Abstract
This very short clip from the hagiographic 1929 biopic about Paul von
Hindenburg, Der eiserne Hindenburg in
Krieg und Frieden [The Iron Hindenburg in War and Peace], depicted
France’s 1923 occupation of Germany’s industrial heartland, the
Ruhrgebiet, during which it deployed
Black soldiers from France’s overseas colonies, as a deliberate move to
harass and humiliate the German people. This episode, instrumentalized
by German nationalists as “die schwarze
Schmach” [the Black Disgrace], contributed to many Germans’ larger
sense in the leadup to the 1925 presidential elections that their nation
needed salvation by a figure of Hindenburg’s stature.
The occupation stemmed from France’s perception that Germany was
purposely delaying the transfer of the reparations payments stipulated
in the Treaty of Versailles, after France and Belgium decided in January
1923 to send soldiers into the Ruhr to seize German assets directly.
Berlin responded by calling for the Ruhr population’s “passive
resistance”—work stoppages and blanket non-cooperation— which stretched
into September, fueled hyperinflation, and immiserated large swaths of
the middle classes. This segment presented the historical episode in
incendiary language—referring to France’s “breach of the Versailles
Treaty,” its use of the “most brutal force,” and its calculated
harassment by “heavily armed ‘Neger’”
[Negroes]. The filmmakers then superimposed a spectral figure of a Black
soldier over images of Ruhr factories. This segment also reinforced
earlier scenes in the film that showed rapacious hands dismantling
Germany by alluding to France’s larger desire to annex the Rhineland
wholesale. Such cinematic tricks and inflammatory intertitles sought to
cultivate an impression of ongoing French cruelty that the footage
itself did not clearly show.
Most of the film, though, focused on Hindenburg himself, presenting
the man who had served as Germany’s President since 1925 and who had
claimed credit for winning the 1914 Battle of Tannenberg as the only one
who could deliver the country from this legacy of shame, betrayal, and
defeat. The director, Johannes Häußler, released
Der eiserne Hindenburg in spring
1929, just as the bestselling antiwar novel
All Quiet on the Western Front was
setting sales records across the country and presenting a decidedly
different view of Germany’s recent past, underscoring the contradictory
nature of national discourse in the closing years of the Weimar
Republic.