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German dueling fraternities face scrutiny — DW.com story

Here is the story link and an excerpt

 

Fraternity brothers apparently like to sing: Two decades after its publication, a songbook belonging to the Austrian fraternity “Germania zu Wiener Neustadt” has emerged, complete with anti-Semitic and xenophobic references.

The scandal has led to the resignation from all offices of Udo Landbauer, the fraternity’s vice president and member of the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), the junior partner in Austria’s current government.

The fraternity itself is under fire as well. Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz wants it dissolved.

“There’s no place in our country for associations in which something this repugnant occurs,” he said on Wednesday in Vienna.

These are welcome words to critics across the border in Germany, who say that Germania’s attitudes are the norm among fraternities in both countries.

Landbauer was forced to step down from all positions over the songbook scandal

Secret societies

Fraternities are student organizations that meticulously uphold traditions and a particular understanding of manhood. These are men-only groups with a ritualistic pledging process. Those who pass the trial period can become lifelong members, potentially affording them valuable career contacts.

As members of a closed, sworn society, there is a sense among fraternity brothers that they belong to an elite circle. During university, they mostly enjoy low-rent living in opulent housing in their cities’ choicest areas.

Fencing among fraternity brothers is also a tradition. During these duels with sharp blades, most parts of the body are protected, with the deliberate exception of cheeks and the rest of the head. If someone is hit, there is mostly some bleeding and a scar is left. However, these dueling scars are not seen as a sign of defeat. Instead, they are worn with pride as a demonstration of someone’s readiness to fight.

Fraternal origins

Official events, which are mostly beery affairs, are attended in a uniform unique to the fraternity. Older fraternity brothers attend as guests whom younger classes look to for advice and career stewardship. They can significant wield influence.

Fraternities as organizations do not look kindly on outsiders interested in revealing what goes on behind their closed doors. Michael Gehler, a history professor at the University of Hildesheim, is one such outsider. In the late 1990s, the first edition of a book he and some colleagues wrote taking a critical look at the history of fraternities quickly sold out.

“We found out that these organizations had bought up the books,” Gehler told DW. “They didn’t want it reaching wider audiences.”

Germany is home to more than 1,000 student societies, of which about 120 are fraternities. Most are in university cities with a long tradition, such as Marburg, Heidelberg and Tübingen. They came into being during Napoleon’s occupation of Germany in the 19th century, when Germany was still a collection of independent states.

Students back then were particularly interested in forging a sense of national identity and thus founded the first fraternity in Jena in 1815. Its founders adopted the colors of a Prussian volunteer military unit: black, red and gold – today the national colors of modern Germany.

Criticism of fraternities

Fraternities have long been viewed as anachronistic and often criticized for extreme right-wing views. The criticism is not entirely disputed by some in fraternal circles, depending on how the term is defined.

“Fraternities stand for achievement and uphold a rather different image of manhood with their fencing,” said Philipp Stein, spokesperson for the “German Fraternity” (Deutsche Burschenschaft), by far the largest and oldest umbrella organization, with 70 fraternities and 8,000 members.

If a traditional view of family and manhood is classified as “right-wing,” serving as a “counterweight to a left-wing zeitgeist,” he told DW, “then it is not an incorrect label.” But right-wing was not the same as right-wing extremist, he said.

Stein: ‘A counterweight to the left-wing zeitgeist’

Membership in fraternities within Stein’s umbrella group is offered only to those with one German parent. The other parent must then be at least European. Members are also required to have done their military service.

Such requirements led to a split in the umbrella group, first in 1996 and then again in 2016. Withdrawal from the “German Fraternity” was due to “particular behaviors clearly seen as falling along the right-wing, far-right and radical-right spectrum,” said Michael Schmidt, a spokesperson for 27 fraternities that withdrew in 2016 to form one of the two other umbrella groups. “This has nothing to do with fraternal values,” he said.

Read more:Between secrecy and fame: 300 years of Freemasons

Fraternal influence

The numbers and significance of fraternities have declined since the time of the German Empire and the Weimar Republic, when more than half of students were members. Nowadays, the membership rate has fallen to 2 percent or less, said Dietrich Heither, a social scientist and fraternity expert.

Fraternities are a thing of the past, he said, because “dueling and hard-drinking academics don’t fit with the social and soft skills that more modern, international companies demand.”

However, he added, that was no reason to write off their influence altogether. Above all, the “old guard” of fraternities retained good contacts in politics and business, Heither said.

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Hurray for these Greek students

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Updated February 02, 2018 05:31 PM

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USA Today

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Florida State 911 call: They tried to cover their butts before trying to save Andrew’s life.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Newly released 911 calls capture the desperate scene as Florida State Universityfraternity brothers struggled to revive a pledge who died of alcohol poisoning in November.

Police said Andrew Coffey, 20, a junior from Pompano Beach, died of alcohol poisoning after attending at Pi Kappa Phi party.

“So there we had a party last night and my friend passed out on the couch on his side. His lips are purple, his body is extremely stiff, and I can’t wake him up,” the caller told the dispatcher. “And honestly, I don’t feel a pulse.”

The dispatcher instructs the caller to perform chest compressions on Coffey, urging him to count with her as ambulances raced to the fraternity house.

“We’re going to do this until help can take it over. I need you to count out loud so I can count with you,” the dispatcher said.

Nine men are facing hazing charges in connection with the death.

A Leon County grand jury last month said that it saw enough evidence for criminal charges but that the investigation was not complete. It left the decision about charges up to the state attorney’s office or a future grand jury.

According to grand jury testimony, a fellow FSU fraternity pledge found Coffey unresponsive at the party, but instead of calling immediately 911, the pledge contacted other members of the fraternity.

“The brothers, pledges, and officers were more concerned about getting in trouble than they were about trying to save Coffey’s life,” the grand jury said.

After Coffey’s death, FSU President John Thrasher suspended all Greek life and banned alcohol at all recognized student organization events. Pi Kappa Phi’s national office has closed the FSU chapter. This week, Thrasher reinstated Greek life on campus although a ban on alcohol remains in effect.

The grand jury did find that although Coffey’s alcohol consumption was not physically forced, an environment of hazing existed that culminated in his death. The fraternity’s “Big Brother Night” party, which was held at an off-campus home, encouraged binge drinking.

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NPR interviews the Piazza family

Here is the link and an excerpt

 

Evelyn Piazza wears a heart-shaped pendant around her neck. It has her son Timothy’s thumb print on it. When she runs her finger across it she says it’s like holding his hand.

Piazza’s son was a sophomore at Penn State last year, when he died from injuries suffered after fraternity hazing rituals. Now she dreads the days leading up to the first anniversary of Timothy’s death on Sunday.

“It’s going to be a rough three days because each day is going to be, ‘This is the day that he was hazed and got hurt.’ ‘This is the day that we spent in the hospital — that nightmare.’ And, ‘This is the day that he died,'” Piazza says while sitting in her Readington, N.J. home.

“You don’t send your child off to school thinking they could come home in a casket,” Jim Piazza says.

“One of the things we’d like to do is look at legislation across the country and see if we can influence legislation in states that may not have significant or any hazing laws whatsoever,” Jim says. Working collectively, he says the families hope they can bring even more attention to the country’s hazing problem.

Much of what happened to 19-year-old Timothy at the Penn State Chapter of Beta Theta Pi fraternity was caught on surveillance cameras.

Prosecutors say pledges were run through something called “the gauntlet.” They drank large amounts of alcohol very quickly. As NPR previously reported, Piazza was given 18 drinks in 82 minutes.

At around 11 p.m. Timothy fell head-first down a flight of stairs. He was moved to a couch where he stayed for a few hours. Then prosecutors say he stumbled around the house before again falling down the same stairs. His new fraternity brothers didn’t call for help until about 12 hours after the first fall.

Some of the fraternity brothers were charged with crimes — ranging from involuntary manslaughter to aggravated assault and hazing. But a new Centre County district attorney was sworn in late last year and he has forwarded the case to Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro because of an unspecified conflict. Shapiro’s office says the case is still under review.

The Piazza case has brought new attention to the hazing issue.

Elizabeth Allan, professor of higher education at the University of Maine, studies how prevalent hazing is and how to prevent it. She defines hazing as, “Any activity expected of someone joining or participating in a group that humiliates, degrades, abuses, or endangers them regardless of a person’s willingness to participate.”

Allan surveyed college students and found many of them don’t even know that they have experienced hazing.

“When we asked students what they had experienced in order to become a member of their club, team or organization, 55 percent reported behaviors that would meet the definition of hazing,” Allan says. But only about 1-in-10 of those students said they had been hazed.