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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Today, many Germans reject any guilt/responsibility because they were not alive when this happened but I don't take that position. [/quote] I find this odd. How can one feel guilty or assume responsibility for something one has not done nor facilitated?[/quote] Another German here (born in the 70s, with parents born after WWII). I agree, but there is a line to walk for Germans. I don't feel guilty or responsible for the Holocaust, but I do think that Germany and Germans have a special responsibility to remember it, and also have a particular responsibility towards the Jews and Israel. I do feel that I should not be personally resented for something neither I nor my parents were involved in, but the topic is certainly deeply uncomfortable. I don't know any Germans who aren't deeply disturbed by our country's history, and nobody I know would reject this type of responsibility.[/quote] Curious, do Germans feel any responsibilty towards Palestinians? Also, what were your grandparents doing during the war? This is not meant to be a threatening question. [/quote] There is a tradition among the radical German left to side with the Palestinians. Otherwise I'm not aware that Germans feel more responsibility towards Palestinians than any other nation. Regarding my grandparents - as far as I know, they were not actively involved in any atrocities. They certainly were the types who looked the other way if they knew anything. My one grandfather was wounded early and returned to his farm, my other grandfather was in Italy. Maybe they sympathized with the Nazis, I don't know. It wasn't something they liked to talk about after the war. They were politically conservative, there were the typical tensions with my leftist, 1968'er generation parents, and I learned early they weren't the ones with whom to discuss politics or social issues. Why do you ask? What they did or didn't do doesn't affect what I wrote above in any way.[/quote]
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