A film about the former German left-wing extremist terrorist organisation, the Red Army Faction (RAF), starts today at German cinemas. Writing in the daily Der Tagesspiegel, author Tanja Dückers notes that this RAF revival is generating a certain sense of "nest warmth" among Germans: "The members of the RAF were not just a few hate-mongerers from countries most Germans would not be able to find on a map. They were to a certain extent Germany's own sons and daughters, with parents who give lengthy newspaper interviews and with whom everyone can sympathise. And in comparison with some of the present conflicts the battle of these German urban guerrillas against the state was pretty transparent, geographically limited and, at least initially, rational. ... For the stability of a society it makes a difference whether the perpetrators are seen to have had motives or not. ... The sight of the RAF members generates a certain 'nest warmth' (feeling of security) ... because ultimately theirs was a success story for the Federal Republic of Germany, and by extension for Western democracies. It was only initially that the state and its institutions proved hysterical and inflexible, later on it was just as flexible as it was unrelenting." (25/09/2008)
» Artykuł (Link zewnętrzny, niemiecki)
Więcej z przeglądu prasy na temat » Film, » Media audiowizualne, » Historia, » Niemcy, » Europa
Wszystkie dostępne teksty » Tanja Dückers