Saturday, October 11, 2008

Jörg Haider

Death of a politician
"The governor of Carinthia, Jörg Haider is dead"
This somewhat bizarre headline has definitely secured it's place in Austrian news history.

Besides the tragedy at a human level, knowing that politicians don't carry a license protecting them from demise it leaves you desperately trying to pin-point the weirdness of this news. And the strange sensation garrison these words.
One explanation might be that this happened just two weeks after the elections - in the midst of the coalition talks with concerns ranking high of Haider and his right-wing department landing yet another coalition-coup as seen in 2000. Both of the countries right-wing parties together, Haider’s former FPÖ and his newly formed BZÖ, have managed to generate voters favours accounting for 27 per cent of the total voting outcome. Just one percent less than the Social Democrat Party with a winning majority of 29 per cent. If this does not spill the beans on a country’s „mental“ state.

What Haider has managed once more is leaving the country in conflict. This time round on whether to feel mourning, relief or indifference. A dichotomy that seems to have hit on the media the most for its obligation to deal with the moral question of the his obituary in this particular case. No doubt he might have been an earnest, hard working man had only his motif and cause would have proved of human integrity.
What are the ethical implications to call a dead man a good man knowing of his strictly selected love and respect towards his own kind of which he made no secret of.

It is almost painful to follow the media coverage; how the ORF (Austrian Broadcasting) is dutifully broadcasting special reports, permitting their national branch covering Haider's hometurff province Carinthia changing it's entire programme for the day; liberal paper Der Standard (web edition) apologising for the missing blog-spot complementing the article since due to a mass of impiously responses to this news they saw themselves forced not to; editor's hairsplitting discussions over the term neo-fascism with regards to his policies; reports about mourners in Carinthia putting on candles for a man who was one of them; columnists airing their disgust over the legend he has already been made overnight; voices from the press across the globe.
Austrian news agency APA putting together a medley of the most outrageous quotes he delivered in his career that have given Austria a face to its name. A name that still has precisely this right-wing connotation clung to its sound.
What exactly is the catch-22 for the media: Duty before ethics? Or ethics before death?
How to pay tribute to a man who perhaps did not deserve one without saying it out loud.

What has been elegantly left out is Haider's one and only positive function he occupied – although subconsciously – in his position. He epitomized the opportunity for debate and reflection on the true identity of this country and its intended future image. He posed a challenge for the country to grapple with its own history and trauma that is being passed on from generation to generation since the end of WWII. But this never happened. Looking at the country’s post-election situation at this very moment where politicians are swamped with forming a hopefully righteous government - one finds it hard to believe that they are able to grapple with the current political challenges to start with.

A similar inertness hovers in the air; that same old game of complacency rather than rolling up the sleeves and rethink the voting system – for example.
Living in this country feels quite insular in fact. All the more when a paper like the center-right Die Presse prints headlines such as „The cliche has returned: Austria as Nazi-country“. Would the word cliche not strike the perfect chord to finally demand for clarification; for mature discussions without being ashamed or having the finger pointed at - in order to enable this country to get over its „victim“ trauma and a chance for a new beginning. Finally.
The current discourse reduced to the literature section in a couple of national daily quality papers is not enough: so far it's only authors desperately solving their conflict of loving their grandfather, the Nazi.
If politicians – elected by a nation in the hope of bringing about change are not able to to so, then what happened to the so-called fourth estate of the press? It should start to exercise its duty to the public rather than acting dutiful. How else to get rid of the so-called cliche?

This piece is published on Falter and former Die Zeit political editor Florian
Klenks Watchblog

http://www.florianklenk.com/2008/10/haiders_tod_nachtrag.php

4 comments:

Martin said...

As an Austrian I think I know how the structure of our families look like and the two great problems are following:

1. Not our grandparents were Nazis, our grand-grandparents were Nazis. This belongs to a generation of people who is hardly alive.

2. At the same time you hear all the time that we shouldn't forget and we are all children of mass murdering Nazis.
The Austrian NS history is a omnipresent topic. If somebody acting unethical many people pick the Nazi-club to show it. The NS history is the main topic in Highschool's history subject. You see all the time documentations about the horrific things happend back then in televison. (ORF2, ARTE, Phoenix and even VOX)

So in short words: Many people are don't seeing the reason to hack in their owen flesh because of crimes which were made by their grand-grandparents beside the fact that the next generations are going to pay the depts of the WW2.
At the other hand many things are running in the wrong direction in Austria. Immigration problems in Vienna (classes full of non german speaking students), Crime and so on.
The most of our political parties are scared to talk directly over this brisant topics so they keep their mouths shut.
At the same time right parties present fast solutions. This inhuman solutions look at the first glance like their would work, so many people believe this shit.

As long as this clima don't change, the right parties have good choices to get stronger. (Not fast, but steadly)

In this very difficult position foreign countries which don't know the Austrian problems are mocking arround because of its history.

It isn't about working the Austrian history out, it's about finding new solutions. And as long only right parties talk about some special problems, the have good cards to get stronger.

Anonymous said...

why would you choose to write in english,
when apparently both the writer and the readers are more skilled in german?

and allow me to ask: who are the christian democrats who made 29% in the elections?
why are there so many unfinished or obviously rewritten but unedited sentences in this article?

Martin said...

I think it's very unpolitly to switch the language even when I'm more able to describe my stand point in german. So I stay writing english. (From Software Developing I know how frustrating it can be when you suddenly find comments in a language you don't speak and I don't know how many readers are non german speakers.)

The Christian Democrats (OeVP) made 26% whereas the Social Democrats (SPOe) made 29,3%.
Don't mix this two very (ideological) different parties up.

pluckedchickenbySandraPfeifer.com said...

weil jodeln in englisch doch so schön ist...weit über den österreichischen Schnitzeltellerrand hinaus