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Abstract
This paper examines the parallels between West Germany’s collective response as a nation, from a political and public standpoint, and the individual reactions of the second and third generations of Nazi descendants in the aftermath of the Nazi era. It explores how both entities grappled with and confronted the enduring legacies of World War II, National Socialism, and the Holocaust. The research involved an analysis of academic journal articles, archival materials from the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., and personal memoirs and autobiographies written by individuals after the war. By synthesizing these diverse sources and putting them into conversation with one another, this investigation will situate the maturation and evolution of individual memories and emotions within the broader context of national trends and developments in population attitudes and collective commemoration. Specifically, the paper scrutinizes the formidable challenges that West Germany faced in reckoning with its past within the realms of politics and public discourse. It also examines how the descendants of the perpetrator generation either identified with or resisted the societal changes stemming from this historical introspection. Spanning the period from 1945 to 1999, the year that the German parliament decided to establish a central memorial site for the victims of the Holocaust, this project aims to demonstrate that the collective and individual responses to the Nazi era are interrelated processes, intertwined with overarching concepts of memory, identity, and consciousness. The temporal scope chosen for this study endeavors to illustrate that these responses are not linear progressions but complex and cumbersome journeys.