
Das
Shicksal des deutschen Volkes
und seine Not – Gibt
es einen Ausweg?
The Fate Of The German-Speaking People And Their Plight – Is There A Way
Out?
By Karl Heyer, Dr. jur. et phil. |
Reviewed
by Daniel Hindes |
This
interesting book, a pamphlet really,
was published in 1932. The title page
indicates that this is the second printing.
Dr. Karl Heyer, as the cover informs
us, held a PhD in law and another in
Philosophy. He was a follower of Rudolf
Steiner, and has several dozen books
to his name. Another one of his books,
a collection of essays titled after
one: Who was the German Folk Spirit
has been held up as an example of Anthroposophist
fascist leanings. This pamphlet, and
especially its date of publication,
shows why the Nazi party was hostile
to Anthroposophy. It must have taken
a certain amount of courage to publish
such a document in 1932. Although the
Nazi party is not directly mentioned,
the ideology is attacked as "leading
to disaster" and not the proper direction
for Germany. Just a few years later
the Brown Shirts would forcibly close
the publishing house.
It
says on the copyright page: "From public
lectures by the author in various German
cities". Contrary to the assertion that
Anthroposophists were passive or even
encouraged the Nazi rise to power, the
author of this pamphlet actively
opposed the Nazi ideology. The pamphlet
starts off:
"The
fate of the German people weighs heavily
on all of us today; we have experienced
and suffered it for years and now in
the present it has reached new depths.
Today
it stands directly before us as a terrible
economic disaster. Certainly this is
just a part of a larger world-crisis,
however Germany is especially heavily
impacted.
Previously
we experienced the political
catastrophe; the loss, after a heroic
defense, of the World War, ending
with
the political capitulation of the German
peoples to the American President
Woodrow
Wilson and his famous, or infamous "14
Points" and the further capitulation
in the "peace" treaty of Versailles.
This
double - political and economic - decline
stands clearly before our gaze. Yet
many people are far from sufficiently
clear about what preceded this,
and I mean over the course of many hundreds
of years, and where one should look
to find the causes that work
so tragically to bring such a disaster,
a disaster that is suffered later by
the German people, that today breaks
upon us in such terrible ways.
These
causes should not be sought in either
the political or economic sphere, these
causes lie much more convincingly
and
finally in the spiritual sphere.
And today in the commemorative year
of Goethe, Hegel and von Stein and
other German spirits the German people
in
truth have every reason, in all
earnestness, to become conscious of
these spiritual-cultural
causes of their current situation."
Heyer
then investigates the conditions that
he feels are responsible for the then-present
conditions. The height of German culture
was the period of German Idealism, around
the turn of the 17th to 18th
Centuries. This was the age of Goethe,
Fichte, Lessing, Shelling, the Freiherr
von Stein, and Wilhelm von Humbolt,
among others. German-ness was expressed
entirely in the cultural sphere, and
not in the political sphere. In politics
there were many small states, most trying
to emulate the French model of Louis
XIV. After the Napoleonic Wars there
was an attempt to reform political relationships
to a form more appropriate to German
ideals, that is more respectful of individual
freedom in the relationship between
the individual and society. This ultimately
failed in the turmoil of 1848, and political
relationships continued in the mode
of Louis XIV.
At
that point, the question of a German
national state to unite all German-speaking
people and give a space for specifically
German social, economic and political
forms arose in many quarters. This nationalist
sentiment found partial fulfillment
in 1871, but was in Heyer's opinion
an utter failure, for it manifested
the wrong political structure - an absolutist
state, and not one that was true to
the intentions of the German Idealist
Philosophers, where the individual would
be respected and allowed to flourish.
From
1848 another trend accelerated, that
of materialism, and especially materialism
of the tyranny of economic affairs.
Economic considerations dominated the
average person's life during that period,
overwhelming the cultural impulses,
something Heyer traces to an English
influence. Both these trends - French
style absolute monarchy and English
style economic materialism, along with
a decline of uniquely German culture,
intensified up to the start of the First
World War, and represented a failure
on the part of the German-speaking people
to realize their true and ideal social,
cultural and political intentions. For
example, when Liberalism appeared, in
Germany and Austro-Hungary it quickly
turned from a political movement to
an economic one.
This
is Heyer's explanation of the cause
of the First World War and the post-war
disasters. Notable is what is missing.
There is no mention whatsoever of Jews.
No elaborate conspiracies involving
Freemasons. The cause of the German
disaster is laid quite plainly at the
feet of the Germans themselves. Germany
has not lived up to its spiritual ideals,
has not developed political or economic
structures to match its cultural ideals
(or even really matured its cultural
impulses) and has brought disaster upon
itself.
Addressing
some of the themes that were in vogue
at the time, Heyer continues:
"Many people in Germany today feel these dangers [Americanism
and Bolshevism]; they feel the threat
of the oppressing force of "materialism."
And many of these seek to create a
counter-force and believe that they
can find this in blood-ties.
They want to call on blood-ties as
an
elemental force against those forces
that draw their strength from the
mechanization
of life. Certainly in ancient times
blood-ties were fundamental to social
life; in all community-building the
blood-ties held people together in
smaller
and larger groups: from the family
to the tribe to the Folk and finally
the
race. Individuals felt themselves primarily
as a member of their blood-based group…
But the history of the world is the history of the emancipation
of the individual personality from the
group-based ties of blood. The human
being gradually becomes a self-conscious
I-being that stands for itself purely
from spiritual strength, independent
of blood-ties.
The transition from the old blood-ties to the new individual
consciousness is especially clearly
demonstrated in the ancient German
tribes (Germanen). Formerly group-bound,
in blood-ties - so
it appears to us in Tacitus - they
become gradually the ground for
the unfolding
of a higher
individual spirituality over the course
of the centuries. From the Germanic
soul the German spirit unfetters itself,
within which the "I" realizes itself
as a spiritual being in the free
spiritual
world.
This development cannot be reversed, and where this
is attempted, disaster would necessarily
follow. And it would be anything but
a healing if, against the threatening
forces of collectivism of our times
- the collectivism of Bolshevism or
Americanism - one would attempt to
set up a blood-based collectivism,
or to
call against the destructive passions
of class struggle the passions of
blood-ties."
The
only way forward for Heyer is Anthroposophy
– the recognition of the spiritual
worth of every individual and social,
political and economic structures that
are true to this. He does not give
any
programs, no concrete steps to fix
Germany, only a warning that the German
people
need to wake up to the ideals of the
German Idealistic Philosophers, including
the ideals of individual freedom, and
seek change in that direction. In 1932
this
can
only have be considered a direct attack
on the Nazi’s and their ideology,
and given the situation, must have
taken
considerable courage to argue publicly.
How much more the irony, then, when
the author is accused today of being
a fascist and responsible, along
with
others, of causing the holocaust! Those
leveling such accusations feel that
anyone who adheres in any way to an
idealist form of philosophy is ultimately
co-responsible for National Socialism.
Heyer shows that it is possible to
be
an idealistic philosopher and still
abhor just about every tenet of National
Socialism.
Daniel
Hindes
February 14th, 2004
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