Kinder in Deutschland, p. 8. 74. Ibid.., p. 54.

75. Ibid, p. 77.

76. , Fremgen, und wenn du dazu nich schwarz bist, p. 65. See alsoGoogle Scholar, Lester, “Blacks in Germany”, pp. 128130Google Scholar.

77. , Eyferthet al., Farbige Kinder in Deutschland, p. 105.Google Scholar

78. Be it in the fotm of sociobiology that holds positions similar to those of the social anthropologists and nevertheless receives favorable treatment in the mainstream press, as e.g. the reception of Murray's and Herrnstein's The Bell Curve shows; see Frazer, Stephen, The Bell Curve Wars (New York, 1995). Or in the modified variation of “invincible cultural differences” between the “races”, seeGoogle ScholarOtyakmaz, Berrin Ozlem, Auf alien Stühlen: Das Selbstverständnis junger türkischer Migrantinnen in Deutschhind (Cologne, 1995)Google Scholar.