Mmmph! Never thought I’d have so much to unpack from a 168 page case study that avoids (almost) anything anecdotal. Because let’s be real, fellow book nerds; we want actual research.
If you know anything about the art of clever titles, Stasi State or Socialist Paradise is basically a way of telling the reader that the German Democratic Republic, or more commonly the GDR or East Germany, was simply, neither! Its conclusion somewhat sums things up nicely at the end, and the overall take is something along these lines: the GDR was a state of contradictions. A socialist project that fed, housed, and took care of its people while offering a strong sense of culture, solidarity, companionship, and the ability to forge one’s destiny. Meanwhile, it also lacked proper grassroots-decision making that allowed the party members to weigh in properly, and often time mistrusted its people due to the strenuous forces of a much richer, stronger, and more hostile western front that stretched from its very borders all the way to the USA.
But, as much as it lacked in consumer goods, privacy, and well… longevity, this book serves more to look into what it achieved without ignoring these important drawbacks. For one, it did a deep dive on essential background information around the nation’s starting point compared to the west, the side not spending 4 years of ravish between Hitler and Stalin in WWII. It uncovered how much the GDR paid in reparations to the USSR (much) compared to its west counterpart (none), how the west unrolled a new currency to further plunder the east’s starting point, how the west was entirely rebuilt by Uncle Sam, and how these material conditions lead to a brain drain (and then later a nice thick wall) in the GDR. Despite this, it highlights that what it lacked in “democracy,” it multiplied in terms of women’s rights and independence, childcare, home ownership, healthcare, and education. Moreover, this certainly didn’t shy away from the overlooked anti communist witch hunts that very much existed in the west, nor how propped-up their government was, and the influence the Bolsheviks’ victory ultimately had in the creation of much of west Europe’s social democracies (I prefer to call them welfare states. Afterall, the safety nets have to come from somewhere, right?).
Near the end, we also get a breakdown of the unfair treatment that many from the former GDR felt from the newly united Germany. Many were treated far worse than former nazis ever were, more time and money went into shunning the Stasi system (a thing that a mere 2% of the average Joe population had to deal with in the GDR. You should check out the modern U.S. incarceration rate), and by contrast, how long it took to truly represent Hitler’s war crimes. It unravels the poor-faith narrative of comparing the GDR with Nazi Germany, and how many people were indeed satisfied and even miss the former socialist state, despite many crossing that border in 1989.
I guess you could say that history is always written by winners, and it’s these works that prove that to me day in and day out. The point is, the GDR, like anything, had its issues, and many we hear about have some layer of truth (even if it’s a very thin one). But the narratives are what never fly, and seem far too convenient. The goal here isn’t to praise it on some pedestal, but to learn from it, understand its position in history, and do better with future installments of socialist projects. We all have those MAGA-fueled colleagues that run their mouths because of a PragerU article, or chose to look at only the bads, and come to a conclusion that no communist truly knows what they’re talking about, aiming to end the conversation before it even begins. Words like “freedom” with no elaboration set the stage just right and just like that, an opinion is already formed. I’d say this book may focus too much on the goods at times, but considering how much artificial brain rot is churned out about former socialist examples, I think it’s alright to overlook that. Especially, since one of the authors worked 30 years of her life in the GDR, and the other studied it extensively.