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    Feeling ‘Ostalgie’ for communist-era brands

    Feeling ‘Ostalgie’ for communist-era brands

    David Crossland, Foreign Correspondent
    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/20...705309836/1135

    May 31. 2009 12:34AM UAE / May 30. 2009 8:34PM GMT

    BERLIN // Plans to relaunch East Germany’s Wartburg car brand have highlighted a renaissance of eastern products sparked by mounting nostalgia for the communist era 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

    Supermarkets have begun stocking resurrected eastern brands in response to growing demand in the former German Democratic Republic driven by a wave of Ostalgie, fond memories of the days when everyone had a guaranteed job and was looked after by the state, provided they did not disagree with it.

    It is a far cry from the early 1990s when easterners ditched local products in favour of western food brands, televisions, washing machines and cars they knew from TV advertisements beamed across the Iron Curtain, and had spent decades yearning for.

    Anything eastern was tainted by communism and ridiculed as cheap and shoddy. The ubiquitous Trabant car with its temperamental two-stroke engine and plastic body became a legendary butt of jokes such as this one: “How do you double the value of a Trabant? Fill it with petrol. How do you quadruple the value? Put a banana on the back seat.” The car now enjoys cult status.

    “When the [Berlin] Wall came down there was a surge in demand for Western goods that had been out of people’s reach and were seen as exotic,” Nils Busch-Petersen, the head of Berlin’s retailers’ association, said in an interview. “A lot of companies went bust. But that trend has since been reversed. It’s not just because of Ostalgie. It’s also down to more professional marketing and greater awareness that these home-made products are good.”

    The Wartburg, known as the “working-class Mercedes”, was a cut above the Trabant, and even West Germans acknowledge that it looked like a real car – from afar. Now media reports say Opel, which is being sold by its ailing parent company General Motors, is considering reviving the Wartburg as a budget car.

    The possible resurrection of the Wartburg is further evidence that eastern brands no longer carry a stigma. Some, such as Rotkäppchen sparkling wine from the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt and Radeberger beer from Dresden, have even managed to establish themselves in western Germany.

    Others are successful locally because they trigger memories. “People are buying eastern grocery brands because they say it comes from here and it tastes like the old days. It’s an Ostalgie effect,” said Christoph Bauditz, head of accounting for Ostprodukte Versand, a mail-order company that sells eastern brands.

    “I was just six when the Wall came down so I don’t care whether a product comes from the east or west. But my parents’ generation does,” Mr Bauditz said. “The fact that the big discount chains are starting to stock these products shows that the demand is back. Five or six years ago they wouldn’t have bothered.”

    Firms are opting for trendy, retro-style packaging and have introduced slick advertising campaigns to lure customers by promising a taste of the old days. Vita Cola, the eastern version of Coca-Cola originally launched in 1958, is back on supermarket shelves vying with its rival. “It’s a homage that triggers a pleasantly warm recognition, like meeting an old friend again,” Vita Cola’s maker gushes. One of Germany’s biggest retail discount chains, Penny Markt, recently started a marketing campaign called “Eastern is Delicious” and now boasts that 30 per cent of its product lines in its more than 470 eastern stores are local brands.

    It may seem surprising that many easterners look back wistfully at a time when they were not free to travel, had an extremely limited choice of goods, did not have a proper right to vote, were systematically spied on and could wreck their career or get locked up for expressing the wrong opinion. But many easterners are disenchanted with the harsh realities of the capitalist system that wrecked their economy in the 1990s. The region’s unemployment rate at 13.3 per cent in May is almost twice as high as in the west.

    Surveys regularly show easterners feel like second-class citizens, and the Left Party, the successor to East Germany’s Communist Party, enjoys 25 per cent support in the region.

    The problems of everyday life in united Germany have left many yearning at least for a taste of yesteryear – the crunchy chocolate flakes made by Zetti, Spreewald pickled gherkins and Werder tomato ketchup that used to line the thinly stocked shelves in communist times.

    “Werder ketchup is a classic and it’s one of our best sellers,” Mr Bauditz said. “We send loads of it to people who’ve moved away. There’s simply no ketchup that tastes like it.” In addition to ketchup, Mr Bauditz’s company, which sends out 30,000 parcels a year, also sells T-shirts emblazoned with “Hero of Labour” and vintage East German sandals.

    Many regard their new-found brand loyalty as a way to support the local economy, which remains fragile despite having received transfers of an estimated €1.5 trillion (Dh7.8 trillion) in state subsidies and benefit payments from the west since 1990.

    A trade fair for eastern goods in Berlin this month attracted 20,000 visitors, most of them over 50, who scoured the stands for such forgotten brands as Pottsuse, a mixture of mincemeat and liver sausage.

    Mr Busch-Petersen, Berlin’s retail association chief, thinks it will take at least another generation before people stop distinguishing between eastern and western brands.

    “The east-west division will gradually blur and be replaced by the regional identities that are normal in a federal state like Germany,” he said. “But it will take time.

    “We’ll only achieve true unity if we stop pretending that we’ve already attained it.

    “There are still major differences between east and west. Our business leaders and top civil servants are still westerners, for example.

    “Easterners are still firmly in second place.”

    #2
    I would very much agree with a lot that is being said in this article. You can suddenly get a lot of the East German sweets and chocolates again and a lot of it in the same design packaging as it would have been during the DDR and they all still taste the same as well. At least 50% of the East German cigarette brands all survived right through from the Wende to now and again, they never changed the design of their packaging .... I would certainly be very interested to see a new Wartburg. Cheers, Torsten.

    Comment


      #3
      Sorry but i have to disagree. If anyone wants to produce and sell the same eastern chocolate like 20 years ago he will for sure failure. The quality was very low. Everyone (me include) waited the whole year for our christmast package from the west. Then you could eat "real" chocolate and drink "real" coffee.

      Perhaps some surviving eastern company use the label and package for their products today, but i am sure they have improved their products.

      At least i dont doubt this trend in general, but for me and all my relatives no one as any longing to the GDR, even the live was not ever easy in the last 20 years.

      Comment


        #4
        well, to me the chocolates that I get now that have the old DDR packaging on them still taste the same as they did in the past and there was nothing wrong with the quality of most of the DDR produce, although of course there were also some pretty rubbish products, but of course these are not being made now. Taste is subjective of course and not everyone will like everything ... that is just the way it is. No-one is saying anything about wanting the DDR back the way it was ... the point is simply that not everything we had in the DDR was bad, unlike the way that it was (and still is) being portrayed all around the world ... PzOffz27, I do not know how old you are or what you and your family did until 1989, but experiences and memories of the DDR will be very much different for every single person that lived there and so, there are always bound to be disagreements about the past and the future of East Germany and there is nothing wrong with that ... ;-). Cheers, Torsten.

        Originally posted by PzOffz27 View Post
        Sorry but i have to disagree. If anyone wants to produce and sell the same eastern chocolate like 20 years ago he will for sure failure. The quality was very low. Everyone (me include) waited the whole year for our christmast package from the west. Then you could eat "real" chocolate and drink "real" coffee.

        Perhaps some surviving eastern company use the label and package for their products today, but i am sure they have improved their products.

        At least i dont doubt this trend in general, but for me and all my relatives no one as any longing to the GDR, even the live was not ever easy in the last 20 years.

        Comment


          #5
          here is a short article about chocolate in GDR:

          http://www.theobroma-cacao.de/schoko...er-suesstafel/

          As for the most GDR products, the problem was not the lack of know how, it was the lack of raw material - here cocoa. So i doubt that most of the former GDR products would have a real chance on todays markets.

          Sincerly, i dont remember the tast of our chocolate in the GDR, its 20 years ago.
          But i remember the big difference between our chocolate and west chocolate.
          Last edited by LuckyStrike23; 05-31-2009, 07:17 AM. Reason: .

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by PzOffz27 View Post
            here is a short article about chocolate in GDR:

            http://www.theobroma-cacao.de/schoko...er-suesstafel/

            .
            That description is specifically about Schlager Suesstafel, which I never liked during DDR times, but others did .... incedently, below is a pic of something that I took a few mins ago in my kitchen ... Cheers, Torsten.

            PS: The packaging is not identical to the one used in the DDR, but it is very, very similar.
            Attached Files
            Last edited by torstenbel; 05-31-2009, 08:44 AM.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by torstenbel View Post
              That description is specifically about Schlager Suesstafel, which I never liked during DDR times, but others did .... interestingly below is a pic of something that I took a few mins ago in my kitchen ... Cheers, Torsten.
              the current state of the contents of that particular pack of chocolate ....
              Attached Files

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by torstenbel View Post
                the current state of the contents of that particular pack of chocolate ....
                btw .. I still don't like Schlager Suesstafel, even in its current incarnation .. but my children do and they know next to nothing about the DDR and they have no particular patriotic feelings toward the DDR or Germany, but they still like all the other former DDR brands of sweets that my mother keeps sending over to us regularly in her 'Care' parcels ... Cheers, Torsten.

                Comment

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