Domain Registration

Germany’s WWII surrender: Should May 8 be a public holiday?

  • February 08, 2020

The weapons of World War II fell silent on May 8, 1945, and Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally. German dictator Adolf Hitler had killed himself just days prior, unwilling to witness the fall of his “thousand-year empire.”

His vision caused untold destruction: More than 60 million people lost their lives, more than 6 million Jews were murdered and broad swaths of Europe were turned to rubble. 

For political prisoners and Jews who survived the concentration camps, or soldiers on the front, May 8 was a day of liberation.

But not everyone experienced it that way. Some 14 million Germans were uprooted. Rape, pillaging and murder took place as the conquering armies marched through the country. For many German prisoners of war, May 8 marked the beginning of an imprisonment from which some would never return.

As part of the Soviet Union’s sphere of influence, East Germany was denied the democracy it touted in its name, the German Democratic Republic (GDR) for more than 40 years. Thus, for many Germans, May 8 marked the beginning of a new chapter of suffering.

Wehrmacht Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitel signed the declaration of surrender

Legal philosopher Christian Hillgruber said “the ambivalence of that day” and the declaration of May 8 as a “day of liberation” would be “an inappropriate condensation of the breadth of its meaning.”

Just like today’s AfD

In a famous 1985 speech commemorating the end of the war, former German President Richard von Weizsäcker spoke of those very different meanings.

“We must not regard the end of the war as the cause of flight, expulsion and deprivation of freedom,” he said. “The cause goes back to the start of the tyranny that brought about war. We must not separate May 8, 1945, from January 30, 1933.”  

It was unusual for Weizsäcker to refer to the day as one of liberation, even 40 years after the end of the war. But the idea was not completely new. At the presentation of West Germany’s newly crafted Basic Law on May 8, 1949 — and before becoming the first president of the fledgling Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) — Theodor Heuss called May 8 the day when Germany had been “at once saved and destroyed.”

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Reichstag parliament building

    On April 30, 1945, two Soviet soldiers hoisted the red flag on the Reichstag parliament building in Berlin. Even though it is now known that the scene for this photo was actually staged two days later, it remains one of the most famous images of the 20th century, symbolizing the victory over Hitler, the destruction of the Nazi party and the end of the Second World War.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    The German-Russian Museum

    In this officers’ mess in Berlin Karlshorst, the German Wehrmacht army signed the unconditional surrender on May 8, 1945. The German-Russian Museum exhibits the document, which was drawn up in English, Russian and German. The permanent exhibition provides information about the the war of annihilation led by the Nazis against the Soviet Union from 1941, which claimed around 25 million lives.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    The Allied Museum

    The western allies, namely Americans, English and French, did not get to Berlin until July 1945 when they took over the western sectors of the city. The center of the US forces was the Zehlendorf district. The former Outpost Theater cinema building is now part of the Allied Museum, which covers the period of postwar Berlin, including the 1948 airlift, up to the withdrawal of the Americans in 1994.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    The Soviet War Memorial

    A Soviet soldier holding a rescued child on his arm and a lowered sword over a shattered swastika — this huge monument towers above the Soviel Memorial in Treptow. The military cemetery is the final resting place for 7,000 Soviet soldiers who lost their lives in the fight for Berlin in the spring of 1945.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Commonwealth War Cemetery in Berlin

    Some 3,600 Air Force soldiers, mainly killed in air combat over Berlin, are buried in the British cemetery on Heerstrasse. The honorary cemetery was built between 1955 and 1957 for the fallen soldiers from Great Britain and the Commonwealth States, especially Canada. It is still under special protection by the British Crown.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Memorial to the German Resistance

    The war almost ended a year earlier: On June 20, 1944, a group of German officers led by Claus Schenk Count von Stauffenberg tried to overthrow Hitler. But the assassination attempt failed and the officers involved were executed. The German Resistance Memorial Center remembers those who died while resisting the Nazi regime.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Topography of Terror

    With about one million visitors annually, the documentation center Topography of Terror on Niederkirchnerstrasse is one of the most visited memorial sites in Berlin. From 1933 to 1945, this was the site of the headquarters of the Secret State Police Office and the SS — in other words, where the Nazi regime’s system of terror was planned and managed.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

    A wave-shaped field of 2,711 pillars commemorates the approximately 6.3 million European Jews who were murdered during the Nazi era. Directly underneath the Holocaust Memorial, changing exhibitions document the discrimination, persecution and systematic extermination of the Jewish people in the Nazi concentration camps.

  • 75 years after WWII: Memorials in Berlin

    Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church

    The Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church on Breitscheidplatz was severely damaged in bombing raids in 1943. When it was to be completely demolished and rebuilt in the postwar years, Berliners protested. As a result, the 71-meter-high (233-foot-high) tower ruins were preserved as a highly visible memorial against war and destruction, for peace and reconciliation.

    Author: Lisa Marie Jordan


Nevertheless, for decades to come, emphasis was mainly placed on defeat rather than liberation in West Germany. In contrast, East Germany branded the day one of liberation from the start and instrumentalized it as the justification for its entire existence. Still, the day was declared such by party bosses, not by the wider society.

Read more: The Yalta Conference, where the postwar world began

Even in 1985, not everyone agreed with Weizsäcker’s sentiments. Bavarian State Premier and Christian Social Union (CSU) Chairman Franz-Josef Strauss bemoaned the “endless process of coming to terms with German history as a form of permanent public penance.”

In 1985, German President Richard von Weizsäcker called May 8 ‘a day of liberation’

Today, that doesn’t sound much different from the more radical demand of “a 180-degree pivot when it comes to the politics of remembrance” that was called for by far-right Alternative for Germany’s (AfD’s) firebrand Björn Höcke. 

Is there a more fitting day?

But how deeply is the idea of May 8 as the day of liberation from the Nazi regime anchored in German society? Christian Hillgruber said, “The vast majority of Germans see it that way today.” But, he says, they do so in a manner that is “not very reflective and which young people do not know from personal experience.”

May 8 was declared an official day of commemoration in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in 2002, though not a state holiday. The state of Brandenburg followed suit in 2015. The state of Berlin announced that May 8 would be declared a one-time state holiday this year.

Holocaust survivor Esther Bejarano has now proposed establishing May 8 as a national holiday in Germany. In an open letter to German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Chancellor Angela Merkel and members of the Bundestag, she wrote that such a holiday would help people, “finally understand that May 8, 1945, was the day of liberation and the toppling of the Nazi regime.”

The AfD’s Björn Höcke has called for a ‘180 degree turnaround in remembrance policy’

Bejarano received broad support for her proposal from German lawmakers. Green party parliamentary group leader Katrin Göring-Eckardt described May 8 as the day that made a democratic Germany possible and as a reminder of the dangers of relativizing German atrocities. Left party politicians voiced similar views, and Michael Theurer of the business-friendly Free Democratic Party (FDP) suggested it be made a holiday across the entire EU. No politician of weight has come out against the idea, yet neither has anyone from Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) come out in favor of it.

Read more: At Auschwitz, Merkel expresses shame over barbaric crimes

As Bejarano is mainly concerned with remembering Jews murdered during the war, Christian Hillgruber pointed to January 27, the day of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, as a “more fitting day.” Hillgruber said that is because “it truly stands for something that can be undeniably seen and celebrated as a liberation: The end of Nazi terror, and the persecution and murder of millions of human beings.” January 27 was declared a national day of remembrance in 1996, but not a national holiday.

Commemoration by decree?

Hillgruber warned against decreeing sensitivity.

“Official interpretations of history can only be an offer — one that each individual is free to accept or not,” he added.

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier: ‘Evil spirits of the past are reappearing’

Speaking with German public news outlet Deutschlandfunk on the 70th anniversary of the end of the war, and at a time when the Left party was calling for May 8 to be declared a national holiday, historian Norbert Frei of Jena said: “I don’t think we should always attempt to craft new laws to codify our thoughts on history and our consciousness of it ( … ) In general, I would say historical reflection — which is very important — should, and must, come from society itself, and not be prescribed by laws.”

More than anything, Christian Hillgruber said he sees another problem – fatigue.

“In my opinion, we already have far too many days of remembrance,” he said. “That diminishes the meaning of each. And it wears many people out.”

He said the threat of fatigue is greatly enhanced when the message “is constantly delivered in a patronizing and lecturing manner.”

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-s-wwii-surrender-should-may-8-be-a-public-holiday/a-52301859?maca=en-rss-en-ger-1023-xml-atom

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com
%d bloggers like this: