In her extraordinary graphic memoir Heimat
Krug dissects antisemitism in her own family’s history and Germany’s national guilt over the Holocaust – and the country’s recent far-right backlash
Wed 3 Oct 2018 09.00 CESTLast modified on Sat 23 Feb 2019 23.07 CETShareOf the hundreds of documents the German author and illustrator Nora Krug has wrenched from archives and flea markets for her sprawling
two of the most emotionally arresting are about fungi
The first is a page from her uncle Franz-Karl’s sixth-grade school exercise book, which Krug discovered in a musty drawer in her parents’ living room. Each line is filled with meticulously crafted Sütterlin script
a now largely obsolete form of German handwriting
The margins are populated by childish pine trees and toadstools with grinning faces
“When you go to the forest and you see mushrooms that look beautiful
you think that they are good,” the text reads
they are poisonous and can kill a whole family.” Then the gut-wrencher: “The Jew is just like this mushroom.”
10 days before Hitler declared that the outcome of another world war would be “the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe”
if you don’t get a chance to cook them?” Edwin writes
berries and mushrooms are coming to an end
because nature is beginning to show its cold face
but unfortunately it isn’t possible in these eventful times.” The next document is a letter from Edwin’s company leader
informing his wife that he went missing in combat on the Sõrve peninsula in Estonia on 18 November 1944
View image in fullscreenNora Krug provides some context for her uncle’s school essay in Heimat
Illustration: Nora KrugEach of Edwin’s letters is illustrated with a portrait of their author
each one sketchier and paler than the last
until Krug’s great-uncle has been literally rubbed out of history
one sounds as if he had the potential to become culpable in one of the most monstrous crimes in human history
The other ended up as a victim of conflict
Does one uncle’s suffering offset another’s hatred
And should their guilt be carried forward to a 41-year-old relative living in Brooklyn today
View image in fullscreenHeimat: A German Family Album by Nora Krug Illustration: Nora KrugKrug’s memoir Heimat: A German Family Album seeks to wade through this moral quagmire
full of “people you can neither classify as resistance fighters or as victims
It is a surprising mission for a writer born in 1977
of coming to terms with the National Socialist era
is in Germany mainly associated with the literature and films of Krug’s parents’ generation
“If I had stayed in Germany, I would have never thought of writing this book,” she says over a coffee in a beer garden in central Berlin. “There’s that Hannah Arendt line: ‘If all are guilty
no one is.’ As a German in Germany you have already learned so much about the second world war
thought so much about it and talked so much about it
that I would have thought: what’s left to be said?”
Krug’s perspective changed when she left her hometown of Karlsruhe behind aged 19 and headed abroad – first to Liverpool
where she studied at Paul McCartney’s Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts
where she now teaches illustration at the Parsons School of Design and lives in Brooklyn with her husband and daughter
but sometimes it would reach a point where I would feel angry – always inwardly
not outwardly – about the lack of admission that Germany has changed.”
After 12 years of living in the US and now married into a Jewish family, she writes: “I feel more German than ever before” – on a page illustrated with a picture of her re-enacting Caspar David Friedrich’s ur-German painting Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog
she finds it harder to grasp what being German really means
That sense of in-betweenness gave birth to a personal research project that came in three stages: over a period of two years
Krug regularly returned to her father’s hometown of Külsheim in Swabia
she wrote up the tales she had discovered: the story of her fervently National Socialist uncle Franz-Karl
who died of a bullet to his chest in Italy aged 18
who worked as a chauffeur for a Jewish salesman and voted for the Social Democrats in 1933
only to then join the Nazi party a few months later
In hindsight, Krug says, the family history she embarked on was the kind of project she wished she had done when she was much younger: “What I found problematic about the way in which we were taught at school about the Holocaust and the war was that it conveyed a very generalising sense of guilt
but you weren’t encouraged to research what happened in your own city
we would have learned to deal with this guilt in a much more constructive way
You would have been able to say: ‘I am doing something positive now
I am contributing to retelling the story in a new way.’ The sense of paralysis would not have been so strong.”
In recent years, Germany’s new far-right party Alternative für Deutschland has started to agitate against what it calls the country’s Schuldkult – “guilt cult”. Railing against architect Peter Eisenman’s Holocaust memorial next to Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate
the AfD delegate Björn Höcke last year said that “we Germans are the only people in the world that have planted a monument of shame in the heart of their capital”
Has German culture exposed itself to attacks from the far right by putting the country’s collective guilt at the heart of its modern identity
“I think there is now a backlash from people who say they are fed up with having to feel guilty
There’s a defensive attitude that can lead to the exact opposite
Germans still feel deeply insecure about all this.”
While travelling frequently between the US and Germany
she started a notebook to document behavioural oddities that she had previously been blind to
whether that is for bumping into people in the road
To apologise in German entails an admission that you are guilty
an apology doesn’t necessarily imply that: it can just mean ‘I didn’t intend that to happen’
But Krug rejects the idea that the guilt of Nazi Germany no longer applies to her own generation
“I don’t think we should no longer feel guilty
But there are paralysing ways to feel guilt and there are constructive strategies for coping with guilt
and we didn’t learn enough of the latter at school.”
oscillates between referring to a specific geographic location
Germany’s current government announced in March this year that it would establish the first ever Heimat ministry
though appropriately for such a conceptually overloaded word
there has yet to be any announcement on what such a ministry would do
Krug’s biographies are interspersed with entries from what she calls “the notebook of a homesick émigré”, listing quintessentially German objects such as Hansaplast bandages, Leitz binders or dark and crusty sourdough bread, and her “scrapbook of a memory archivist”, in which she presents curios unearthed during her flea market treasure trawls.
Sometimes, Krug uses these objects to undercut sarcastically the emotional pull of the individual biographies. Fly agaric toadstools, she notes, having just discovered her uncle’s grim school essay, are in Germany still seen as signs of good luck.
In another chapter, an account of how all memory of Judaism as a living culture has been erased from her father’s hometown is interwoven with evidence of how the country tried to erase memory of the Nazi period after 1945. A stamp bearing Hitler’s portrait is relabelled “Germany’s contaminator” so as not to diminish its value. On a photograph of three young men in uniforms, the swastikas on their armbands have been scratched out.
Read moreThe curious appeal of Krug’s graphic memoir is that it never fully loses itself in the act of storytelling but constantly stops to turn over and reassess the means at its disposal
“The research stage took so long because I was very insecure at first: how do you tell a story like this without being misunderstood?” she says
“I didn’t want to make the point that Germans were victims
you would have to be extremely careful what kind of music you used
The same applies to pictures: it can suddenly seem so very sentimental.”
even a cosmopolitan young German writer living in New York cannot tell the story of Germany as a simple tale with a hero and a villain
a forgotten word once called into the mountains
Heimat: A German Family Album is published by Particular.