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SECURING THE GARDEN AND LONGINGS FOR HEIMAT IN POST-WAR HANOVER, 1945–1948*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2015
Abstract
Zeroing in on private garden plots, the article discusses the manner in which Germans portrayed themselves in relation to displaced persons (DPs) – former foreign workers, Allied prisoners-of-war (POWs), and concentration camp inmates – in immediate post-Second World War Hanover. Challenging the notion that a coherent narrative of German victimization truly emerged only in the 1950s, the article reveals how German gardeners already articulated loudly a discourse through which they sought to depict themselves as decent, hard-working sufferers, while portraying displaced persons as immoral and dangerous perpetrators. The plots of garden owners, as foci of German yearnings for Heimat, came particularly under threat. Germans cherished such sites, not only because they provided the opportunity for procuring additional sustenance amidst a post-war world of scarcity, but because they symbolized longings to inhabit a peaceful, productive, and beautiful space into which the most turbulent history could not enter, and upon which a stable future could be constructed. Only with the removal of DPs could Germans claim for themselves the status of victims, while branding DPs perpetrators, and reaffirm past patterns of superiority and inferiority in both ethical and racial terms. In so doing, Germans could realize the innocence integral for achieving Heimat and establish democratic stability after 1945.
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Footnotes
I would like to take this opportunity to extend particular thanks to Peter Fritzsche, Margarete Feinstein, Judith Fai-Podlipnik, as well as the anonymous reviewers of the manuscript, all of whom offered invaluable advice and criticism on multiple drafts of the article.
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159 Polizeibericht, Jan. 1948, Niedersachsisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Nds. #230, #2.
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173 Ibid., 2 July 1945.
174 Ibid., 6 Feb. 1946.
175 Case of Paul Ziese, reports of criminal incidents involving foreigners, 6 June 45, StAH, HR #2, #199.
176 Case of Richard Bartels, 26 May 1945, StAH, HR #2, #199.
177 Case of Wilhelm Fischer, 6 June 1945, StAH, HR #2, #199.
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