Political lyric
April 4, 2012It doesn't often happen that a lyric work penned by a German poet makes its way into the international press. But 84-year-old Nobel Prize-winner Günter Grass has managed just that.
The poem he titled "What must be said" and published in Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung, Italy's La Repubblica and US paper The New York Times is a political statement that is stirring up heated debate.
Grass' poem focuses on the tense situation between Iran and Israel and the threat of war between the two countries. His harsh criticism of Israel is only loosely clothed in the robe of a lyric text. Grass wrote that Israel is claiming the right to a nuclear first strike with the aim of "eliminating the Iranian people."
In Iran, the poet added, nuclear weapons are only an unconfirmed suspicion. "Why am I just now, aged and with the last ink, saying that the nuclear power Israel is endangering the already fragile world peace?" asks Grass.
Grass continued by saying that Israel rejects efforts to keep its nuclear potential in check - something the world does not talk about, an "incriminating lie" that he says he no longer wants to submit himself to.
Now, when Germany is to "deliver another submarine to Israel," Grass wrote, "I no longer keep silent, because I'm disgusted with the hypocrisy of the West."
The author stated with disapproval that criticism of Israel is often seen as anti-Semitism. He wrote of Germany's past and the crimes that were committed during the Second World War as a blemish that makes it difficult to mention certain truths. At the same time, Grass expressed his solidarity with Israel.
Grass taken to task
These theses presented as poems were bound to draw reactions, most of which have been critical. Publicist Henryk M. Broder, the first to respond in a newspaper article, called Grass an anti-Semite: "Grass has always had a problem with Jews, but he had never articulated it as clearly as in this 'poem.'"
The writer is "completely off the wall," added Broder.
"It's not a coincidental poem, but consciously staged and placed in the media," Julius Schoeps, a historian and the director of the Moses Mendelssohn Center in Potsdam, told Deutsche Welle. He accused Grass of one-sidedness, adding that he finds the author's allegations against Israel inacceptable.
Ralph Giordano, a publicist and author, called the text an "attack on Israel's very existence." Frankfurt-based professor Micha Brumlik said it was sad that a winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature should misuse his art to publish "a rather dumb agitprop poem."
Distancing in the political arena
Politicians in Germany have also responded with alarm. Secretary General of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Hermann Gröhe, said he was appalled by the tone and orientation of the poem.
Grass was a great writer, commented CDU chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Ruprecht Polenz, but in this case he was turning the situation on its head. The one-sided accusations against Israel were wrong, he added, since Iran was actually the cause of more concern.
In response to the poem, the Israeli Embassy in Berlin spoke of anti-Semitic prejudices, adding that Israel was the only country in the world whose right to exist was publically questioned.
The Italian press has referred to the poem as a "confused whirr." Others, however, have expressed their agreement with Grass. Johano Strasser, president of the German PEN-Center, also warned against German weapons exports to Israel, whose government was giving the impression that a war with Iran was unavoidable.
Pinned down by the past
The debate is inflamed not only by Grass' provocative theses, but also by the biography of the world-famous author, who has published numerous volumes and made a name for himself as an artist. Grass has always considered himself a political author: He campaigned for the Social Democratic Party in the 1960s and later withdrew from the party because of disagreements over its asylum policies. He regularly expressed his opinions on social issues.
A turning point came in 2006 when Grass published his autobiography and confessed to being a member of the SS, known for its ruthlessness during World War II, as a 17-year-old. He was heavily criticized and his moral integrity suffered a blow.
"Here, we're dealing with a problem of a member of the so-called anti-aircraft-support generation, an 84-year-old who can't contain himself," said historian Schoeps. "I'm ashamed for Günter Grass. It would have been better if he hadn't written."
This time Grass wrote about a current topic, but his past is still catching up with him.
Author: Cornelia Rabitz / kjb
Editor: Sean Sinico