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{{short description|Collective guilt attributed to Germany}} | |||
'''German collective guilt''' is a term describing the responsibility of German citizens regarding atrocities made by Germany during ]<ref name="Jasper">"In his famous work The Question of German Guilt, in which he discusses German guilt in the Second World War,Karl Jaspers explicitly advocates the thesis of German collective guilt. He grounds this belief in the collectivity of guilt in the fact that such a regime became possible in the spiritual conditions of German life. The text was written only a few months after the war was over. At that time, Germany was profoundly defeated: an ideological, moral, economic ruin. Jaspers did not wait for Germans to get on their feet in order to face them with their guilt, but neither did he take on the role of their judge. He wanted to see a "conversation," in which everyone will be both the judge and the accused, and try to look at things from the other's and not only from their own perspective. The objective of this conversation, he wrote, was common welfare". Nenad Dimitrijevic The Past, Responsibility and the Future Eurozine 2001-07-04 </ref> | |||
{{for|the debate about assigning responsibility to Germany for starting World War I|War guilt question}} | |||
].]] | |||
{{expand German|topic=cult|date=November 2017}} | |||
{{use dmy dates|date=June 2024}} | |||
] to the German populace. The text accuses Germans as a whole of doing nothing while atrocities were committed.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Beattie |first1=Andrew H. |title=Allied Internment Camps in Occupied Germany: Extrajudicial Detention in the Name of Denazification, 1945–1950 |date=2019 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-48763-4 |page=13 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3KCsDwAAQBAJ&q=Eure+Schuld+famous&pg=PA13 |language=en}}</ref>]] | |||
'''German collective guilt''' (]: '''{{lang|de|Kollektivschuld}}''') refers to the notion of a ] attributed to ] and ] for ] and ].<ref name="Rensmann-2004">{{cite book |last=Rensmann |first=Lars |editor1=Nyla R. Branscombe |editor2=Bertjan Doosje |title=Collective Guilt: International Perspectives |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cS5fqn3KJKIC&pg=PR169 |series=Studies in emotion and social interaction. |date=6 September 2004 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-52083-6 |pages=169–190 |chapter=10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany |chapter-url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/collective-guilt/collective-guilt-national-identity-and-political-processes-in-contemporary-germany/75549360195D96F75B1FF5EC6E8FA1C7 | |||
|doi=10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012 |oclc=783204942 |quote=The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.}}</ref><ref name="Muskat-2015">{{cite book |last=Muskat |first=Jörg |title=Kollektivschuld am Holocaust. Warum das deutsche Volk eine moralische Gesamthaftung an den NS-Verbrechen trifft |trans-title=Collective guilt in the Holocaust: Why the German People Have a Collective Moral Liability for the Nazi Crimes |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0RFnCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA1 |date=20 August 2015 |publisher=GRIN Verlag |isbn=978-3-668-03308-5 |oclc=929998010 |pages=1 |quote=Es gibt eine deutsche Kollektivschuld für den Holocaust. |trans-quote=There is a German collective guilt for the Holocaust.}}</ref> | |||
== |
==Advocates== | ||
Swiss psychoanalyst ] wrote an influential essay in 1945 about this concept as a psychological phenomenon, in which he asserted that the German people felt a collective guilt (''Kollektivschuld'') for the atrocities committed by their fellow countrymen, and so introduced the term into German intellectual discourse. Jung said collective guilt was "for psychologists a fact, and it will be one of the most important tasks of therapy to bring the Germans to recognize this guilt."<ref>{{citation |title=Guilt and Defense |author=Jeffrey K. Olick, Andrew J. Perrin |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2010 |isbn=978-0-674-03603-1 |pages= |url=https://archive.org/details/homeelsewhererea0000step/page/24}}</ref> | |||
] D'' death squad at work in ], ], in 1942]] | |||
After the war, the ] occupation forces in ] promoted shame and guilt with a ], which included posters depicting ] with slogans such as "These Atrocities: Your Fault!" (''Diese Schandtaten: Eure Schuld!'').<ref>{{citation |title=The Guilt of Nations? |author=Jeffrey K. Olick |doi=10.1111/j.1747-7093.2003.tb00443.x |journal=] |volume=17 |number=2 |pages=109–117 |date=September 2003|s2cid=17120839}}</ref> | |||
During Second World War Germany engaged in massive genocidal operations whose victims included several nations, often classifed by German state as "]". Nationalities subject to German agression such as ] or ] were to be exterminated in the name of "Tausendjähriges Reich". German goals included elimination of almost 50 milion people in ] to make room for German nation, perceived by them as "]" in ] and extermination of Jewish people in ] in accordance with the policy of ]. To accomplish that goal German state used industrial means of genocide such as ], ], ], mass executions, artificial ] and other means. Those atrocities were accompanied by complete disregard of human life when it came to people branded as 'subhmans', as even animals in German Reich had higher rights and received higher protection then Jewish or Polish people(for example protection from medical experiments). | |||
After the war due to perceived overwhelming support for Nazi Regime among German population, the term appeared as description of responsibility of German people regarding those atrocities, as citizens of German community. | |||
The theologian ] and other churchmen accepted shared guilt in the ''Stuttgarter Schuldbekenntnis'' (]) of 1945. The philosopher and psychologist ] delivered lectures to students in 1946 which were published under the title ''The Question of German Guilt''.<ref>{{citation |title=Accountability for Collective Wrongdoing |author=Tracy Isaacs, Richard Vernon |pages=196–199 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2011 |isbn=978-0-521-17611-8}}</ref> In this published work, Jaspers describes how "an acknowledgment of national guilt was a necessary condition for the moral and political rebirth of Germany".<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Question of German Guilt {{!}} book by Jaspers|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Question-of-German-Guilt|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en|access-date=2020-05-05}}</ref> Additionally, Jaspers believed that no one could escape this collective guilt, and taking responsibility for it might enable the German people to transform their society from its state of collapse into a more highly developed and morally responsible democracy. He believed that those who committed war crimes were morally guilty, and those who tolerated them without resistance were politically guilty, leading to collective guilt for all. | |||
==Support among German population for Nazism== | |||
] | |||
Support for Nazism among German population was of significant level in pre-war times and in March 1933 German elections ] received 43.9 % of votes while its political ally and coalition partner the nationalist ] gained 8 % of votes, meaning that together they had won the support of over half ot the voting population, that is 51,9 % of votes. | |||
Even when Germany lost the war, the Nazi ideology was supported by large portions of German society; in 1947 in a poll made in American German occupation zone 58% of Germans stated that Nazism was a "positive ideology"(similar attitude existed in other zones)<ref name="RocznikI">Rocznik Polsko-Niemiecki Tom I ''"Polska a Niemcy:Ludność, odbudowa, przemiany polityczne w pierwszych latach powojennych"'' Edmund Dmitrów Warszawa 1992 page 18</ref>, while 37% supported genocide of Jewish and Polish nations as "justified"<ref name="Tony">"Zapłata | |||
Prawda o denazyfikacji" ] ] "EUROPA" 2005-11-16, page 5 | |||
</ref> 62 years after the war, in a poll from 2007, 40% of German people expressed a view that Nazi ideology had "good sides"<ref name="GoodSides">"Niemcy: Nazizm miał również dobre strony" ] 2007-02-11 </ref>. | |||
The German collective guilt for the events of the Holocaust has long been an idea that has been pondered by famous and well-known German politicians and thinkers. In addition to those mentioned previously, German author and philosopher ] describes how he sometimes feels as if being German is a huge burden, due to the country's past. According to Schlink, "the reason the European crisis is so agonising for Germany is that the country has been able to retreat from itself by hurling itself into the ]".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Connolly|first=Kate|date=2012-09-16|title=Bernhard Schlink: being German is a huge burden|language=en-GB|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/sep/16/bernhard-schlink-germany-burden-euro-crisis|access-date=2020-05-05|issn=0261-3077}}</ref> Schlink also believes that "the burden of nationality has very much shaped the way in which Germans view themselves and their responsibilities within Europe", and he describes how Germans see themselves as ]s or Europeans, rather than as Germans. Schlink sees this existing guilt becoming weaker from generation to generation.{{cn|date=May 2020}} ] also advocated for collective guilt: | |||
==Origins of Nazi planning== | |||
], victims of medical experiments.]] | |||
The plans of Nazi Germany in Second World War concerning ] in ] were based on earlier designs by ] in ] <ref name="Geiss"> Imannuel Geiss, Der polnische Grenzstreifen 1914-1918. Ein Beitrag zur deutschen Kriegszielpolitik im Ersten Weltkrieg, Hamburg/Lübeck 1960</ref>, which envisioned expulsion of milions of Poles and Jews from annexed territories in Poland and ]<ref name="Geiss"/>. While the term subhuman was used by the Nazis to describe Poles who were to be eliminated from German territories<ref> Selections from | |||
] and ] | |||
Poland Under Nazi Occupation</ref><ref name="Volk"> ] "Germans and Poles 1871–1945" in "Germany and Eastern Europe: Cultural Identities and Cultural Differences", Rodopi 1999</ref>, the politician who led the creation of an unified German state, ] already compared in 1861 Poles to animals that one should exterminate in order to live<ref name="Bis">]He(Bismarck) wrote(...):"We can do nothing other then exterminate them if we want to exist; the wolf also cannot help the fact he is created by God as he is and yet we shoot him dead when we can can" Bismarck,2004 | |||
Pearson Education. Page 94</ref> | |||
In 1887 ], the future ], hoped for a military conflict that would allow to remove Polish population from Polish territories gained by Germany<ref name="Herbert">Herbert Arthur Strauss, "Hostages of Modernization: Studies on Modern Antisemitism 1870-1933-39 Germany - Great Britain-France", | |||
Walter de Gruyter 1993</ref> | |||
Some historians thus point out at historical development of German political goals and policies as reasons for atrocities in WW2 rather then just limit them to Nazi's existance<ref name="Geiss"/>. | |||
{{quote|Those, whose world became grey a long time ago when they realized what mountains of hate towered over Germany; those, who a long time ago imagined during sleepless nights how terrible would be the revenge on Germany for the inhuman deeds of the Nazis, cannot help but view with wretchedness all that is being done to Germans by the Russians, Poles or Czechs as nothing other than a mechanical and inevitable reaction to the crimes that the people have committed as a nation, in which unfortunately individual justice, or the guilt or innocence of the individual, can play no part.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Suppan |first1=Arnold|authorlink=Arnold Suppan|title-link=Hitler–Beneš–Tito |title=Hitler–Beneš–Tito: National Conflicts, World Wars, Genocides, Expulsions, and Divided Remembrance in East-Central and Southeastern Europe, 1848–2018 |date=2019 |publisher=] |location=Vienna |isbn=978-3-7001-8410-2 |jstor=j.ctvvh867x|pages=739–740}}</ref>}} | |||
==Resistance== | |||
==See also== | |||
While there was a resistance against Nazi government in Germany it only reached its highest point in ] at the time when Germany was losing the war. Despite desiring to topple Hitler such leading figures in resistance like ] were nationalists and supported such Nazi policies as ]<ref name="Martyn"> Martyn Housden,"Resistance and Conformity in the Third Reich" Routledge, 1997 page 100: "He was endorsing both the tyrannical occupation of Poland and the use of its | |||
{{Portal|Germany|Society|}} | |||
people as slave labourers"</ref><ref> | |||
{{div col|colwidth=20em}} | |||
''Die Bevölkerung ist ein unglaublicher Pöbel, sehr viele Juden und sehr viel Mischvolk. Ein Volk, welches sich nur unter der Knute wohlfühlt. Die Tausenden von Gefangenen werden unserer Landwirtschaft recht gut tun''(''The population here are unbelievable plebs; a great many ] and half-breeds. A folk that only feels good beneath the ]. The thousands of POW's will be very good for our agriculture.'')</ref> or German colonisation of Poland<ref name="Hoffman">Stauffenberg was plased(...)"It is essential that we begin a systemic colonisation in Poland. But I have no fear that this will not occur". Peter Hoffman "Stauffenberg: A Family History, 1905-1944 | |||
*] | |||
page 116 2003 | |||
*] | |||
McGill-Queen's Press</ref>. | |||
*] | |||
Opposition to Nazi regime that didn't support some of its goals also existed, for example ] movement which counted 6 people during the war. In non-German countries such movements were larger, for example in Poland the ]] counted 400,000 members<ref name="LukZaw">"A Concise History of Poland" Jerzy Lukowski, Hubert Zawadzki Published 2006 | |||
*] | |||
Cambridge University | |||
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Press</ref>, while the resistance in France circa 200,000<ref name="Fox">"The Desert Fox in Normandy: Rommel's Defense of Fortress Europe" Samuel W. (Jr.) Mitcham 1997 | |||
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Praeger/Greenwood page 65</ref>. | |||
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{{div col end}} | |||
==References== | |||
==German minority support for Nazi agression== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{Germany topics|state=collapsed}} | |||
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In ] and ] German minority organisations actively supported Nazi agression,. In Poland out of 740,000 Germans living there pre-war<ref> </ref>, 100,000 joined ]</ref>, which engaged in organised genocide of Polish intellectual elites in ]. In the early years of German occupation 90% of Polish citizens who were sent to concentration camps, were sent there from list made by local Germans<ref name="Piotrowski"> Tadeusz Piotrowsk "Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918-1947" page 23 1998 McFarland & Company</ref> After the war the cooperation of German minority in genocide and Nazi agression was one of the reasons to transfer German population from most territories that were germanised to Germany.<ref name="Wardzyńska">''"Polacy - wysiedleni, wypędzeni i wyrugowani przez III Rzeszę"'', Maria Wardzyńska, Warsaw 2004". Created on order of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, the organization called ] carried out executions during "Intelligenzaktion" alongside operational groups of German military and police, in addition to such activities as identifying Poles for execution and illegally detaining them</ref>(however some territories that underwent germanisation remained part of German state). Additonaly a large part of those Germanised areas where majority of population voted for NSDA(see map:] was re-assigned to Poland and ] after the war. Descendants of German colonists. migrants and settlers from those regions that were sent to Germany formed various organisations representing their interests. Those organisations concentrated in so called ] or Federation of Expellees. It's first president was a former Nazi Ortsgruppenleiter ], who during the war worked as judge in Nazi occupied Poland. It has also been revealed that of circa 200 high-ranking members of the BdV prior 1982, more then a third more than a third can be found in the members index of NSDAP or are associated in other ways with Nazi regime. Those numbers include three former general secretaries and several vice-presidents. Actions of organisations such as BdV remain an issue of conflict and hostility between Germany and its eastern neighbours, Poland and Czech Republic. | |||
] | |||
==Attitude of German soldiers== | |||
]s of the ] murdered near ] by the ] of ] Commanded by General ]]] | |||
Attitude towards German policies in WW2 was also studied among German soldiers, by using photos and correspondence left after the war. | |||
Photos serve as valuable source of knowledge as making them and albums about persecution of Jews was a popular custom among German soldiers. These photos aren't official propaganda of German state and represent personal experience. Their overall attitude is antisemitic<ref name="Ordinary"> Ordinary Men, Extraordinary Photos" Judith Levin and Daniel Uziel ] Yad Vashem Studies, No. 26</ref>. German soldiers as well as police members took pictures of Jewish deportations, executions, humiliation, abuse to which they were subjected. The photographs indicate the consent of the photographers to the abuses and murders committed<ref name="Ordinary"/>. | |||
Archival evidence as to reaction to policies of racial extermination can also be traced in various letters that remained after the war<ref name="Ordinary"/>. Many letters from Wehrmacht soldiers were published in 1941 and entitled "German Soldiers See the Soviet Union, this publication includes authentic letters from soldiers on the Eastern front. Researchers Judith Levin and Daniel Uziel quote a German soldier writing: | |||
"The German people is deeply indebted to the Fuehrer, because if these animals, our enemies here, had reached Germany, murders of a nature not yet witnessed in the world would have occurred.... No newspaper can describe what we have seen. It verges on the unbelievable, and even the Middle Ages do not compare with what has transpired here. Reading Der Stuermer and observing its photos give only a limited impression of what we have seen here and of the crimes committed here by the Jews." | |||
Judith Levin and Daniel Uziel state that this type of writing and opinion was very common in correspondence left by German soldiers, especially on the ]<ref name="Ordinary"/>. | |||
Another sample are German soldier's letters that were sent home and copied during the war by special Polish Home Army cell that infiltrated German post system to collect possible intelligence assets<ref name="Kazdemu"> | |||
Niemieckie listy ze wschodu ] - nr 51 (2483) 18-12-2004; Jerzy Kochanowski, Marcin Zaremba</ref>. Those letters have been analyzed by historians and the picture they paint is similiar to views expressed by Judith Levin and Daniel Uziel. Most soldiers write openly about extermination of Jews and are proud of it. Support for "untermensch" and "master race" concepts are also part of the attitude expressed by German soldiers<ref name="Kazdemu"/>. Presented examples reflecting this trend include samples such as :"I'm one of those who are decreasing number of partisans. I put them against the wall and everyone gets a bullet in his head, very merry and interesting job", "My point of view:this nation deserves only the knaut, only by it they can be educated; a part of them already experienced that;others still try to resist. Yesterday I had possibility to see 40 partisants, something like that I had never encountered before. I became convinced that we are the masters, others are untermenschen"<ref name="Kazdemu"/>. | |||
Much more evidence of such trends and and thoughts among ] soldiers exists and is subject to research by historians<ref name="Ordinary"/>. | |||
==End of ]== | |||
On 5th of May ] the future chancellor of Germany, ] during a public speech expressed his opposition to de-nazification<ref name="Tony"/>. He demanded to leave alone "sympathizers of nazism". Two weeks later on CDU forum, he repeated his demands. With the beginning of Cold War, efforts of de-nazification were abandoned. | |||
In 1949 authorities of newly created ] made a decision to end all investigations into the past of officials in civil and military departments. In ] alone in 1951 former Nazis made 94 % of all judges and prosecutors, 77 % of workers in Bavarian Ministry of Finance, 60 % of all workers in Ministry of Agriculture<ref name="Tony"/>. In 1952 one out of three people employed in German Ministry of Foreign Affairs was a former Nazi. 48 % of people in diplomatic corps were former ] members and 17 % former members of SD and ]<ref name="Tony"/>. | |||
Some former high ranking Nazi officials remained in post-war positions of authority. ] who helped ] gain unlimited dictatorial powers and wrote a law commentary on the The ] became Director of the Federal Chancellory of West Germany between 1953 and 1963 and was one of the closest aides to Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, the Chief of Police in ] Wilhelm Hauser was a former obersturmführer responsible for massacres in Belarus during the war<ref name="Tony"/>, ] responsible for massacres of thousands during ] became a politician and mayor of a German town of ]. Many war crimes comitted during Second World War by the German forces have remained unpunished. The role of former Nazis in German society and politics has led to serious social debate and conflict in Germany during ] events<ref name="Tony"/>. | |||
The issue of German guilt and responsibility remains a political issue to this day, issues such as uniquness of the ], the reasons of Nazi appearence in Germany as well as the matter if Germany has dealt enought to correct its past are vital part of political discourse both within Germany as well as within its neighbours and former victims. | |||
==See also== | |||
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== Notes == | |||
<references /> | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 18:06, 26 November 2024
Collective guilt attributed to Germany For the debate about assigning responsibility to Germany for starting World War I, see War guilt question.You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (November 2017) Click for important translation instructions.
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German collective guilt (German: Kollektivschuld) refers to the notion of a collective guilt attributed to Germany and its people for perpetrating the Holocaust and other atrocities in World War II.
Advocates
Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung wrote an influential essay in 1945 about this concept as a psychological phenomenon, in which he asserted that the German people felt a collective guilt (Kollektivschuld) for the atrocities committed by their fellow countrymen, and so introduced the term into German intellectual discourse. Jung said collective guilt was "for psychologists a fact, and it will be one of the most important tasks of therapy to bring the Germans to recognize this guilt."
After the war, the Allied occupation forces in Allied-occupied Germany promoted shame and guilt with a publicity campaign, which included posters depicting Nazi concentration camps with slogans such as "These Atrocities: Your Fault!" (Diese Schandtaten: Eure Schuld!).
The theologian Martin Niemöller and other churchmen accepted shared guilt in the Stuttgarter Schuldbekenntnis (Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt) of 1945. The philosopher and psychologist Karl Jaspers delivered lectures to students in 1946 which were published under the title The Question of German Guilt. In this published work, Jaspers describes how "an acknowledgment of national guilt was a necessary condition for the moral and political rebirth of Germany". Additionally, Jaspers believed that no one could escape this collective guilt, and taking responsibility for it might enable the German people to transform their society from its state of collapse into a more highly developed and morally responsible democracy. He believed that those who committed war crimes were morally guilty, and those who tolerated them without resistance were politically guilty, leading to collective guilt for all.
The German collective guilt for the events of the Holocaust has long been an idea that has been pondered by famous and well-known German politicians and thinkers. In addition to those mentioned previously, German author and philosopher Bernhard Schlink describes how he sometimes feels as if being German is a huge burden, due to the country's past. According to Schlink, "the reason the European crisis is so agonising for Germany is that the country has been able to retreat from itself by hurling itself into the European project". Schlink also believes that "the burden of nationality has very much shaped the way in which Germans view themselves and their responsibilities within Europe", and he describes how Germans see themselves as Atlanticists or Europeans, rather than as Germans. Schlink sees this existing guilt becoming weaker from generation to generation. Thomas Mann also advocated for collective guilt:
Those, whose world became grey a long time ago when they realized what mountains of hate towered over Germany; those, who a long time ago imagined during sleepless nights how terrible would be the revenge on Germany for the inhuman deeds of the Nazis, cannot help but view with wretchedness all that is being done to Germans by the Russians, Poles or Czechs as nothing other than a mechanical and inevitable reaction to the crimes that the people have committed as a nation, in which unfortunately individual justice, or the guilt or innocence of the individual, can play no part.
See also
- Collective Responsibility
- Austria victim theory
- Anti-Germans (political current)
- Myth of the clean Wehrmacht
- Denazification
- Diffusion of responsibility
- Germanophobia
- Gonin Gumi
- Japanese history textbook controversies
- Milgram experiment
- Moral disengagement
- Reprisal
- State responsibility
- War crime
- War Guilt Clause
- War guilt question
- Wiedergutmachung
- Vergangenheitsbewältigung
- White guilt
References
- Beattie, Andrew H. (2019). Allied Internment Camps in Occupied Germany: Extrajudicial Detention in the Name of Denazification, 1945–1950. Cambridge University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-108-48763-4.
- Rensmann, Lars (6 September 2004). "10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany". In Nyla R. Branscombe; Bertjan Doosje (eds.). Collective Guilt: International Perspectives. Studies in emotion and social interaction. Cambridge University Press. pp. 169–190. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012. ISBN 978-0-521-52083-6. OCLC 783204942.
The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.
- Muskat, Jörg (20 August 2015). Kollektivschuld am Holocaust. Warum das deutsche Volk eine moralische Gesamthaftung an den NS-Verbrechen trifft [Collective guilt in the Holocaust: Why the German People Have a Collective Moral Liability for the Nazi Crimes]. GRIN Verlag. p. 1. ISBN 978-3-668-03308-5. OCLC 929998010.
Es gibt eine deutsche Kollektivschuld für den Holocaust.
[There is a German collective guilt for the Holocaust.] - Jeffrey K. Olick, Andrew J. Perrin (2010), Guilt and Defense, Harvard University Press, pp. 24–25, ISBN 978-0-674-03603-1
- Jeffrey K. Olick (September 2003), "The Guilt of Nations?", Ethics & International Affairs, 17 (2): 109–117, doi:10.1111/j.1747-7093.2003.tb00443.x, S2CID 17120839
- Tracy Isaacs, Richard Vernon (2011), Accountability for Collective Wrongdoing, Cambridge University Press, pp. 196–199, ISBN 978-0-521-17611-8
- "The Question of German Guilt | book by Jaspers". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- Connolly, Kate (16 September 2012). "Bernhard Schlink: being German is a huge burden". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- Suppan, Arnold (2019). Hitler–Beneš–Tito: National Conflicts, World Wars, Genocides, Expulsions, and Divided Remembrance in East-Central and Southeastern Europe, 1848–2018. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. pp. 739–740. ISBN 978-3-7001-8410-2. JSTOR j.ctvvh867x.