Nueva Germania (New Germania, German: Neugermanien) is a district of San Pedro Department in Paraguay. It was founded as a German settlement on 23 August 1887 by Bernhard Förster and Elisabeth Nietzsche to create a model community in the New World based on anti-Semitic eugenic ideas that were supposed to demonstrate the supremacy of German culture and society. In 1889, Förster committed suicide after the settlement's initial failure. After Förster's death and Nietzsche's return to Germany, the inhabitants took the management of the town into their own hands and distanced themselves from the ideas of its founders.
Because of its racist and eugenic anti-Semitic history, the town is often represented in sensationalist ways, which contemporary inhabitants reject.[2]
Geography
Nueva Germania is located about 297 kilometres from Asunción, capital of the Republic of Paraguay. It borders on
The Nueva Germania district is watered by the rivers Aguaray Guazú and Aguaray mí, and the streams Tutytí and Empalado.
Climate
The climate is tropical, with a maximum temperature of about 35 °C, a minimum of 10 °C and an average of 23 °C, and a humidity of 80%. There are abundant rains, with precipitation exceeding 1300 millimeters, especially in summer.
History
Nueva Germania was founded in 1886 on the banks of the Aguaray-Guazú River, about 250 kilometres from Asunción by five, later fourteen, largely impoverished families from Saxony.[3] Led by Bernhard Förster and his wife, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, sister of the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche[4] the German colonists emigrated to the Paraguayan rainforest to put to practice utopian ideas about the superiority of the Aryan race. It was the declared dream of Förster to create an area of Germanic development, far from the influence of Jews, whom he reviled.[5] It was one of several closed German communities in Paraguay.[6][7][8]
The colony's development was hampered by the harshness of the environment, a lack of proper supplies, and an overconfidence of the colonist's own supposed Aryan supremacy.[9]
Most settlers soon died of starvation and disease. Those who survived malaria and the sand-flea infections rushed to flee Nueva Germania.
Förster, who had negotiated the town's titles of property with General Bernardino Caballero, committed suicide only 3 years later in 1889 in the city of San Bernardino after abandoning the settlers.[10][11]Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche returned to Germany 4 years after his death in 1893.
20th century
According to Gerard L. Posner, writing in Mengele: The Complete Story, Josef Mengele, a major German war criminal, spent some time in Nueva Germania while he was a fugitive after World War II.[12] However, the evidence that Mengele ever passed through is shaky at best.[13]
21st century
Nueva Germania became a quiet and relatively poor community in the San Pedro district dedicated to agriculture such as the cultivation of yerba mate and soy beans and the raising of cattle, as well as the production of bricks. The main three languages spoken in the community are Spanish, Guaraní, and German. The two most common religions practiced are Catholicism and Lutheranism (the latter being practiced mostly by German descendants). The history of the town's foundation has led to the celebration of the mixture of German and Paraguayan cultures as a joint heritage of the town, with inhabitants referring to themselves as Germanino. As Jonatan Kurzwelly described in his book, People and Identities in Nueva Germania, people variably identify as German, Paraguayan, or Germanino in different situations.
Route 11, a paved road, is the main access to the town, which connects it with other localities of the department via Route 8, and to Asunción via Route 3. Route 11 also provides a direct access to the Amambay departament, while a nearby junction with Route 22 allows for travel north to Concepción.
About 80% of the population speak the Guaraní language. The rest speak a combination of German and Spanish.[14]
Population
The General Directorate of Statistics, Polls and Census has reported the following:
In 1992 the district had 17,148 inhabitants, the majority of whom lived in the town of Santa Rosa del Aguaray. In 2002 Santa Rosa del Aguaray became a municipality in its own right. Consequently, the District of Nueva Germania lost most of its population and territory, though it retained the Mennonite colony Rio Verde to the north of Santa Rosa del Aguaray.
The population is mostly rural and occupied in agricultural activities.
The projected net population by gender for 2002 was 4,335 inhabitants (2,323 men and 2,012 women).
As of 2002, about 10% of Nueva Germania's inhabitants were of mainly German origin.[3]
Demographics
Main social and demographic indicators were[when?]:
Total fertility rate: 3.4
Percentage of illiteracy in the district: 15.4%
Percentage of housings that have power: 82.0%
Percentage of housings that have running water: 39.6%
Percentage of population that are under the age of 15: 39%
Percentage of population that have access to modern housing: 41.2%
Percentage of population that have access to modern sanitation: 20.9%
Percentage of population that have access to modern educational programs: 13.5%
Percentage of population that are employed in the primary sector of the economy: 60.1%
Percentage of population that are employed in the secondary sector of the economy: 14.3%
Percentage of population that are employed in the tertiary sector of the economy: 25.0%
^Fischer-Treuenfeld, Richard Friedrich Eberhard von[in German] (1904). El Chaco y el litigio de límites entre el Paraguay y Bolivia (The Chaco and the boundary dispute between Paraguay and Bolivia) (in Spanish). Tip. la Tarde. Richard Friedrich Eberhard von Fischer-Treuenfeld (7 February 1835, Thorn, East Prussia - 29 December 1907, Dresden)
Ben Macintyre, Forgotten Fatherland: The Search for Elisabeth Nietzsche, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux 1992, reissued as Forgotten Fatherland: The True Story of Nietzsche's Sister and Her Lost Aryan Colony, Broadway 2011 ISBN0307886441ISBN978-0307886446
Kraus, Daniela, Bernhard und Elisabeth Försters Nueva Germania in Paraguay. Eine antisemitische Utopie. PhD Thesis. University of Vienna. 1999
Kurzwelly, Jonatan (2019), "Being German, Paraguayan and Germanino: Exploring the Relation Between Social and Personal Identity" in Identity: An International Journal of Theory and Research, 2/2019. doi:10.1080/15283488.2019.1604348