Latest news with #Raimund


Scroll.in
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Scroll.in
‘Parting' by Sebastian Haffner: A forgotten German novel of the early 1930s that became a bestseller
Abschied (Parting) by Sebastian Haffner (1907–1999) is dominating the bestseller charts in Germany. It has been published posthumously, over 25 years after his death, after the manuscript was found in a drawer. The novel is a love story between Raimund, a young non-Jewish German student of law from Berlin, and Teddy, a young Jewish woman from Vienna. Raimund and Teddy meet on August 31, 1930, in Berlin and the novel covers the time they spend in Berlin and Paris together. Abschied was written between October 18 and November 23, 1932, just before the Nazi takeover. It reads in the breathless, immediate manner in which it was clearly conceived. It also gives a personal insight into the zeitgeist of the final months of the Weimar Republic. Haffner was born Raimund Pretzel in Berlin, where he trained as a lawyer. He disagreed with the Nazi regime and emigrated to London in 1938. There, in order to protect his family in Germany from potential Nazi retribution he changed his name. It is estimated that around 80,000 German-speaking refugees from Nazism lived in the UK by September 1939. Most of these refugees were Jewish, but there was also a sizeable number who, like Haffner, had fled for political reasons. Many politically committed exiles arrived soon after 1933 but this was not the case for Haffner. In the 1930s he was busy being a young man in Berlin, training as a lawyer and enjoying himself. Haffner's father was an educationalist who had a library with 10,000 volumes. As a young man Haffner liked reading, and toyed with the idea of becoming a writer and journalist, but his father advised him to study law and aim for a career in the civil service. Political developments in Germany made this option increasingly unpalatable. Initially, Haffner found it difficult to see a way out. As he wrote in Defying Hitler: 'Daily life […] made it difficult to see the situation clearly.' In the book, he also describes how he and other Germans acquiesced to the new regime. Haffner was disgusted with his own reaction to the SA (the Nazi party's private army) entering the library of the court building where he was a pupil, asking those present whether they were Aryan and throwing out Jewish members of the court. When questioned by an SA man, Haffner replied that he was indeed Aryan and felt immediately ashamed: 'A moment too late I felt the shame, the defeat. I had said, 'Yes'. […] What a humiliation to have answered the unjustified question whether I was Aryan so easily, even if the fact was of no importance to me.' Haffner never really took up his career as a lawyer, because it would have meant upholding Nazi laws and Nazi justice. Instead, he started working as a journalist and writer, first in Germany and after his escape in 1938 in the UK. Life in the UK Soon after his arrival in the UK, Haffner finished a book titled Defying Hitler (1939). The memoir was both autobiographical and a political history of the period – but after the outbreak of the Second World War it was considered not polemical enough, and was dismissed as an unsuitable explanation for the rise of Nazism at the time. But the intermingling of private and public history is of great interest to readers in the 21st century. Defying Hitler was published posthumously in German (2000) and in English (2003) and became a bestseller in both languages. After Defying Hitler, Haffner turned to writing another book, Germany: Jekyll and Hyde (1940). It was more clearly anti-Nazi and focused on his journalism – during the war, he worked for the Foreign Office on anti-Nazi propaganda and he was later employed by The Observer as a political journalist. The book was a success, and Winston Churchill is said to have told his cabinet to read it. The German critic Volker Weidemann who wrote the epilogue to Parting toys with the idea that it was never published because its focus on the love story was considered a bit too trivial for such a great writer. Thanks to his work for The Observer after 1941, Haffner was a well-regarded political journalist and historical biographer. He became the paper's German correspondent in 1954, and was well known for his column in West Germany's Stern magazine and for his biographies, including one on Churchill (1967). The perspective of a young non-Jewish German living a relatively ordinary life in the early 1930s makes Abschied a fascinating read. Academics have been exploring everyday life under Nazi rule for nearly half a century now, but it seems that modern readers are still keen to learn about it today. Perhaps the novel resonates with so many German readers because we live in a time where many struggle with the inevitable continuation of everyday life while politics is becoming ever more extraordinary. Andrea Hammel is Professor of German, Aberystwyth University.
Yahoo
29-03-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Ski jumper with vertigo: Germany's Raimund to miss season finale
Germany's Philipp Raimund celebrates after his jump in the 2nd round of the men's large hill competition during the Four Hills Tournament of the FIS ski jumping World Cup. German ski jumper Philipp Raimund has decided not to participate in the World Cup finale in Planica on Sunday because he is suffering from vertigo. Daniel Karmann/dpa German ski jumper Philipp Raimund has decided not to participate in the World Cup finale in Planica on Sunday because he is suffering from vertigo. "I will not be flying tomorrow," the 24-year-old told broadcaster ARD. "I still have a few things in my head that I unfortunately cannot fully shake off." Advertisement Raimund has not competed all weekend on the massive flying hill in Slovenia. Flying hills are the biggest used for ski jumping and top competitors routinely jump over 230 metres. He explained his sudden fear of heights on social media earlier in the week. Looking ahead to next season and February's Olympics, Raimund plans to work specifically on addressing his issue. "It's difficult, but I want to take care of it so that it happens less often or, ideally, not at all," he said.


Reuters
28-03-2025
- Sport
- Reuters
Ski jumping-German Raimund skips giant hill event as fear of heights resurfaces
March 28 (Reuters) - German ski jumper Philipp Raimund has withdrawn from this weekend's prestigious ski flying event in Planica, Slovenia citing persistent challenges with his fear of heights. The 24-year-old explained in a social media post that while he manages his fear in the vast majority of his jumps, the 240-metre hill in Slovenia presents too great a risk. Unlike regular ski jumping, ski flying takes place on larger hills, resulting in higher speeds and longer flight times. This enables athletes to achieve greater distances, but also introduces a higher level of risk. "...usually isn't a problem while skijumping, but from time to time, I have the issue (mainly while ski flying) that my body is reacting without me controlling it," he said in a post on Thursday. "I'm not taking the risk of it happening, when I don't know if I'm still the pilot, or if I can't react at all." The ski flying hill at the Planica Nordic Skiing Complex, near the Italian and Austrian border, has been dubbed the 'Monster Hill' due to its hill size of 240 metres. Raimund added he could return on Sunday if his confidence improves. "If not, then it is what it is. But I won't fly if I don't feel ready and happy to do so," he said. The event in Planica culminates the elite ski jumping season. Raimund is 22nd in the overall World Cup standings.