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8 - Symbols in action: Willy Brandt's kneefall at the Warsaw Memorial
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- By Valentin Rauer, Research Fellow in an interdisciplinary research group “Norms and Symbols”, University of Konstanz (Germany)
- Edited by Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University, Connecticut, Bernhard Giesen, Universität Konstanz, Germany, Jason L. Mast, Yale University, Connecticut
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- Book:
- Social Performance
- Published online:
- 07 December 2009
- Print publication:
- 04 May 2006, pp 257-282
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
“Through all former and later pictures, [… I] see a kneeling man in Warsaw. […] there are people who can say more with their back than others with thousand words. It was obvious that every part of this body felt something that wanted to be expressed – about guilt, penance and an infinite pain.”
Cees NooteboomIntroduction
On December 7, 1970, Willy Brandt, the Chancellor of the German Federal Republic, was to sign the Warsaw Treaty, one of the treaties between Germany and Warsaw Pact nations currently seen as the first diplomatic step to the breakthrough of the Iron Curtain. The official signing took place in Warsaw and, as expected in the international political arena, it was paralleled by several commemorative ceremonies. The agenda included a visit to the Warsaw Memorial, erected in honor of the Jewish heroes of the 1943 Ghetto Uprising. Surrounded by the official political entourage and several representatives of the international press, Mr. Brandt stepped out of his vehicle, slowly approached the Memorial, straightened out the ribbon of a previously laid flower wreath and took a step back. Then something unexpected happened: he suddenly sank on to his knees in front of the Memorial and remained still for a minute. The next day, the response to his gesture was enormous. The picture of Brandt kneeling made its mark in the international press. All major newspapers in Europe and the United States enthusiastically featured this “emotional moment” in international relations.