Faraway, So Close

By Omer Bartov

This article appeared in the January 8, 2007 edition of The Nation.

December 20, 2006

In 1995 Fritz Stern was asked to replace Richard Holbrooke as keynote speaker at the fortieth anniversary of the founding of the Leo Baeck Institute in New York, since the latter was leading the American team negotiating the Bosnian Peace Accords in Dayton, Ohio. Praising Holbrooke's diplomatic abilities, Stern writes, he "indulged in a historical fantasy" that had Holbrooke been around in July 1914, he might have single-handedly prevented the outbreak of World War I. "In which case neither he nor his Hungarian-born wife nor I would be here in the United States."

This, in a certain sense, is the gist of Stern's hefty new book: part memoir, part extended rumination on German history, part coming to terms with German-Jewish relations and his own involvement in that saga. For Stern and his family were the very embodiment of German-Jewish integration before it ended in expulsion and mass murder--members of a once glorious community who avoided death only by fleeing the country that so cruelly betrayed them. Five Germanys I Have Known is also a tale of encounters with the men and women who shaped Germany's destiny in the twentieth century or were doomed by the course it took. It tells the story of one man's triumph and of one land's resurrection. But it contains a melancholy strain, a memory of all that was lost and will never be given the second chance afforded Stern and his German homeland.

University Professor Emeritus and former provost at Columbia University, Stern has been a major figure among historians of modern Germany for many decades. His first monograph, The Politics of Cultural Despair (1961), was an influential study of the cultural roots of Nazism in imperial and Weimar Germany. While examining what he termed German illiberalism and the complex relationship between German and Jewish elites--analyzed in his book Gold and Iron, on Bismarck and his Jewish banker Bleichröder--Stern has also taken part in some major scholarly/political controversies in the Federal Republic in the role of an insider-outsider, starting with the debate in the 1960s and '70s over Fritz Fischer's controversial books on Germany's role in the outbreak of World War I and the continuities between German imperial and Nazi policies.

Subscriber Login

4 ISSUES FREE

Subscribe Now!

The only way to read this article and the full contents of each week's issue of The Nation online is by subscribing to the magazine. Subscribe now and read this article -- and every article published since for the past five years -- right now.

There's no obligation -- try The Nation for four weeks free.

.

About Omer Bartov

Omer Bartov, the John P. Birkelund Distinguished Professor of European History at Brown University, is the author of Germany's War and the Holocaust: Disputed Histories (Cornell). Princeton will publish his Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-Day Ukraine in September. more...
Most Read

Issues »

Most Emailed

Issues »

Popular Topics

Blogs

» State of Change

GOP Plays a Mean Saxby | But Chambliss's own ads in the Georgia runoff aren't quite so repulsive this time around.
Leslie Savan
Posted at 11:45 PM ET

» The Beat

Key Committee Pick Signals Obama-Pelosi Direction | Waxman gets Commerce chair, amid signs of focus on healthcare, environment, consumer protection.
John Nichols

» The Dreyfuss Report

That Iranian "Bomb"? Relax. | Obama has lots and lots of time to deal with this problem carefully and rationally.
Robert Dreyfuss

» The Notion

A Clinton Administration? | Given the Obama appointees so far, you might think Hillary had been elected.
Tom Engelhardt

» Capitolism

Criteria for Treasury | What do we want in our next Treasury Secretary?
Christopher Hayes

» Passing Through

Should GM Survive? A Wall Street Analyst's View | Maybe they should just let it die.
Jane Hamsher

» Act Now!

Take the Joe Lieberman Pledge | In America, it's never too early to start preparing for the next election.
Peter Rothberg

» Editor's Cut

Smart Defense | Rep. Barney Frank is leading the charge to end the Pentagon's weapons spending spree. Is anybody listening?
Katrina vanden Heuvel

» And Another Thing

Election Updates --Good News and Not | Details on some ongoing stories
Katha Pollitt