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(en) Britain , Anarchist journal - ORGANISE! #71 - THE SCHLURFS ? youth against Nazism

Date Wed, 31 Dec 2008 11:34:17 +0100 (CET)



Schlurfs, no, not little blue gnomes but young people in Austria who
rejected what the Nazis had to ?offer? ? the whole package of militarism,
the work ethic, authoritarianism and race hatred. --- In Organise! 59 we
had an in-depth look at the French equivalent of the Schlurfs-the Zazous.
We also looked at the German opposition among young people to Nazism ? the
Edelweiss Pirates (Organise!53). This article will build upon these. ----
The Schlurfs were working class youth who were not afraid to engage in
street battles with the Hitler Youth, growing up in the streets as they
had. Peter Treumann, a member of the Hitler Youth writes about clashes
with the Schlurfs in his memoirs. He was shocked by their outlook, their
refusal to perform well in school or work and contempt for ?achievement?,
their imitation of American styles of clothing and liking of American
music, their antimilitarism.

?In his imagination Peter Treumann projected what he had warded off for
himself on to the Schlurfs; apart from their consumerism and their refusal
to perform in school or at work, it was above all their relations to girls
and their liberal approach to sexuality which indicated their social
inferiority. They embodied, so to speak, the negation of the Hitler Youth
ideal and therefore appeared to be the natural enemies.? Sieder, ?A Hitler
Youth from a Respectable Family? quoted in: Daniel Bertaux and Paul
Thompson (eds.) ?Between Generations. Family Models, Myths and Memories?
Oxford 1993

The typesetter Fredy Pietsch described some Schlurfs in his reminiscences:
?When we walked in there we saw a few Viennese men in the group, whom we
called ?Wiener Schlurf?... ?Wiener Schlurfs? wore their hair in a certain
style very high in front, long hair, very high in front, to make the so
called ?Lahmwelle [in Viennese dialect] and at the neck, the ?swallow
tail?. The long hair was put on top of the other part, and greasy
brilliantine was rubbed into the whole thing, so that the hair would keep
shape. And there were about 5, 6, 7 of these so-called ?Schlurfs? with
this hairstyle with us.

So we stood in front of this man with his patent-leather boots and all of
a sudden he says, ?I would like to introduce myself. My name is
?Unterfeldmeister? Wiawalla and I am a true Prussian and you are bloody
Viennese wimps. We will teach you how to waltz.? And we were all
completely silent for a moment and really almost shocked, and suddenly one
of the ?Schlurfs? at the back says, ?You know, you can kiss our ass.? (in
Viennese dialect) ? I?m sorry to say this so frankly, but (laughs), that?s
how it was. We were all laughing because that was so to the point, this
answer to his affected behaviour, he says, ?You know... and so on.? But
well, we didn?t laugh for that long. We didn?t laugh long and he (the
Unterfeldmeister) didn?t even understand what the young man had meant and
what he had said. Since he said it in Viennese dialect and so (laughs)
fortunately the Unterfeldmeister didn?t get it.? This was when Fredy had
been summoned to work for the Reich Labour Service (Reichsarbeitdienst) in
October 1942, and where young Austrian workers experienced the
authoritarianism and humiliating conditions imposed on them by the Nazis.
As one Schlurf, Alexander Mejstrik was to comment: ?Then it all started:
being giving overalls and uniforms, getting a hair-cut. Our hair had to be
cut to a length of three fingers wide, or two fingers wide above the ears.
A cropped hairstyle?the ?Lahmwelle? and the ?swallow-tails? were gone of
course.?

The origin of the word ?Schlurf? can be traced back to the spoken word
Schluaf , an old Viennese put down of boys and men who prefer fun to
responsibility. The written word Schlurfe was used in official public
documents for the first time in 1941. As early as the 1930s, there were
apprentices, young auxiliary workers and schoolboys who showed a
preference for the sharp clothes which could be seen in the new Hollywood
movies, for a particular hair cut, for swing music and swing dance. All of
these later became trade-marks of the Schlurfs, as they did with the
Zazous in France. Young people who strived for this look used different
means to look sharp, depending on their social background or moral
outlook. Some might save for a long time to buy a sharp coat or shirt,
whist others would be able to procure a stolen suit, whilst others had to
alter their older brother?s clothes. Old hats were moulded to the desired
shape by applying steam. Large single-breasted suits were converted to
double-breasted versions by adding additional buttons. Plaid and pinstripe
were the preferred patterns. White scarves were worn, as were thick-soled
shoes. Schlurf women or ?Schlurf kittens?

In 1941, the Nazis began to implement their social and cultural policies
in Austria. This meant they had to pinpoint a group which would be the
opposite of what they desired and to then persecute that group. The
Schlurfs were defined as ?immature youngsters whose way of being is
deficient and who strive for superficial leisure, dance, jazz music and
women?. This artificially created group combined a number of different
practices or ways of behaving, seen as undesirable by the Nazis, into a
unity. Whereas only one or two of these characteristics might be seen in
the way of life of particular individuals, the Nazis combined all of these
into a united uniform whole. All of these tastes involved fun, something
that was anathema to the Nazis. So now the Nazis could use the artificial
construct of the Schlurfs to develop their official policies . In fact
they started a ?campaign against the Schlurf menace?.

As a result some young people began to actually identify with this ?bad?
role as defined by the Nazis. They accepted the definition and reclaimed
it as their own developing it on the streets, in cafes and through their
dress and social activities-dances, gatherings in flats, but also in their
street opposition to the Hitler Youth, their slang and nick names, and
their use of the black market to dress in their preferred style.

?BdM (Nazi organisation for young women) and HJ (Hitler Youth) watch out
for your lives. When the Schlurfs wake at night and come out of the
Zweites café. They will swing their knives and St. Louis Blue will sing
his songs again. Police, Filth, stop shaving our heads bald? ? Schlurf
song recorded in a Nazi archive.

The Schlurfs began congregating at weekends at the bar-restaurant-cafe the
Zweites Kaffee in the Prater district of Vienna, where they drank, smoked,
and listened to live music (practices that were forbidden for young people
under the Nazi regime). As noted earlier they were predominantly working
class, and they began to attract many apprentices and young armaments
workers to their ranks, as well as ?misfits?; those rejected by the draft
because of disabilities. Above all, there were the weekends in the Zweites
Kaffee, at least as long as it was not raided. In this bar-restaurant-café
located in the Prater, the largest entertainment area of the city, the
youngsters could dance to live music, drink and smoke even though at times
it was forbidden. The Schlurfs were predominantly working class, but class
did not matter to them, those most respected were they who could look the
sharpest and be the most laid back.

In the Prater district itself street clashes broke out between the
Schlurfs and the Hitler Youth. It was compulsory for young people to
attend Hitler Youth meetings but they subverted this through absenteeism
or open mockery. Concerts of Nazi ?folk? music were disrupted by the
Schlurfs. Planned attacks on Hitler Youth units took place, with the
response of police raids and Hitler Youth attacks. In November 1941 the
Gestapo arrested 3 Schlurfs who were destroying an HJ poster which
depicted caricatures of young men and women drinking, smoking, dancing and
generally having fun, which had the slogan ?We Reject These? above it. On
one occasion in 1942 50 Schlurfs attacked a HJ house. As with the Vichy
youth organisation attacks on the Zazous in France, where Zazous had their
hair forcibly shaved, so too did the HJ forcibly shave Schlurf scalps. The
Schlurfs replied with attacks on the HJ, ripping and shredding their
uniforms. The police tried to plant spies and the Schlurfs responded with
the daubing of pro-Schlurf slogans on walls.

The Nazis wanted to educate the youth in a ?Völkisch? manner, that is,
their concept of what a good German should be. This combined
indoctrination in the school with indoctrination in the family to produce
a youth with ?Charakter?. One of the instruments used to impose this upon
Austrian youth was by means of the HJ. However, the more there was a
fightback against these impositions, the more the Nazis turned to stricter
policies, the more the youth fought back, leading to the final collapse of
these social policies in 1944. The Nazis tried to eliminate the pleasure
principle from everyday life. For them the concepts of ?duty?, discipline
and efficiency were in direct opposition to the search for variety and fun
in order to chase away boredom and monotony. The Nazis saw the slack
behaviour of young workers as a threat to the imposition of their social
and cultural policies. The Schlurf phenomenon, as with the French Zazous
and the German Edelweiss Pirates, was a herald of the counter-cultures
that were to develop in the post-war period, not just in Western Europe
but around the world, counter-cultures that implicitly challenged the old
order and its discipline and work ethic. The word ?Schlurf? was used as an
insult for several years after the end of the war against young workers
who refused work discipline and authority, a sign that this kind of
behaviour was as unacceptable to the new ?Free World? as it was to the
Nazis. The newspapers of the new Austrian democracy denounced the ?weed?
of the Schlurfs that threatened the healthy tree of Austrian democracy. It
appears that the police continued their repression against the Schlurfs.

Read the AF pamphlet Resistance to Nazism for more about the Zazous and
Edelweiss Pirates.

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