User:Ich

User:Ich in high school.

Ich was born in the U.S. during the Reagan administration; after an accidental five-and-a-half-year layover in New York, he now finds himself in Berlin. He chose the username "Ich" because it was available.

"Third Reich" vs. "Nazi Germany"

Whenever I find the term "Third Reich" in an article, I usually change it to "Nazi Germany" or "during Nazi rule", which has less ideological baggage and is clearer to the unfamiliar reader.

The term "Drittes Reich" ("Third Empire") was coined in 1923 by German nationalist Arthur Moeller van den Bruck in a book of the same name, echoing ideas and language from much older Christian millennialism, messianism, and eschatology.[a] Moeller, an admirer of Mussolini, imagined a future "third" German empire with a strong leader, as a successor to Germany's "first" (Holy Roman Empire, 800-1806) and "second" empires (German Empire, 1871-1918). Moeller's writings were influential among conservatives, and the Nazis incorporated many of his themes into their ideology and propaganda, adopting the term "Drittes Reich" to cast their brutal dictatorship as a continuation of a perceived glorious Germanic history. Using "Third Reich" implicitly accepts this tendentious, decontextualized history; in light of the term's origins, it should not be used uncritically. (The names "First Reich" and "Second Reich" were not used contemporarily, and are very rarely used by historians or academics outside discussions of Nazi historiography.)

Nonetheless, it wasn't long before opponents of Nazism were mockingly using the term "Fourth Reich" to imply the Nazi regime's days were numbered. Due to this and the religious undertones, after coming to power, the Nazis largely stopped using the term. In June 1939, Hitler issued an order to stop using the term "Third Reich"; the following month, the Ministry of Propaganda ordered the press to cease using the term, suggesting instead "nationalsozialistisches Deutschland" or "Deutsches Reich". Under Nazi rule, Germany's official name was "Deutsches Reich" from 1933–1943; from 1943–1945, it was "Großdeutsches Reich".

After the war, former Nazis and Mitläufer generally preferred "Third Reich", as it came across as a neutral, anodyne-sounding name for the Nazis' murderous reign of terror. Beginning in the 1980s, the phrase "Drittes Reich" fell out of favor among German academics; by the 1990s, it had been supplanted in German newspapers and popular usage by "NS/Nazi-Zeit" or "NS-Diktatur" ("National Socialist/Nazi-Era" and "National Socialist Dictatorship" respectively). When the phrase is used in German today, it is often presented with a distancing "sogenannte »Dritte Reich«" ("so-called 'Third Reich'"), highlighting the need for a nuanced and critical awareness of the term's baggage.

I feel the reason many writers in English use "Third Reich" is because they are looking for more ornate language or want a (fancy) way to avoid constantly repeating the word "Nazi". I believe it is important to use language carefully; while I can't change the way some books are named (like 1960's The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich or 1985's The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich), I am doing what I can to reduce Wikipedia's (mis)use of the term.

Lastly, if you consider the terms "Third Reich" and "Nazi Germany" effectively interchangeable, then my changes are at worst a quixotic but wholly uncontroversial waste of my own time.

  1. ^ Although it is large and complicated topic, the Nazis often publicly appropriated religious imagery, particularly in the early years before their grasp on power was secure; compare "...they will reign with [Christ] a thousand years" (Revelation 20:4) to Tausendjähriges Reich ("Thousand-Year Empire").

"Died" vs. "was murdered" in the Holocaust

There are over 90,000 Stolpersteine in Germany alone, making it the world's largest decentralized memorial. A typical example:
Here Lived Josef Herz
Born 1894
Fled to Westerburg 1940
Deported to Majdanek 1942
Murdered 6 August 1942.
The Holocaust memorial at the intersection of Bahnhofstraße and Sigismundstraße in Konstanz, Germany.

In a similar vein, "died in the Holocaust" should be avoided in favor of "was murdered in the Holocaust". The verb "murder" is used preferentially by scholars and institutions such as Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and the German government.

The Holocaust was systematic, premeditated, state-sponsored mass-murder, and its victims were not accidental deaths or casualties of war: they were murder victims. This encompasses not just fatal beatings, hangings, drownings, burnings, live burials, electric fences, shootings, firings squads, gas chambers, gas vans, poison injections, horrific medical experimentation, etc.: deaths in a ghetto, train car, or concentration camp from forced labor, deliberate squalid conditions, overcrowding, malnutrition, dehydration, cold, heat, exhaustion, suffocation, epidemic disease, or deprivation of medical care are still premeditated murders (i.e. foreseen and intentional). If someone deliberately locks a person in an unheated cellar without food or water for a week, the resulting death is not an accident: it is murder. In the Warsaw Ghetto, the official daily food ration was 180 calories, far below the level needed to sustain human life. (Polish people outside the ghetto received about 700 calories per day; Germans received 2,600.) Executions carried out by starvation are sometime referred to as "immurement"; the ghettos in German-occupied Poland have been described as instruments of "slow, passive murder". The Hunger Plan was the deliberate genocide of millions by starvation.

Furthermore, some Jews were driven to suicide to escape the torture, arrests, further persecution, or to end their needless, relentless suffering. A suicide committed by a person as a result of having been subjected to unspeakable psychological horrors is an indirect but still wholly deliberate murder.

The verb "die" is neutral and accurate for plenty of deaths, but when applied to the Holocaust, it obscures the Nazis' crimes. It is certainly appropriate to say "up to 12,000 people died during the 1900 Galveston hurricane"; the sentence "up to 900,000 Jews were deported to Treblinka extermination camp where they died" awkwardly elides the fact that these were premeditated murders. Using verbs like "died" or "perished" avoids assigning any blame or responsibility to the perpetrators.

From a legal standpoint, the governments of Allied-occupied, East, West, and reunited Germany all prosecuted and convicted perpetrators for the murders that took place during the Holocaust. Arguments that "murder is a legal term; the killings were lawful at the time" are a red herring: Germany's Federal Constitutional Court has ruled that Nazi Germany operated as an Unrechtsstaat or Verbrecherstaat, a criminal state whose legal system was perverted to pursue criminal means. The actions taken to legalize these murders were illegitimate and void ab initio, the same way that just following orders is not a defense for committing a war crime. When prosecuting perpetrators of Nazi crimes, post-war German courts have repeatedly applied the Radbruch formula, ruling that laws that deliberately pursued injustice were fundamentally incompatible with the tenets of a legal system, and thus were never valid laws, i.e. "an unjust law is no law at all."

In Germany, the federal government has taken full responsibility for the Holocaust and frequently refers to the events that took place during the Holocaust as "murder", such as the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. State and local governments also commonly use the term "murder" without qualification or controversy, as well as newspapers, academics, memorials, foundations, and companies that were involved as perpetrators. Simply put: murder is "the verb of choice in Germany's culture of public remembrance".

The Nazis' victims deserve better than to have words minced about their murders.

Articles

Gzuckier saw fit to give me this for adding {{spoiler}} to Genesis.
For having really sweet hair. Dylan 03:16, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for your help! Sausa11 17:28, 20 May 2020 (UTC)
Thank you for your tireless efforts across the project to bring needed clarity and accuracy to the ways we describe the murders of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery. I can't get a real count on the number of edits, but it's definitely in excess of 1,500. I am deeply grateful. Firefangledfeathers 18:31, 1 December 2021 (UTC)

Some pages I created or substantially improved. Much of the work I've done has been translating pages from German, with a particular focus on German music and breweries.

Beer and breweries

Other food and drink

Berlin

Other German-ish stuff

Music

I took this picture

Art, Culture, & Misc.

Probably the coolest picture I've taken

People

&c.

  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/pageviews/


CB This user is color blind.
This user has been on Wikipedia for 20 years, 2 months and 10 days.
German
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English
This user likes to translate articles from German to English.
This editor is a Labutnum and is entitled to display this Book of Knowledge with Coffee Cup Stain, Cigarette Burn, Chewed Broken Pencil, and Sticky Note.
This user enjoys the music of
Frank Zappa
This user has adopted the typo "Cincinatti" to nurture.
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