In addition, other bargains, available to everyone, were to
be found, including the incredibly cheap "standing room" places for even
the best music and dance events. With plenty of time to stand in line, I got excellent
standing spots to hear the Wiener Philharmonic, observe Leonard Bernstein
conduct Mahler symphonies, and watch Nureyev dance.
Membership Card for the Austrian Alpine Club (front) |
Later that day, when I mentioned that I had joined the Ősterreichischer
Alpenverein to my friend Jörg Wollmann, a Viennese who was a few years older
than me, he gave me a funny look, shook his head, and said something like, "Don't you know
that is a brown group."
Well, I didn't know, and I was not sure what he meant.
However, I was quite aware of the deep political divisions in Austrian society
that had created, from the beginnings of the First Republic after WWI,
what political scientists had called "Lager," roughly translated as
"political camps," into which most people were born and stayed their
whole lives.
The two main political camps were the socialists (or social
democrats) and the Catholic-conservatives. Membership in the camps was, to a large
extent, a matter of geography: most members were grouped together based on
where they lived. For example, a large majority of Viennese (excluding those
living in a few districts) were solidly members of the socialist camp, while
most rural and small city Austrians were members of the Catholic-conservative
camp. In industrial cities, the socialists lived in worker's districts, and the
Catholic-conservatives lived elsewhere.
Membership Card for the Austrian Alpine Club (inside) |
After WWII, the two camps were roughly equal in size, each about
45 percent of the population. The people comprising the other ten percent of the population were independent or were members of smaller political camps,
including a German nationalist group and a communist group. The first group was
on the far right, and it attracted, some said, people with Nazi sympathies. It typically
struggled to get the five percent of the vote needed to be represented in the
national parliament. The communist group
usually received less than two percent of the vote nationally.
Being a part of a political camp meant much more than supporting
a political party. It also meant that you associated mainly with others of your camp. You lived next to them, went to school with them, went (or didn't go) to
church with them, read the same newspapers and magazines, were members of the same social
clubs, and were members of the same unions or employer groups or industry associations.
In short, you spent your time mostly with people in your political camp from cradle
to grave.
These lager were at odds over many basic issues, economic, social,
and religious. The divisions and enmity were so great during the 1920s and
1930s that each created their own militias, and in 1934, the
Catholic-conservative militia (Heimwehr) teamed with the Austrian army (commanded
by Dollfuss, the Catholic-conservative Chancellor) to crush the social
democrats in a brief and decisive civil war.
Out of the ruins of the 1938 Anschluss and World War II,
Austrians found ways to build bridges between the two camps so that future
armed strife could be avoided. The mechanisms for managing conflict included a
Grand Coalition of the two main political camps that governed the country for decades after the end of the war,
plus other mechanisms to insure that the two camps shared power, influence, and
positions. Essentially, each political camp had a veto power over government action to address major national issues.
The grip of the political camps declined slowly as Austrian
society became a bit more mobile and people moved to different locations where
they regularly encountered people from other political camps. Also, as radio
and television became more important sources of information, members of the
camps heard differing points of views: the lager lost their near-monopoly on
the flow of information to their members. (Radio and television were nationalized after
WWII, and their operations were managed jointly by the representatives of the two
camps.)
In 1971 and 1972, the political
camps still dominated politics, but were weakening. In 1971, Bruno Kreisky's Socialist
Party (SPŐ) received 50 percent of the vote in Parliamentary elections, winning a
majority of the seats in Parliament. For the first time since WWII, one party
governed Austria without a coalition.
In that election, the German nationalist party, the Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (FPŐ) received 5.5 percent of the vote, winning
10 seats in the 183-seat Parliament. Its
fortunes would improve in coming decades, but in 1971 it still was a fringe
party with a suspicious membership, winning support mainly from rural parts of
the country.
Book published by the Austrian Alpine Club, October 2011 |
The ŐAV, now the largest travel group in Austria,
acknowledges the unsavory elements of its history (see this web site: http://bit.ly/nzXmvz ). As part of the upcoming celebration of the 150th
anniversary of its founding, it is publishing a book that critically examines
its history from 1918 to 1945. The book is entitled Berg Heil!
Alpenverein und Bergsteigen 1918-1945.
Despite its present popularity, in 1972, at least some people, including Jörg,
viewed the ŐAV, based on its history, as a "brown" (Nazi-associated) or "blue" (FPŐ-associated) club. People who were strongly anti-Nazi and/or were members of other political camps (the reds and blacks) were unlikely to join it. People who had brown sympathies and/or were members of the German national political camp were more likely to be members of this travel and mountain climbing club than any other one.
I discovered that other travel and mountain climbing clubs existed for members of the main
political camps. If you were a member of the SPŐ ("red") camp, you would likely join Die
Naturfreunde Ősterreichs (the Friends of Nature of Austria), created in 1895 to
assist workers to enjoy travel and nature. As a member of the Catholic conservative ("black") camp, with the Ősterreichische Volkspartei (ŐVP) at its center, you would likely join the Ősterreichische Touristenverein
(ŐTV), the Austrian Tourist Club, founded in 1908 and affiliated then with the Christian Socialist Party.
When I figured out that I had joined a group that some people
considered "brown" or "blue," I was chagrined. I had simply wanted a discount on rail travel and had stopped by the office of the nearest travel organization that would get me that discount. By joining this Club, inadvertently aligning myself with repugnant
political views, I learned a lesson about how simple private acts in Austria
could convey a regrettable political message.
No comments:
Post a Comment