After World War II, Germany lay in ruins. But the main destruction was invisible — it nested in the minds of millions of Germans. How to live on, knowing about concentration camps, about atrocities committed in the name of the people? Collective guilt is not a spontaneous phenomenon, but a deliberately formed policy. The state, the church, the intelligentsia, and allies for decades had been instilling into the minds of Germans the thought: "You are guilty. Not the Nazis, not Hitler — you." This article is about how a sense of guilt became an instrument of democratization, national psychotherapy, and its economic miracle. Zero Hours: Denial and Shock In 1945, most Germans did not feel guilty. They felt themselves victims: of bombings, occupation, and expulsion from the eastern territories. Nazi propaganda for decades had been talking about "cultural traitors" and "a world conspiracy." Therefore, hearing from allies "you are responsible for the Holocaust" was a shock. Polls in 1946 showed that only 7% of Germans admitted their guilt for the war, 33% believed that all nations were equally guilty, and the rest blamed Hitler and his clique. The first reaction was defensive: "we did not know," "we were deceived," "the army fought honestly." This cognitive dissonance required resolution. Denazification and First Steps Allies began with forced denazification: questionnaires, trials, bans on professions. This was an external whip. But more important was the cultural policy. Cinemas showed documentaries about concentration camps ("Die Todesmühlen," "The Nuremberg Trial"). Residents of cities near camps were forced to see piles of bodies. In schools, mandatory history lessons on Nazism were introduced. All this broke down the wall of denial. But the real shift came later — when Germans themselves began to talk about guilt. The Role of the Church and the Intelligentsia In 1945, pastors and theologians issued the "Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt" (Stuttgarter Schuldbeke ...
Read more