Vienna orchestra to lift the lid on its Nazi history
By REUTERS
03/10/2013 02:02
World famous Vienna Philharmonic orchestra is to publish details of its history during the Nazi era after years of silence.
Vienna Philharmonic New Year's Concert 2012 with Conductor Mariss Jansons. Photo: YouTube Screenshot
VIENNA - The world-famous Vienna Philharmonic orchestra will
publish details of its history during the Nazi era on Sunday, responding to
years of accusations of a cover-up.
Austria took several decades after
World War Two to acknowledge and voice regret for its central role in Hitler's
Third Reich and Holocaust. The country will solemnly mark the 75th anniversary
on Tuesday of its annexation by Nazi Germany.
One of the world's premier
orchestras, the Vienna Philharmonic is most popularly known for its annual New
Year's Concert, a Strauss waltz extravaganza that is broadcast to an audience of
more than 50 million in 80 countries.
Less well known is the fact that
the concert originated as a propaganda instrument under Nazi rule in 1939. The
orchestra rarely played the music of the Strauss family, known for the "Blue
Danube" and numerous other waltzes, before this period.
The New Year's
Concert helped promote Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels' desired image
of Vienna. He wrote in his diaries that the Austrian capital should be seen as a
city of "culture, music, optimism and conviviality".
Fritz Truempi, one
of three historians commissioned by the orchestra to produce articles on the
orchestra's Nazi era that will be published on its website, told Reuters: "The
New Year's Concert was invented under the Nazis." Details of 13 musicians who
were driven out of the orchestra over their Jewish origin or relations after
Germany's annexation of Austria in 1938 - five of whom died in concentration
camps - will also be published on the site for the first time.
Bernadette
Mayrhofer, another of the independent historians from the University of Vienna,
said the ostracism of Jewish musicians had begun even before 1938 under
Austrofascism, a period of Italian-oriented authoritarian rule in
Austria.
"It was known whether somebody had Jewish roots or a Jewish
wife," she told Reuters.
The Vienna Philharmonic has further promised to
give more details on Sunday about a ring of honour it presented in 1942 to
Baldur von Schirach, a Nazi governor of Vienna who oversaw the deportation of
tens of thousands of Jews.
A replacement for the ring, which Schirach
lost, may have been delivered to him in the 1960s, after his release from prison
for crimes against humanity, according to Harald Walser, a Greens member of
Austria's parliament, and others.
Cover-up allegations
Orchestra Chairman
Clemens Hellberg, in his 1992 history of the Vienna Philharmonic, "Democracy of
Kings", omits this incident. He has since said he did not have access to all the
relevant documents when he wrote the book.
The orchestra, whose image is
closely tied to the 18th century Vienna of Haydn and Mozart, has come under fire
in recent years for not acknowledging the part its Jewish musicians played in
its history, or its own collaboration with the Nazis.
Walser, one of the
orchestra's most vocal and persistent critics, has demanded the Vienna
Philharmonic open its archives for a full and open inquiry.
This weekend,
he welcomed the orchestra's decision to become more transparent, although he
said it did not go far enough.
"It's a little step in the right
direction," he told Reuters. "But we're still a long way from having adequate
access to the archives." The three historians were given less than two months to
fulfil their commission following a decision by the orchestra's management after
this January's New Year's concert, an annual focal point for
criticism.
The Vienna Philharmonic says it is not obliged to give public
access to its archives, since it is a private organisation, although it does
grant access to selected historians and scholars.
Truempi said it took
him three years starting in 2003 to gain access to research his 2011 book "Das
Politisierte Orchester" ("The Politicised Orchestra"), a study of the Vienna and
Berlin Philharmonic orchestras under National Socialism.
The historian
reckons that the orchestra has now finally come to a point where it realised
that its long-held policy, designed to protect its brand, was actually harming
its image.
"I see it also as an issue of image management. For a long
time, they tried to maintain a strict control over their brand but, in the end,
the political pressure became such that it was the best solution to open up," he
said.