Youth Newspaper Closes Gaps in Nazi Era Press

Jul 1, 2009

Just 20 years ago, this would not have been possible: 15 teams of pupils from Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and Austria have together produced the newspaper Weiße Flecken (blank spots). It closes gaps left from the Nazi era.

Chancellor Merkel and students from newspaper project
Enlarge image
Chancellor Merkel receives a copy of the "Weiße Flecken" newspaper from its young reporters.
(© BPA; by Bergmann)

Chancellor Angela Merkel attended the ceremonial presentation of the publication on June 30 at the Jewish Museum in Berlin. She was impressed by how much work was put into the newspaper. "We have since learned a great deal more about the major cities," said the Chancellor. But in the small towns, there were lots of blank spots left from the Nazi era that need researching, she added. 

What happened? 

With the youth initiative step21, 70 young people from Berlin to Brno, Klagenfurt to Poznan, researched what happened in their home region at the time of National Socialism. For nine months, they sifted through archives and tracked down the last surviving contemporary witnesses. 

They took part in editorial workshops in Germany and Poland and wrote a newspaper to fill in the "blank spots” left by the Nazi press. Supported by professional journalists and historians, the young Europeans studied personal stories of victims of National Socialism. 

German press kept quiet 

The team "Geschichtsjäger” (history hunters) from Zabrze in Poland wanted to find out more about Reichskristallnacht (Crystal Night) in 1938 in their small town. Hardly anything had been written about it in the German press. 

"There were only blank spots about the events of that night,” they told the Chancellor. That was until they found a contemporary witness who told them that, that night, synagogues were burned down and the Nazis destroyed Jewish property. 

Blank spots are shrinking 

A team in Brno, the second largest city in the Czech Republic, carried out research on the college at Kaunitz. This team found a 90-year-old witness who told them what actually happened. 

The Gestapo turned the student residence halls into a prison. Student rooms became prison cells; there were gallows in the courtyard. Former bathrooms were converted into interrogation rooms. 

Pupils from Berlin looked into the life of communist Erich Boltze. He was arrested by the Gestapo in 1933. A court sentenced him to three years in prison. After that, however, he was not released, but taken to the concentration camp at Sachsenhausen. There, in 1944, he was shot dead by the SS, along with 26 other German and French antifascists. 

Together for human rights 

During the research, the young people got to know each other. They realized that they have more things in common than differences. And they learned how important it is to demonstrate civil courage, even today. These girls and boys do not look away when fellow pupils in the playground hand out CDs with extreme right wing radical songs on them. They intervene. 

"We must not make do with human rights on paper,” they write in their joint headline article. "We need to stand up for them!” 

© REGIERUNGonline

Youth Newspaper

The Jewish Museum in Berlin © picture-alliance/ dpa

Historic Responsibility

Holocaust Memmorial, Berlin, (c) picture-alliance/Paul Mayall

The key parameters of German politics can be described by the twin lodestars of "never again" and "never alone." Our Historic Responsibilty section offers you more information on the meaning of these terms.

Writing to Defeat Fear: Anne Frank Was Born 80 Years Ago

(c) dpa - Report

"One day this terrible war will be over. The time will come when we'll be people again and not just Jews!" Anne Frank wrote in her now world-famous diary on April 9, 1944.  She was 14 and had been hiding inside a building in Amsterdam for nearly two years. On June 12, 2009, she would have turned 80.