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Don't mention the war. Grow up.

The Liberal Democrat leader wrote this article for the Guardian in 2002. It is now being used against him by a hysterically melancholic tabloid press in Britain. We are proud to republish it.

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The Liberal Democrat leader wrote this article for the Guardian in 2002. It is now being used against him by a hysterically melancholic tabloid press in Britain. We are proud to republish it.

I still cringe when I remember what happened on the school bus. The  shame of it still lingers.

We were all travelling together - a class  of 17-year-olds from my school and our German "exchange" partners - on  an excursion to the Bavarian mountains. The German teenagers had already  endured a month at our school in central London. Now it was our turn to  spend a month in Munich, living with our "exchange" families and  attending the local school.

A boy called Adrian started it. He  shouted from the back of the coach, "we own your country, we won the  war". Other boys tittered. One put a finger to his upper lip - the  traditional British schoolyard designation for Hitler's moustache -  threw his arm out in a Nazi salute, and goose-stepped down the bus  aisle. Soon there was a cascade of sneering jokes, most delivered in  'Allo 'Allo German accents.

I remember two things vividly. First,  none of the girls in my class joined in. It seemed to be a male thing.  Second, the German schoolchildren did not appear angry, or even  offended. That was what was so heart wrenching. They just looked  confused, utterly bewildered. To a generation of young Germans, raised  under the crushing, introspective guilt of postwar Germany, the sight of  such facile antics was simply incomprehensible.

I looked  nervously to Bernhard, my German exchange partner sitting next to me in  the bus. I could see he wanted to turn and face the commotion. Instead,  he sat rigid, staring silently ahead. The next day, as we were walking  to school, I lamely apologised to him for what had happened. I was  miserable that I had not had the courage to protest in the bus on his  behalf. Such is the power of teenage peer pressure. He stopped, and  explained. He said he felt he had no right to react himself. It was part  of the shame he was obliged to bear on behalf of his parents and grand  parents. Such is the power of collective guilt.

All this came to  mind last week when I read of the plight of Mr Puhle and Mr Sawartzki,  two Germans employed at Motorola's international call centre in Swindon.  They were so upset by the barrage of anti German jokes from their  British colleagues - "they used to call us fucking Germans and sing  songs about Hitler", said Mr Sawartzki - that they were forced to leave  their jobs. But at least they didn't take it lying down. They have  decided to take their employers to an industrial tribunal. Good on them.

It  is easy enough to explain the mixture of arrogance and insecurity that  fuels this peculiar British obsession. Watching Germany rise from its  knees after the war and become a vastly more prosperous nation has not  been easy on the febrile British psyche. John Cleese struck a chord in  the Fawlty Towers episode The Germans, in which a concussed Basil Fawlty  bombards his earnest German guests with a volley of jokes about the  war.

But humour on telly is one thing. Hounding Germans out of  work half a century after the last war is altogether different.

Even  worse, a warped view of Germany also seems to prevail in Britain's top  boardrooms. In an oafish article published last week in the Financial  Times, Martin Taylor, the chairman of WH Smith, declared that Germany,  in cahoots with France, remains one of our principal rivals. He  dismisses the idea that Germany is a partner, "a weasel word", and  concludes - as if he were Jeremy Clarkson - "France is for holidays,  Germany is for cars". His view of the EU is that of a schoolboy's  military board game. I'm surprised he didn't suggest that we should  settle it all in a game of conkers.

The latest twist to this  anti-German mania is a gloating satisfaction at Germany's recent  economic woes. With tedious predictability, one British pundit after  another occupies acres of newspaper space to tell us that the German  economy is a busted flush, that only a vigorous dose of Anglo Saxon  reforms will do the trick, that German economic weakness spells the end  of the euro. And so on. Even New Labour ministers, Gordon Brown in  particular, crow about comparative British economic success with more  than a hint of condescension towards Germany and the rest of the EU.

They  all blithely overlook that Germany's wealth per head remains a full 6%  higher than in the UK. That German workers are 29% more productive than  their British counterparts. That German trade with other EU countries  has shot up in recent years, while Britain's trade with the euro zone  stagnates. That Germany has engineered one of the world's most ambitious  economic transformations in the former East Germany. Not even the most  blinkered British visitor to Germany's prosperous towns and cities, to  its schools, hospitals and its transport system, could pretend that our  quality of life is comparable to German standards.

All nations  have a cross to bear, and none more so than Germany with its memories of  Nazism. But the British cross is more insidious still. A misplaced  sense of superiority, sustained by delusions of grandeur and a tenacious  obsession with the last war, is much harder to shake off. I wish Mr  Puhle and Mr Sawartzki well. We need to be put back in our place.

Republished from The Guardian, 19 November 2002 (Hat tip @bungatuffie)

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