As the populist, anti-immigrant () party were rising fast in the German polls in 2023, national culture collective Die Vielen (The Many) decided to act.
The alliance of some 4,500 theaters, galleries and cultural institutions had been on hiatus since the COVID pandemic. But Die Vielen members saw the upcoming European elections, to be held from June 6-9 — along with local and state ballots and a looming 2025 federal vote — as an existential threat to the pluralist democracy that allows artistic expression to flourish.
Having initiated protests against the AfD in the run-up to the , Die Vielen’s new campaign, “Shield & Shine,” brings grassroots art collectives and curators together with high art orchestras, stagehands, opera houses and audiences to create culture events that double as open forums for debate.
The goal, as articulated at a campaign launch in April, is to “stretch thousands of democratic protective umbrellas over all federal states” and hence neutralize the “normalization of in democratic parliaments.”
With the AfD remaining second in the polls, swing voters and young people, many voting for the first time, are to be encouraged to join the umbrella movement — a metaphor also used by pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong.
Many of the 5,000-odd participants were especially galvanized to sign the “Declaration of the Many” after it emerged that AfD members sat with neo-Nazis at a in November and called for the deportation of millions of migrants from Germany — even if they had German passports.
ensued — also in the name of “protecting democracy” — giving impetus to Die Vielen’s call to fight far-right exclusion through inclusive and creative democratic platforms.
Since then, an AfD leader will face trial for .
Fear of censorship
There is a fear that if the AfD become the country’s second biggest party after the 2025 federal elections, there could be a purge of pro-democratic cultural voices.
In the state of Saxony, where the AFD have long topped the polls, arts practitioners are already self-censoring their work in anticipation of wins in upcoming regional and state elections, noted Philine Rinnert, a Berlin-based Die Vielen board member.
One theater festival in Saxony is already under threat of losing its funding, she explained. Meanwhile, curators and artistic directors are concerned they could be forced out of their jobs if their work is unaligned with the AfD’s monocultural and xenophobic agenda.
Daniel Brunet, the producing artistic director of English Theater Berlin, which has been a member of Die Vielen since its inception in 2017, says that AfD members in the current Berlin state parliament have been monitoring artistic institutions by requesting “itemized lists of recipients of cultural funding.”
He fears potential censorship if the AfD make gains in upcoming elections. “Why precisely do they want that information, it makes us nervous,” he told DW, implying a vendetta against culture organizations who promote liberal or progressive agendas.
European elections pivotal in stopping far-right momentum
Die Vielen has planned a “Week of Action” in early June before European elections that month, where what Rinnert calls “very diverse and different art institutions” will fashion democratic umbrellas in events and performances across the country.
Brunet is anxious that far-right political factions in EU parliament that include the AfD, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally and Hungarian right populist president Victor Orban’s Fidesz party — who has famously made partisan appointments in state cultural institutions — could soon dominate the European parliament.
The English Theater Berlin wants to interrupt this momentum by in elections where only about 60% of eligible voters cast their vote, noted its artistic director.
The artistic director is concerned that the AfD, whose party’s branches in eastern Germany including Saxony and Thuringia have been classified as “proven to be right-wing extremist” by the German intelligence agency, are running election ads featuring white people with slogans like “we’ll make Germans ourselves” — as opposed to naturalizing immigrants.
Getting the (youth) vote out
With young people aged 16 potentially allowed to vote in future elections, the Die Vielen campaign is looking to compete with the AfD to inspire the next generation to come under the democratic umbrella of “the many.”
“Real men are right-wing,” Maximilian Krah, a right-wing extremist and the AfD’s lead candidate in the European election, said in one of a series of AfD posts aimed at young people on the video-sharing platform .
In a — a demographic the far-right have struggled to attract — Krah has cast himself as both a politician and dating expert who dolls out love advice to young men. “Real men have ideals, real men are patriots,” he added in the clip. “Then you’ll get a girlfriend.” The video went viral.
Following complaints that Krah was also spreading conspiracy theories and racist views, TikTok restricted his channel in March 2024 and blocked some of his videos.
Still, many other clips are getting hundred thousands of views; political communication experts believe the TikTok strategy could influence the vote.
Cultural scene united against racism
For Daniel Brunet, Germany “is a beacon of hope in the EU” due to its postwar commitment to pluralism and free artistic expression, and the fact that it is a net immigrant country.
“Never again must theaters, operas and orchestras, museums, libraries, literary and cultural institutions or cinemas put their work at the service of anti-democrats and fascists,” Die Vielen said in a campaign statement that referenced the Nazi era. “It is time to take a stand against contempt for humanity and the destruction of our democratic culture.”
Edited by: Elizabeth Grenier
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