Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 34

Arrival of refugees with a special train by Deutsche Bahn from the Austrian/ German border at the station of Cologne/Bonn airport, October 2015 © Raimond Spekking / CC BY-SA 4.0 (via Wikimedia Commons) bind”: the fact that people identified as racialized refugees in the summer of 2015, which led both to immigrants were simultaneously told that in order inspiring examples of solidarity and, ultimately, to to be German they had to “remember” the Holocaust innumerable attacks on people perceived as foreign and that they could never remember the Holocaust that persist to this day along with the strengthening because it wasn’t part of their history. The double of the far right in the political sphere through the bind was summed up well by a Turkish-German rise of the AfD. But, from my somewhat distant woman who had participated in a civil society perspective in the US, my sense is that the basic project on National Socialism and the Holocaust parameters of the migrant double bind and the called the “Neighborhood Mothers.” In reflecting German paradox remain in place. That is to say that on her experience with the group, she wrote, “We despite increased recognition of the diverse nature often hear that the topic of National Socialism is of German society, a strongly ethnic definition of not for us because we’re migrants. Just as often Germanness continues to reign and to have powerful it’s insinuated that in any case we are too anti- shaping effects on cultural memory, not least Semitic to be interested in this topic.” Becoming memory of the Holocaust and National Socialism. aware of the migrant double bind led us to recognize Our project, however, is not primarily a critique another powerful social logic that we called the of these discourses about Germans, migrants, and “German paradox,” which finds expression in Holocaust memory; it is an argument that despite dominant society. This is the idea that in order to those discourses there has been significant memory take responsibility for the Holocaust an ethnic notion work across society by minorities, migrants, and of Germanness has to be preserved, even though postmigrants. We collect and analyze what we call this very notion of Germanness contributed to the a “migrant archive” of acts of remembrance that committing of that crime in the first place. includes civil society initiatives, performance and A lot has changed since we first became interested in this topic—not least the large influx of 32 Observing Memories ISSUE 3 visual art, music, literature, and theater. While we don’t claim such remembrance is representative