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Eastern Germans oppose anti-Russian course – poll

An op-ed in one of the country’s leading media outlets has accused former GDR citizens of lacking a “sense of society”Eastern Germans oppose anti-Russian course – poll

Eastern Germans oppose anti-Russian course – poll

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Some 58% of Germans living in the regions that used to be part of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) until 1990 want Berlin to adopt a more balanced course toward Russia, a recent survey has revealed.

Conducted by ARD-DeutschlandTrend and published on Thursday, the opinion poll indicated that only 35% of respondents in Germany’s eastern regions are in favor of a more confrontational approach toward Moscow. Comparing that figure with 53% in the west of the country, the researchers concluded that there still exists a massive difference of opinion between what once was West and East Germany when it comes to relations with Russia.  

Commenting on the survey’s findings in his op-ed in Germany’s Die Welt media outlet on Friday, journalist Jacques Schuster inquired rhetorically why so many in the East show so much understanding for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The author noted that while Eastern Germany and Poland had both been part of the Soviet-led Warsaw pact bloc for decades, Poles seem to be far more critical of today’s Russia than those living in the former German Democratic Republic.

Schuster surmised that many Eastern Germans were under the spell of a “deceptive yearning for the past.” The article went on to suggest that this kind of sentiment was particularly widespread among those “who still feel like strangers in the West.”

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The op-ed proceeds to claim that this nostalgia for the GDR was what led some people in Eastern Germany to have a “romanticized” image of the Soviet Union’s successor. On top of that, Germans who were schoolchildren in the GDR, tend to have an outdated idea of European borders, based on what these looked like before the collapse of the USSR and the Eastern bloc in general, Schuster claimed.

Moreover, according to the piece, due to a certain “hubris,” many eastern Germans are “inclined to view countries between Berlin and Moscow as a terra incognita that can be ignored,” with Moscow being the voice that speaks for the collective East.

The author concluded that refusal to unequivocally condemn Russia among many Germans in the east of the country was symptomatic of a perceived decline in the “sense of society in much of the population of the former GDR.”

Other indicators that point to this supposed deficiency, according to Schuster, are the “desire by many for the mono-ethnic community, the delight in authoritarians and in the ghosts of destruction and decomposition,” the author charged.

It is this sentiment in eastern Germany that, as Schuster claimed, the Alternative for Germany party and Putin supporters tap into.

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