German document collection added to library

Dan takes a shot at throwing some Nazi-dirt at the Waldorf Movement.

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From: Dan Dugan
Subject: German document collection added to library
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 13:12:52 -0800

The PLANS research library has acquired the five volumes of *Beitrage zur Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus: NS-Dokumentation*, a German-language collection of documents relating to Anthroposophy, Waldorf education and the Nazi party, edited by Arfst Wagner. Documents date from 1933 to 1992. Many are facsimile reproductions of correspondence between Waldorf schools, the Waldorf school association, and National Socialist officials. Prominent names include the education official Baeumler, Himmler, Hess, Goebbels, and Haverbeck.

I don't read German, so I can only guess that this collection may contain some exculpatory material about the struggle of the Waldorf schools to survive during the Nazi period. In scanning the documents, however, my eye cannot help but light on some things that don't look very good, like letters from Waldorf schools and the school association that close with "Heil Hitler!" There is an issue of the Biodynamic Agriculture newsletter featuring a picture of Hitler with some children on the front page.

-Dan Dugan

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From: Tarjei Straume
Subject: Re: German document collection added to library
Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 18:27:30 +0100

Dan Dugan wrote:

The PLANS research library has acquired the five volumes of *Beitrage zur Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus: NS-Dokumentation*, a German-language collection of documents relating to Anthroposophy, Waldorf education and the Nazi party, edited by Arfst Wagner. Documents date from 1933 to 1992. Many are facsimile reproductions of correspondence between Waldorf schools, the Waldorf school association, and National Socialist officials. Prominent names include the education official Baeumler, Himmler, Hess, Goebbels, and Haverbeck.

I don't read German, so I can only guess that this collection may contain some exculpatory material about the struggle of the Waldorf schools to survive during the Nazi period. In scanning the documents, however, my eye cannot help but light on some things that don't look very good, like letters from Waldorf schools and the school association that close with "Heil Hitler!" There is an issue of the Biodynamic Agriculture newsletter featuring a picture of Hitler with some children on the front page.

-Dan Dugan

You probably have not experienced the struggle to get educated in the middle of a deadly terror regime. The slaves in the old South who wanted to read and write may be a pointer.

When Norway was occupied by the Nazis, all school teachers were asked to sign a promise to teach Nazi ideology. Most of them refused and were subsequently arrested and sent to a prison camp in Kirkenes in Finmark, where they incarcerated with Russian prisoners. One of these disobedient teachers was my aunt's husband, who described it to me first hand.

My father's second wife Sonja once told me what it was like to go to school during the occupation years. The history teacher had drilled the students for unexpected visits. The history books would be hidden under the desks immediately and replaced by propaganda-edited history - re-written history - from Nasjonal Samling (the Norwegian Nazi Party under Quisling). I don't know to what extent they had to do salutes etc., but it was not as bad as in Germany and Austria.

The point is that Sonja's history teacher trained the students to pay lip service to the Nazis in order to protect their illegal curriculum. What you seem to be trying to do, Dan, is to use this kind of defence technique as practiced by the Waldorf school in Stuttgart, Germany, where conditions were a lot worse and more dangerous than in Norway, as some kind of testimony against the integrity and moral ethos of the school's staff. That is really stretching it - by a long shot. The alternative would have been for the teachers to speak out against Hitler loud and clear, and accept the deadly consequences for themselves and abandon the needs of the children.

Cheers,

Tarjei

http://www.uncletaz.com/

[My second comment to this.]

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From: Tom Singer-Carpenter
Subject: Re: German document collection added to library
Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 09:01:31 EST

Dan Dugan wrote:

The PLANS research library has acquired the five volumes of *Beitrage zur Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus: NS-Dokumentation*, a German-language collection of documents relating to Anthroposophy, Waldorf education and the Nazi party, edited by Arfst Wagner.

Tarjei answered to this.

Nevertheless I would like to mention that Arfst Wagner has beed publishing a lot of critical material about the anthroposophical movement. He is the publisher of Flensburger Hefte, a monthly paper, in which he and publish research, interviews and documentary articles about the various branches and themes of the anthroposophical movement.

You are shooting yourself into the foot if you mention Arfst Wagners publications like a finding of new dark, so far secret evidence against Waldorf schools. ***WALDORF TEACHERS AND OTHER ANTHROPOSOPHISTS*** are the people investigating problematic issues in the history of the anthroposophical movement. One of the goals of Flensburger Hefte has always been to bring EVERYTHING into light, including the publishing of critical views about anthroposophy. In my view a good example of critical introspection.

Maybe Bruce will tell us more about it after his visit to Arfst Wagner.

The same is, by the way, true for the books of the first class you had mentioned:

* Its core doctrines are not published. (First Class)

I would not call meditations a doctrine. Be that as it may - they have been published (by anthroposophists).

Best wishes!

Tom Singer-Carpenter
Germany/Switzerland

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From: Bruce
Subject: Re: German document collection added to library
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 09:19:43 EST

In einer eMail vom 08.02.99 10:08:12 MEZ, schreiben Sie:

In scanning the documents, however, my eye cannot help but light on some things that don't look very good, like letters from Waldorf schools and the school association that close with "Heil Hitler!"

Dear Dan,

I am sure that you have read enough history or seen enough movies to realise that EVERYONE in Germany had to say "Heil Hitler" in those days, including school-teachers in official letters. Whether they meant it or not cannot, necessarily, be gleaned from the content.

Today we are lucky with freedom of speech, and are allowed to say almost what we like - although I believe treasonous remarks are still best avoided!

As to the content of the volumes mentioned I will scan them to see if I can quickly translate a letter with the "Heil Hitler"! I have not got the volumes here, but I shall be visiting Arfst next week.

Bruce

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