Germany has always been the problem child
of Europe. For over a millennium it was no more
than a loose confederation of separate states
and territories, whose number at times topped
the thousand mark. When unification belatedly
came about in 1871, it was achieved almost
exclusively by military might; as a direct
result of this, the new nation was consumed by a
thirst for power and expansion abroad. Defeat in
World War I only led to a desire for revenge,
the consequence of which was the Third Reich, a
regime bent on mass genocide and an European,
indeed world, domination. It took another tragic
global war to crush this system and its people.
When the victors quarrelled over how to prevent
Germany ever again becoming dominant, they
divided it into two hostile states; the parts
held by the Western powers were developed into
the
Federal Republic of Germany , while
the eastern zone occupied by the Soviets became
the
German Democratic Republic .
The contest between the two was an unequal
one - the GDR, never able to break free from
being a client state of the Soviet Union and
forced to adopt a Communist system at odds with
the national character, had fallen so far behind
its rival in living standards that in 1961 the
authorities constructed electrified barbed-wire
frontier, with the Berlin Wall as its
lynchpn, to halt emigration - the first time in
the history of the world that a fortification
system had been erected by a regime against its
own people. Thereafter, the society settled
down, but the GDR was a grey, cheerless place
whose much trumpeted economic success was a
mirage, and bought at the price of terrible
pollution problems.
On the other hand, the Federal Republic -
which was seen as the natural successor to the
old Reich, if only on account of its size - had
not only picked itself up by the boot-straps,
but developed into what many outsiders regarded
as a model modern society . A nation with
little in the way of a liberal tradition, and
even less of a democratic one, quickly developed
a degree of political maturity that put other
countries to shame. In atonement for past sins,
the new state committed itself to providing a
haven for foreign refugees and dissidents. It
also became a multiracial and multicultural
society - even if the reason for this was less
one of penance than the self-interested need to
acquire extra cheap labour to fuel the economic
boom. A delicate balance was struck between the
old and the new. Historic town centres were
immaculately restored, while the corporate
skyscrapers and well-stocked department stores
represented a commitment to a modern consume
society. Vast sums of money were lavished on
preserving the best of the country cultural
legacy, yet equally generous budgets were
allocated to encouraging all kinds of
contemporary expression in the arts.
Officially, the Federal Republic was always a
"provisional" state, biding its time
before national reunification occurred. Yet
there was a realization that nobody outside
Germany was really much in favour of this.
"I love Germany so much I'm glad there are
two of them", scoffed the French novelist
François Mauriac, articulating the unspoken gut
reactions of the powers on both sides of the
Iron Curtain. German division may have been
cruel, but at least it had provided a lasting
solution to the German "problem". Such
thinking was rendered obsolete by the
unstoppable momentum of events in the wake of
the Wende , the peaceful revolution that
toppled the Communist regime in the GDR in 1989,
leading to the full union of the two Germanys
less than a year later. Yet initial euphoria has
been quickly replaced by concern about the
myriad problems facing the new nation as it
attempts to integrate the bankrupt social and
economic system of the GDR into the successful
framework of the Federal Republic. While Germany
may officially be one again, it will certainly
continue to look and feel like two separate
countries until the end of the century - and
probably well beyond. Moreover, international
pressure had ensured that, far from being a
re-creation of the old Reich, it can be no more
than the nineteenth-century concept of a Kleines
Deutschland ("little Germany"),
excluding not only Austria but also the "lost"
Eastern Territories, which are now part of
Poland, the Czech Republic and the Russian
Federation.
In total contrast to Germany's intristic
fascination as the country which has played such
a determining role in the history of the
twentieth century is its otherwise predominantly
romantic image . This is the land of
fairy-tale castles, of thick dark forests, of
the legends collected by the Brothers Grimm, of
perfectly preserved timber-framed medieval towns,
and of jovial locals swilling from huge foaming
mugs of beer. As always, there is some
truth in these stereotypes, though most of them
stem from the southern part of the country,
particularly Bavaria , which, as a
predominantly rural and Catholic area, stands
apart from the urbanized Protestant north which
engineered the unity of the nation last century
and thereafter dominated its affairs.
Regional characteristics , indeed, are
a strong feature of German life, and there are
many hangovers from the days when the country
was a political patchwork, even though some
historical provinces have vanished from the map
and others have merged. Hamburg and Bremen
, for example, retain their age-old status as
free cities. The imperial capital, Berlin
, also stands apart, as an island in the midst
of the erstwhile GDR where the liberalism of the
West was pushed to its extreme, sometimes
decadent, always exciting. In polar opposition
to it, and as a corrective to the normal view of
the Germans as an essentially serious race, is
the Rhineland , where the great river's
majestic sweep has spawned a particularly rich
fund of legends and folklore, and where the
locals are imbued with a Mediterranean-type
sense of fun. The five new Länder which
have supplanted the GDR, and in particular the
small towns and rural areas, are in many ways
the ones which best encapsulate the feel and
appearance of Germany as it was before the war
and the onset of foriegn influences which were
an inevitable consequence of defeat.