Germany’s traditional Burschenschaften student fraternities sparked controversy recently by debating whether an ethnically Chinese German citizen could be a member. The Local spoke with him about race and Teutonic tradition.
The
Burschenschaften, one of Germany’s oldest student associations, unites members under the values of ‘Honour, Freedom, Fatherland’ in Germany and Austria.
The fraternity members adhere to old-fashioned traditions including dressing up in cadet-style uniforms, carrying fencing rapiers and taking part in torch-lit parades. Some even take part in arcane rituals such as receiving a fencing scar on the cheek.
Some chapters even attract the attention of German authorities for being so right wing as to be anti-democratic and welcoming homes for neo-Nazis.
This year’s annual meeting of the
Deutsche Burschenschaften (DB), one of the largest umbrella associations, was faced with a proposal to expel an entire fraternity because it had accepted a German citizen with Chinese parents as a member.
The
Alte Breslauer Burschenschaft der Raczeks zu Bonn had applied for the
Burschenschaft Hansea zu Mannheim to be kicked out of the DB because Kai Ming Au, spokesman for the Mannheim fraternity, was ethnically Chinese even though he was born in Mannheim and considers himself fully German.
Stereotypes brought to the fore
The row brought to the surface all the stereotypes surrounding the conservative, nationalist pro-German groups and revealed what many see as a power struggle within the association between its ultra-traditionalist rump with racist tendencies and its more liberal majority.
After 90 minutes of what left-wing daily
Tageszeitung reported last week had been an emotional debate, the submission was withdrawn and new rules adopted which allow members to be either from German parents or in possession of German citizenship – although they still cannot be female.
A statement on the DB site stressed that the initial submission had been dropped on the Wednesday before the weekend conference. “It is and it always was possible for any German citizen to become a member of an association of the
Deutsche Burschenschaft. The rumoured allegation that this was only possible for applicants with so-called German roots, is wrong,” DB spokesman Stefan Dobner said in the statement.
Now the 26-year-old at the centre of the controversy has told The Local he is determined to stand for election to the group's ruling body after the incident.
Au said he wanted to show that the student group, long criticised for being nationalistic, reactionary and even racist, was not what people thought.
“Of course there is a minority who are like that, some of the member groups are not liberal in their thinking, but the vast majority of those I have had contact with are of liberal opinions,” he said.
The association encourages members to become members for life with part of its mission being to foster exchange of ideas, friendships and contacts between current student members and graduates. They are often well-financed, owning large well-situated buildings in the centre of cities kitted out like American fraternity houses where student members can live for minimal rent.
That is how Au first encountered the
Burschenschaft Hansea zu Mannheim. He was looking for a place to stay while studying business administration in nearby Ludwigshafen and was offered a place in the
Burschenschaft house.
Joining up
“At first I didn’t know what to think about it,” he said. “I knew nothing about who they were. I could just as easily have landed up in a
Corps (student association). I was a bit sceptical, and looked it up on Google when I got home. There are about a hundred pages and they nearly all say the
Burschenschaften are racist and anti-women, so I was really unsure.
But he said his opinion quickly changed after a visit to the fraternity.
“The house was really nice and the people who had shown me around seemed to be serious. I had a four- to six-week try-out period before I would have to become a member. It was only a week and I was at an event and people came up to me and asked me about myself. I was not being treated differently or looked at in a funny way. It was a good community.
“I was asking people during this time also, and my [now]
Burschenschaft brothers told me about the association. Some told me there were some groups where it would be better I didn’t visit. In Germany it is normal that we visit each others’ groups when we are in a different town – if I was in Heidelberg or Munich I would go to visit the group there and have a beer or something; that is something we do.”
Au did not name the
Alte Breslauer Burschenschaft der Raczeks zu Bonn as one of the groups he was warned away from, and said that even if he were in Bonn, he would be confident of receiving a warm
Burschenschaft welcome – from another Bonn group.
“I got to know the other Bonn group this weekend at the national meeting. An older member had sent us a letter to support us,” he said.
Au seems convinced that the vast majority of his
Burschenschaften brethren have a modern mindset and than the tradition-soaked association will be able to catch up with the rest of society where it perhaps still lags behind.
Move with the times
“Such a varied association has to move with the times, otherwise it will not survive,” he said, accepting the idea that his might be one of the new faces of Germany that could have a natural home in associations like the
Burschenshaften.
He said his particular group in Mannheim was focused on personal and professional success and using that to play an important part in German society. Members are expected to do well in their studies and finish them quickly and then to go on to use their academic and other talents in their careers.
Au said he was ambitious within the organisation and that after two-and-a-half years as a member, including two stints as spokesman for the Mannheim group, he had intended to stand for election to the
Deutsche Burschenschaften organising committee this year. But he postponed the idea when the row broke out.
“If this had not happened people would still think we were racists. I now have the chance to make it clear that it is not like that," he said. "I have now said a hundred times that the absolute majority are liberal and that not more than 10 or 15 percent are not liberal.”
Your comments about this article:
Me wonders if this is a case of false friend translation.
Anyway, I think this guy is doing the Burschenschaft a favor by dispelling the myths that everyone there is a racist. They should embrace him as a member and stop acting this way. Most of them are not like that anywasy - only a small portion, right? This is important for them then. I wish I were a member!
He's seems to feel welcome amongst his chosen group, and that should speak volumes to the others who fear such integration. Just as there were many who saw themselves as Germans who happened to be Jewish, this man can be both German and ethnically Chinese, and it makes him no less of either. Pride and arrogance don't need to march hand in hand. Be proud of your own heritage, and allow others the same right.
wa
I have an old picture from the late 1800s of my great (x4 or 5) grandfather hanging on my wall. He was a low-ranking Prussian military officer and is dressed in full uniform in the picture (which is probably why the picture was made. It's by far the oldest picture in our family). But what really catches your eye is the massive scar running across his left cheek. I always assumed it was a war wound, but several years ago my great aunt told me it was a "mensur" scar from fencing. Apparently, such scars were actually quite fashionable back in the day (believe it or not), and were worn like marks of bravery, or whatever. He and his brothers had gone to the University of Tubingen, and had apparently belonged to some kind of club like this.
Before she told me about that, I had never heard of these German student/academic associations before. Frat houses here in America aren't quite as serious. Less archaic tradition, more partying & depravity.
Sorry, but I have to respectfully disagree. When I put on a kilt, I'm proud that my ancestors came from Scotland, and there's no reason I shouldn't be. That's true of everyone, which doesn't mean you have to be proud of everyone in your family tree.
wa
Oh sorry, that would be the Third Reich you'd be wanting...Just take your Time Machine back to 1940 and look for the burning Jews, you can't miss it.
Or perhaps you would be happier if you kept going to til you hit the Neanderthal...
Wotan's Day. You can accuse immigrants of very many things, but blaming them for "ridiculing" the Christian religion is somehow over the top, don't you think? Do you mean that it's the so-called "immigrant multicultural lobby" which is responsible for all the laws of separation of church and state passed in most countries all along the 20th century? for all the advances of secularisation and rights that were hard-won against an almighty Church that put all its weight to prevent all manner of scientific progress and social evolutions like women's rights in the last centuries? Are immigrants responsible for Germans, Danes and Austrians leaving the Catholic church in droves because of the Church's attitude always trying to cover up any scandal (especially paedophilia) in its midst? and I'm speaking as a Catholic btw...
Plus this particular case at hand is actually the "ideal" immigrant, the one that is so well integrated, he probably feels very German, and why not, he was born here and grew up in his country. What do you prefer? Immigrant families that remain apart and never integrate? This is real multiculturalism. I'm sure you're among the first ones who denounce that sort of immigrants. This guy is blending so well with Germany, if all immigrants were like him there wouldn't be any multiculturalism to speak of. But it seems to me immigrants and their descendant can never have it right with people like you. If they integrate and feel German - Wrong: that makes them "ridiculous", for whatever reason. If they don't integrate and remain strongly identified with their parent's culture - Wrong again: they're bloody "immigrants who don't integrate and despise the local culture". You don't even see you mix it all up in your shoddy post.
It's excellent to acknowledge all the ancient European cultures (which I think nobody overlooks), you're free to worship "Wicca", Jupiter or the Lady of the Lake if you want, but it's also time to start calling white supremacists out on their stupidity.
So even the talk of "ethnic Germans" is not a very straightforward one. Then, where do you draw the line with Germans of a (known) foreign origin? Do we want to create categories again? Mischling der 1. Klasse, und der 2. Klasse, etc. That does not bode well to me.
Even your sacro-sanct Burschenschaften rules did not seem to be very clear on this. This young guy was accepted into the Mannheim fraternity without problem, he didn't throw a tantrum to get in: he was taken and made a spokesman. Would it have been different if he was only "half-Chinese"? Or 25% Chinese? Obviously, it wasn't straightforward, and the Mannheim Burschenschaft did not agree with your narrow interpretation of the "rule". Now it has become very clear: you have to be German, holding the citizenship. Full stop, end of the story. Of course I guess you disagree with that but your reasoning is quite simplistic my dear.
If you want to go back to the Indians...sure they didn't invite foreigners to come stay but the point is they lost the lands to the White man. Will the same thing happen in Europe. The bottom line is people are tribal-people in Europe are no exception- and many of these new immigrants are simply not wanted.
Yes, the Indians lost the lands to the White man. And we have to accept that nothing is here to last forever. Empires come and go, so do civilisations, so do cultures, languages, nations, etc. The Germany of today has much to do with that of 1932, but many things have changed too. In turn, the Germany of 1932 has not so much to do with that of 1815 or that of 1648 or that of AD 814...
All those immigrants that you say are "simply not wanted" (mostly by you it seems) were indeed invited by the German authorities and employers and recruited en masse, even though they fooled themselves into believing that the Gastarbeiter would not stay in the country where they had a chance to make a living. The Apaches did not travel to Bristol or Amsterdam to recruit the English and Dutch colonists... And as far as I can see, the Burschenschaften took a sensible approache and decided they won't look at "DNA" to determine who they take in now, luckily.
You didn't explain why this guy can't be German if the sons of French Huguenots were Germans after one generation. But well, what you wrote afterwards allows me to get the idea (actually I had got it before already): he's not white.
What I like with racists is their pathetic attempts to justify their views with facts. Sooner or later, the supply of facts all dries up and they're left with flailing their arms around with abuse (at worse) or pitiful wishful thinking.