So, I still haven’t found the perfect solution for this blog, but since it’s already the end of October (wtf…) and I have so many books left to write about, I will for now try to pair similiar books, or similar topics together. This time is an American novel about skinheads and a German one about Neonazis. What a fun topic, right?

American Skin is about a Alex, a young boy that by accident enters the Skinhead scene in Chicago after losing his home. The skins soon become their new family and and they help each other out, also using violence, which brings Alex to jail. The skins are anti-Nazi and often have fights with a rival skin gang that is very much into the Nazi scene. The book was interesting in so far as I had no idea that skinheads do not equal Nazis, because being a German, it kind of does. But as I googled after reading the book, skins are young people with a working class environment and they welcomed almost everyone. It was only in the 90s that it got mixed up with neo-Nazis. Still, I felt very bewildered reading it. The gang leader of the rival gang also ends up in jail, where he gets a tattoo of the I think a Swastika on his forehead. For me, it’s always a bit difficult to understand that in other countries in the world, you can actually do things like this (if that’s what floats your goat….) and don’t face any legal consequences for it. In Germany, you would go to jail (or continue to be there if you already were) because it’s a forbidden symbol. I remember watching American History X as a child (and the blurb on this book says that the book inspired the movie a great deal, but I’m not sure if that’s true) and feeling so confused and somewhat sick about people just showing of their Nazi symbols.
This aside, the book was really interesting to read and quite the page turner. If you are interested into topics like this, I can really recommend it.
The second book is by Peter Richter, telling the story about him and his friends and how they experienced the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the years afterwards (hence the title). Now, I did not get most of the GDR references, while officially born a citizen of the GDR, I must say, I don’t have any memories of this country and most of the things I know are stories from my family or older friends. The second part, however, I understood better, because I actually have memories of that. I have vivid memories of neo-Nazis running around in our village, and of my brother being scared because he had long hair and was/is left (and as he later told me, he was beaten up quite often). It’s a bit sad that the author cannot explain why they all ‚appeared‘ so suddenly, probably because he can’t, but I never really understood it. Granted, they probably had that mindset before already, but how did they all just look the same and value the same things all of a sudden. If you have an idea, let me know, I’m really interested in it. The passages were hard to read, the author tells how he was beaten up but also beat up Nazis – to be honest, it sounded like war or something, and I guess it was.
He has a sentence in the book that I found very strong. The setting is right after the collapse of the GDR and how the demonstrations, once peacefully, were now right-winged people against left-winged people. Here it is:
Rightists and Leftists, this was what it was called now, and we were, whether we liked it or not, the Leftists simply because the other ones were the Rightists. (page 210, own translation)
I find this sentence so strong, because this has never stopped being true. We are so quick labeling people Rightists or Leftists, just because they have a different opinion then we do. If you think that Germany has to take in refugees? Boooooom, you must be leftist. You think that taking refugees in is good, but not too many please? Please move to the right, because you must be a Nazi. With this thinking in black and white categories however, we just intensify the debate and the gap in our society. The old women worrying about refugees coming to her village is definitely simple-minded and overreacting, but is she a Rightist, a Nazi? I don’t think so. The young man worrying about increasing rent in Berlin who thinks that real estate moguls should take responsibility and not raise rents whenever they can? Is he a Leftists? I do not think so. Now, don’t get me wrong. If it talks like a Nazi, acts like a Nazi, thinks like a Nazi and behaves like a Nazi – it is a Nazi (looking at you Bernd Höcke and other AfD members). But maybe we should be more careful with labeling people something just because they disagree with us. That’s all I’m saying.
So, all in all, two interesting books, two different countries, and yet, two similar topics.
On a personal note:
I haven’t been feeling good lately (mentally as well as physically) and today I decided to do something nice for me and went for a very long walk around the lake near my neighborhood. I picked a nice tree, sat down, looked at the water, the leaves falling, the dragon flies flying around, the sun’s reflection in the water and I felt so peaceful and at ease. I understood once again how important it is to do something good for yourself, especially when times are hard. I hope that I will remember this and will build in things like this more often. In the end, you have to prioritize yourself, right?







