The „Niemands“ – Heimatlose Ausländer in Mannheim

Maria Alexopoulou  | 2021

Heimatloser Ausländer (homeless foreigner) was a status granted to Displaced Persons, who were mostly slave or foreign workers during the Third Reich. How did local authorities and the population in Mannheim – an industrial ‘migration-city’– deal with these first ‘Ausländer’ of the Federal Republic of Germany?

 

This article outlines how local authorities managed housing for dp s and later homeless foreigners and how their concerns were treated with at the Ausländerbehörde (foreigners office). It also looks into the reactions and attitudes of the population mirrored in local/regional administrative files and press coverage.

The self-denomination as Niemands (nobodies), originating from sociologist and Mannheim based son of dp s, Stanislaus Stepień, expresses the history of a group of migrants who have been mostly forgotten after serving as projection surfaces and transmission objects for racial knowledge about the ‘migrant Other’ and ‘the German’.

Date
12.11.2021
Language
German
Publication Type
Journal article
Audience

Contributing RISC authors

Work Packages

BER_F_04
Racism since 1945 and the Transformation of Germany into an Immigration Society: The FRG, GDR, and Federal Republic of Germany (1945–1999)
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