http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46407
 
EUROPE: Communist Ideology, as bad as Nazism?
Analysis by Zoltán Dujisin

BUDAPEST, Apr 6 (IPS) - A declaration which equates communism to Nazism and
condemns communist ideology as "directly responsible for crimes against
humanity" has been debated in the European Parliament on the initiative of
the Czech Presidency of the European Union.

The "Prague Declaration" was approved by the Czech Senate in June 2008. It
calls for communism and Nazism to be recognised as the common totalitarian
legacy of Europe. 

It also calls for victims of communism to be properly compensated and
perpetrators of crimes to be punished, while urging "acceptance of pan-
European responsibility for crimes committed by Communism." 

The declaration reflects a feeling among right-wing sectors in Central and
Eastern Europe that the West should recognise East Europe's suffering in the
same way that it recognises suffering caused by Nazism. 

But some fear this is a case of manipulative exploitation of genuine
suffering by political opportunists among Eastern Europe's right. 

Last month the website of the declaration was attacked by a flood of
fictitious signatures of South American dictators, libertarian thinkers or
paramilitary leaders as part of a campaign initiated by current and former
students of the Budapest-based Central European University (CEU), where many
youngsters from the entire post-communist region study. 

Among the hundreds of signatures allegedly posted by dozens of people on
various continents, was "Niculae Ceaucescu, opportunist who if alive would
have turned neo-liberal and anti-communist like all of you" and "Adolf
Hitler, anti-communist number 1". 

Leading Romanian daily Cotidianul gave first-page attention to the story
last week, interviewing two of the anonymous authors of the signature
campaign, together with right-wing commentators who called them everything
from "leftist maniacs" to "holocaust deniers". 

IPS spoke to one of the participants in the initiative which he claims was
successful in achieving its goal: starting a debate on the political
exploitation of the communist past in a region with an overwhelming
domination of right-wing media. 

"Eastern Europe does not have a monopoly on the communist experience. In
Western Europe or South America communist parties and syndicates are
recognised as active participants in the democratisation of their countries
and presently influence the outcome of political negotiation on a variety of
socio-economic issues," the 29-year old Romanian former CEU student, who
says he had relatives beaten and imprisoned under Romania's communist
regime, told IPS. 

"Moreover, why does the declaration uses the word Nazism and not fascism, if
the purpose is to deal with the entire totalitarian heritage of Europe as it
claims? Couldn't Italians, Portuguese, Spanish, and the citizens of Central
and Eastern Europe who lived under other fascisms interpret this as a
softening of Europe's stance on fascist forms of government other than
Nazism?" 

Moreover, the declaration considers "exterminating and deporting whole
nations" inseparable from communist ideology, a view that could be used
against the entire left, the source said. 

"What to think of (Hungarian deputy) Gyorgy Schöpflin comments in the
European Parliament, falsely claiming that the entire European left bears
the responsibility for the crimes of communist regimes? Or of (Romanian
deputy) Sorin Iliesiu's warning against 'neo-communism'? We all know what
that means in Eastern European jargon, they could try to de-legitimise or
even forbid parties and movements in the entire European social-democratic
and socialist left," he said. 

The Prague declaration calls for an "adjustment and overhaul of European
history textbooks" and the creation of an "Institute of European Memory and
Conscience" at the EU level. Similar and highly controversial institutes in
Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Romania, and equally controversial
museums in Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Hungary support this idea. 

Memory institutes in the region have sought a monopoly on access to
communist-era secret service files, and are often accused of selective
political targeting. 

The Polish cases have been the ones most highlighted in Western media, with
many conceding that the institute had been turned into a tool for witch-
hunting by the populist right. 

The last controversy involved Polish anti-communist figure and first
president of post-communist Poland Lech Walesa, who is threatening to leave
Poland after once again being accused by historians from Poland's Institute
for National Remembrance of collaborating with communist authorities. 

Walesa was cleared of the accusation in 2000 by a special court, which found
that the secret service files on him had been forged to block him from the
Nobel Peace Prize, which he won in 1983. 

In the Czech Republic, another country that is home to such institutes,
former state attorney Radim Obst was accused in 2007 of cooperating with the
Czechoslovak secret services just as he investigated a corruption scandal
involving a leading politician of the right-wing governing coalition. He was
cleared of the accusation only after being replaced. 

In Romania, public opinion was shocked to discover that Sorin Antohi, one of
the members of the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist
Dictatorship in Romania, turned out to have been a collaborator himself.
Public opinion in the region has often expressed disapproval of these
initiatives as many communist-era collaborators were forced by threats to
cooperate with authorities. 

Moreover the institutes have often paid undue attention to the political
left, although former communist collaborators populate the entire political
spectrum in the region and may well engage in harsh anti-communist rhetoric
nowadays. 

High-ranking signatories include former Czech president and dissident Václav
Havel and former Lithuanian president and dissident Vytautas Landsbergis. 

The Polish and Lithuanian presidencies of the EU are likely to bring the
declaration under discussion again, but by then the authors of the signature
flooding campaign will seek wider support for a counter-declaration.
(END/2009)
 
 <http://ipsnews.net/copyright.shtml> Copyright © 2009 IPS-Inter Press
Service
 
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