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Deutschland über alles is literally the German national anthem though. I don't see how it can be illegal to say
It's from the banned part that the nazis used. Today's national anthem starts at a later part of the same song. Why they didn't go with something entirely new is beyond me but that's a different question.
Well, it was a popular song that was made into the national anthem of the Weimar Republic. The Nazis kept it, but added another one.
The Deutschlandlied/Lied der Deutschen is mostly about uniting the disperate kingdoms that used to be where Germany was into one country. The use of the first two stanza was mainly discontinued because they mentioned borders that are way outside modern Germany, and are a bit unserious for an anthem (German women, German wine). They also aren't banned, just not part of the national anthem.
So it wasn't written by the Nazis, and not necessarily their main anthem. Still, something new would have been nice. I like the Kinderhymne, I would also have taken Auferstanden aus Ruinen, it's a lot more upbeat. But oh well, we're stuck with it for now.
I think part of the reasoning also was the "Germany, Germany above everything, above everything in the world" is quite literally incompatible with our modern constitution and the desire for redemption in the time after the war. The idea of a nation state being above anyone was consciously rejected, which is why the very first words of our constitution literally reads:
(1) Human dignity shall be inviolable. To respect and protect it shall be the duty of all state authority.
(2) The German people therefore acknowledge inviolable and inalienable human rights as the basis of every community, of peace and of justice in the world.
Literally nothing can stand above human rights and human dignity, including Germany itself.
Yeah, that's probably another reason.
But again, the German Anthem literally starts with "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles!" and you see the national team sing it every time they play. That's why i can't understand how it can be illegal to say in Germany when it is literally the opening stanza of their national anthem.
How the fuck do you manage to be so confidently wrong when everyone tells you you're wrong, and a single Google Search would prove that. The anthem starts with "Unity and right and freedom".
This is the national anthem, translated:
Unity and right and freedom For the German fatherland! Let us all pursue this purpose Fraternally with heart and hand! Unity and right and freedom Are the pledge of happiness; |:Flourish in this blessing’s glory, Flourish, German fatherland!:|
The German anthem starts with "Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit".