On the day that the horrific images of the Russian atrocities in Bucha went around the world, a different set of pictures also made for uncomfortable headlines in Germany: around 400 vehicles paraded Russian flags through Berlin.
Ostensibly, the 900 demonstrators had draped their vehicles in the Russian tricolour and took to the streets of the German capital in order to draw attention to what they perceive as growing hostility towards Russians in Germany. But the reality is that the community they claim to speak for is diverse and deeply conflicted about the war in Ukraine.
It is a surprisingly little known fact (outside of Germany at least) that there are well over two million Russian native speakers in Germany. The estimated overall figure for people with Russian roots in the country ranges between three and six million. The great majority have emigrated since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, but many have roots that go back to the Cold War or the Second World War.
This vast community has always been a broad mix of people. There are the so-called Russia Germans, who see themselves as ethnic Germans born in the territory of the Soviet Union and there are Russian Jews with family links in Germany. Both of these groups often want to be seen as Germans rather than Russians. They usually speak German and integrate quickly.
But there are also Russian intellectuals who have fled persecution, family members of Russian Germans and economic migrants — groups that have tended to retain a Russian identity. In addition, there are also many immigrants from other Eastern European nations, including Ukraine (145,500 Ukrainians already lived in Germany in 2020, now the numbers are much higher due to the influx of refugees).
Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the loyalties of this vast and diverse community have come under intense scrutiny. After Berlin Mayor Franzistka Giffey had condemned the “motorcade of shame” in her city, a similar spectacle with 190 cars played out in the south-German city of Stuttgart last weekend. The local Minister President Winfried Kretschmann said that he couldn’t prevent such unpalatable events as they had been legally registered, but he found them “difficult to stomach in the current situation.”
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SubscribeAh yes, ‘diversity is our strength’.
If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.
As George Orwell wrote, “In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.”
There was much consternation about a similar motorcade in Ireland recently. It made it into international news. The poor Guardian newspaper got very upset over it. Turns out, it was only ten cars (with flags) taking a spin on the motorway around Dublin. Ten cars out of a population of nearly five million people. It would have been better to ignore it. Whoever they were, they were awful eejits.
Like the handful of trans activists in this country that have successfully infiltrated the culture and changed government, education and health policy. They’re awful eejits too.
Who ‘see themselves as ethnicity Germans’? Does the author think such a view is a fantasy? Despite the cleansing of Germans from Soviet occupied Europe. by the late 1979s some 3.5% of the USSR was German, and carried ID cards to prove it. While another 3.5% were Jewish. Does Hoyer dispute this? Or just careless journalism?
I thought he was talking about Germans of Russian ethnic origin?
She.
WRT Bucha, have you seen the video footage of Ukranian soldiers dragging bodies TOWARDS their locations as shown in the “massacre footage”.
Hmmmm