The Incest Imprisonment: Why Austria?
By GulfStreamBlues on Tuesday, April 29 2008, 18:53 - Permalink
Across the world the media is in breathless shock over the extraordinary case of an Austrian man who kept his daughter imprisoned in his basement for 24 years, fathering 7 secret children with her. The attention is not surprising, this is a truly bizarre story. But what does it all mean for Austria, especially considering this is the third such instance in just two years?
To
recap, Josef Fritzel, a 73 year old retired engineer in the town of
Amstetten in Austria, has confessed to drugging his daughter Elisabeth
at the age of 18, imprisoning her in his windowless basement, and then
keeping her and the subsequent children he fathered with her chained in
this secret lair for 24 years. The story is so complex the news
broadcasts on the subject have had to use charts to explain the various
players in it.
Apparently Elisabeth’s mother, Rosemarie Fritzel,
had no idea about any of this, Mr. Fritzel having told her in 1984 that
Elisabeth had run away and joined a cult. Over the next two decades
Fritzel had seven children with his captive daughter, three of whom he
kept locked in the basement with her. Extraordinarily, the other three
he brought to the surface, raising them in the main house as normal
children. Fritzel told his wife they had been left at the doorstep by
Elisabeth, with a note saying she couldn’t take care of them.
All
of this only came to light when the eldest daughter living in the
basement, who has never seen sunlight in her 19 years on earth, started
getting sever cramps from lack of oxygen. Fritzel had to take her to
the hospital. The details of what happened next are still unclear,
either Fritzel then took Elisabeth to the hospital as well, or
Elisabeth put a note in her daughter’s pocket pleading for help, there
have been varying media accounts.
Even
as extraordinary as this story is, what’s even more extraordinary is
that this is the third such case in Austria in just two years. In
August 2006 there was another notorious kidnapping of an Austrian
schoolgirl, Natascha Kampusch, who was hidden in a windowless cellar
for eight years until she escaped. The following February it was
discovered that another three children had been locked in a
rat-infested hideaway for seven years in Linz by their deranged mother.
And now this.
What’s unbelievable is the ease with which all of
these people were able to hide their captives. What’s insane about the
Fritzel story is that this three-story building was in the middle of a
crowded shopping street, and while the top two floors were used by the
Fritzel family, apparently the ground floor, just above the basement,
was rented out to different tenants over the decades. When Elisabeth
went missing the police never questioned it, even though Fritzel had
previously been in prison for sexual assault and had also been
convicted of arson according to reports.
And when the children, in three different instances, were “left on the
doorstep,” social services didn’t bat any eye and allowed the family to
adopt them.
Today in Austria the whole nation just seemed to be in shock. How could three such horrifically similar events have happened in such a small country? The Austrian daily newspaper Österreich railed in an editorial, "The whole of Amstetten should drown in shame. The neighbours have turned a blind eye.” And Der Standard wrote, "The whole community must ask itself what is really fundamentally going on."
Though
the image of Austria in people’s mind is often defined by its charming
rolling hillscapes with Julie Andrews spinning around a la the Sound of
Music, today people are seeing a very different side to the country.
Austria, and indeed all of Europe is asking whether these events have
exposed the country as a "look-away society", a land where people would
rather turn their heads and ignore possible suffering than acknowledge
it.
The British press seems to be grasping for historical precedent. An editorial by David Jones in today’s Daily Mailspeculated
that it was Austria’s uncomfortable experience during World War II,
when after the annexation the Nazis encouraged Austrian neighbours to
spy on each other and report any dissent, that has produced an insular
mentality that still permeates the society. This argument is of course
patently absurd. Austrians lived with this reality for less than a
decade, while their neighbours to the East in Hungary, Czechoslovakia
and East Germany lived with this reality for 45 years – and they’re not
having a rash of unspeakable crimes. What’s more, Germans would have
experienced this same reality for even longer than Austrians, as would
anyone living in an occupied country.
Perhaps
more convincing is Jones’ argument that an obsession with privacy,
common also in Switzerland and Bavaria, could be to blame. The Southern
German lands are notorious for holding privacy as an extremely
important value. My family, Americans who live in Zurich, have often
experienced this firsthand. Their efforts to get to know their
neighbours have been met with confusion or suspicion. If a neighbour
thinks they are making too much noise they’ll phone the authorities
rather than confront them directly. A neighbour even once complained to
my father because he had let a TV license inspector into the building.
Apparently the neighbour was incenses that he would let a stranger in,
even though that stranger was an agent of the government inspecting
licenses (not surprisingly, this neighbour didn’t have one!).
Privacy
is also enshrined into law in both Austria and Switzerland. As Jones
notes, both countries have perhaps the most Draconian privacy laws in
the Western world. In fact it seems that not only neighbours, but
police as well are discouraged from prying too deeply into another
person’s affairs.
Of course it will take time to get to the
bottom of all this and figure out who knew what and when, but in the
mean time it’s safe to say Austria seems to be primed for a
psychological crisis. Perhaps it is just a gruesome coincidence that
these three heinous crimes were discovered so closely together. But
perhaps the key ingredient that made them happen in Austria as opposed
to somewhere else is not that Austrians are somehow more predisposed
for depravity, but that their “look-away” culture has allowed such acts
of depravity to go on for much longer than they would elsewhere. It’s
an uncomfortable question, but it is perhaps one that needs to be asked.
Comments
I haven't been to Austria, but I've been to Switzerland, that I was staying in a friend's flat for several days and as usual, we travelers stayed late because of sight-seeings and traveling around, somehow, the other night when me and my wife was taking a bath around 10 or 11pm, the lady living next door banged the wall with her stick as a gesture of complaint, good god, these people have their utmost privacy and human rights, what about their neighbors? we were not turning on TV and sing out loud, we just took a regular and quick bath before going to bed. so I agree that obsession about privacy was one of the many reasons, weak policing power against its own residents could be another reason. It make me sick to hear this kind of news, especially in a highly developed and so-called civilized western country. I think the entire population of Austria needs to rethink and contemplate the right way to rectify these problems. Missing children cases in European countries are not uncommon and I think governments of Europe should do something to plug the loophole and restore public confidence.
As an Austrian (and American), I have to say I find this comment is utter nonsense, just as all the other psycho-babble I´ve read over the last few days in the international press about this story. Your own argument lacks credibility due to the fact that you seem to think that the experience of your "American family living in Zürich" is in any way relevant to Austria. Having just returned from a week in Switzerland, I have been struck again by the vast differences in mentality, culture, and everyday person-to-person interaction between the two countries, despite their geographical and (sort of) linguistic proximity. Have you ever been to Austria, or even met any Austrians? The fact that you quote Britain´s Daily Mail - a right-wing, xeno- and europhobic tabloid which is known to deal in sensationalism, and never miss a chance to mention the Nazis whenever anything to do with a German-speaking country is vaguely mentioned (yes I have lived in Britain a few years myself!) - as if it offered some kind of high-quality, impartial, analysis weakens your own "insights" even more.
Let me make quite clear that I am not some kind of mindless patriot - indeed, I am only half Austrian, and have spent most of my life living elsewhere in Europe and the US. I am generally the first to complain about Austria, and I am a very vocal critic of the continuing inabilty fairly many (though by no means all!) Austrians have in dealing honestly with their Nazi history. I am quite happy to offer criticism where it is due, but in this case, it simply is not. There is nothing "wrong" with Austrians or with Austrian society that is responsible for this case, or the other two mentioned. Horrific as they are, they are the isolated actions of mentally ill individuals, not some kind of symptom of a national disease. Though there are some questions about the actions of the social services in this case, (or the police in the Kampusch case), given the horrific incidents of abuse carried out on children under state superivision which regularly crop up in other countries (Britain especially springs to mind), Austria would hardly be unqiue in this respect. And the fact remains that this is a country in which violent crime is very rare; Vienna, where I live, is a multicultural city of two million people, with varied economic and social demographics. Still, there is not a single area where I as a young, white, female would feel particularly unsafe alone in the middle of the night. Where kidnapping/the fear of it is so rare that parents have no qualms about letting their 8 year-olds take the bus alone across town. I personally know of no other city of comparable size of which this is true.
And as for Austria being a closed, privacy-obsessed society where people ignore the others - well this idea, which I have been reading everywhere in the foreign press the past couple days strikes me as bizarre. My foreign friends here and I all found the hardest thing to adjust to was just how nosy everyone was, how little concept they had of certain information being private, how commonplace it is to ask and know personal things about neighbours, co-workers, and vague acquaintances that those from an Anglo-Saxon, Latin, Asian or Middle Eastern background would only dare mention to their best friends or family!
I think the problem is that, like the author of this post, most journalists and commentators know nothing about Austria - at best, they know enough German to read the Austrian press. But like all national presses, it is subject to hyperbole, espescially when it comes to dramatic stories like this. Because in their soul-searching Austrian journalists (I have yet to hear a single "man in the street" mention it) blame their cold and closed society, assorted foreign media assume this must be the cause of this tragedy. I, on the other hand, think this soul-searching shows just how little is "wrong" with Austria (at least in this respect). I only wish there had been more of such similar national soul-searching and a sense of social responsibility in the wake of dramatic crimes in my previous "homes", Britain and the USA, rather than the very Anglo-Saxon attitude of blaming a few bad apples while wallowing in their own self-righteousness.
Heh, I'm not sure you read my post entirely!
I'm very aware of the Daily Mail's right wing and xenophobic tendencies, that's why I said the editorial author's attempt to link this crime with the Nazis was absurd (you're absolutely right that the Daily Mail links every story about Germans to the Nazis).
But then I went on to say that in my experience the editorial author may be right in his second point, which was about the privacy preoccupation of the region. I have been to Austria, in fact I lived there for a month in high school and was just in Tyrol two weeks ago. As an outsider I find German Switzerland and Austria to be very alike, with their similarities far outnumbering their differences. But obviously a Swiss or Austrian person is going to perceive more differences than I would (however my experience in Europe is that people perceive differences where there are none).
I don't think your argument that its only the Austrian press that's asking these questions and not the Austrian people makes sense. If it's in the press, then people are reading it and they're thinking about it. If they were completely shutting it out that would be quite bizarre and perhaps further evidence of the tendency described above!
I in fact specifically said that there likely ISN'T anything in the Austrian character that makes them somehow more gruesome than others. I posited that the difference may lie in the fact that these crimes went on for so long, ie, it wasn't the gruesomeness that was unique to Austria but the timeframe.
Lastly, I didn't make any firm conclusion on the subject. As I noted in my last paragraph, perhaps it is just a gruesome coincidence that these three heinous crimes were discovered so closely together. I was simply noting that questions about why this is happening in Austria are being asked, I didn't provide an answer to those questions!
I understand your frustrations with the coverage of this event by the foreign press, but your comment sounds like it's in response to something other than my blog entry!
I am not shocked at all that disgusting crimes are being committed in continental Europe. This has happened in France not too long ago but nobody paid any attention and after all this is the place where Jewish people were burn alive and killed in ovens. Europeans are barbaric, savage animals and I will never ever visit Europe or invest in that disgusting place.
It was really shocking to read the story about Josef Fritzel who captivated his own daughter for 24 years and made sex slave. And it is difficult to believe such barbaric crimes are happening in this modern era. Story of Joef should be an eye opener for people around the world.
I have to agree that the Swiss are very enclosed people, to an extent to which it is quite weird. The Austrians, however were quite nice people when I went to visit Salzburg.
I lived with a Swiss girl for a year in Sydney.
The Germans, however, are definitely the weirdest, enclosed and unfriendly.
They all do have quite a barbaric history, in Namibia as another genocide committed by the Germans before ww2.
The Spanish are quite friendly however, and not so weird.
The British are a completely different culture, and don't really like the Germans either.
As a human being, I really do sympathize with the Jewish people who were murdered in the war. WW2 was one of the driving factors of why the state of Israel was created. This is not the fault of the Jewish people, but was instigated by the Germans. The states of the middle east should take their fight out with Germany, and not the Jews of Israel. The Germans are the instigators of this conflict.
What a shame
I think most of the people in austria are born out of incest and thats why they are so tolerant, I think if every basement in Austria is searched- they will find many more such cases.
I saw this online article "A Gentile's View Of Today's Germany" by some journalist living in Germany who has come to the conclusion that
"The internal conditions --that is, the attitudes, world view and cultural assumptions - that led to the rise of Nazism in Germany are still present because they constitute the basic components of German identity. Nazism was not an aberration; it was the distillation of the German psyche into its essential elements." I dunno. Just yesterday I read that this guy threatened to pump poisonous gas into the cellar. Do Germanic people have a fetish-inclination to place innocents into captivity? Ms. Natascha Kampusch (violated in a similar fashion for years) in a BBC interview blamed this phenomena in Austria on Austrian-Nazi culture.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7376667....
I don't understand the obsession about Nazi Germany that has sprung from this horrific case. In all probability, these three cases taking place in Austrian, have nothing to do with some deep seated psychological remnants left from Nazi Germany. Furthermore, I find it absurd that some people think they "understand" a nation from spending two weeks or a month there. Perhaps, Austria's justice system and social services ought to be called in to question more than the population's mental psyche. I recently read that Josef Fritzel can only serve one sentence, and that the longest sentence he will possibly be able to serve is that of manslaughter, if they are able to find he did nothing to prevent the death of one of his daughter's children. I find this absolutely appalling. Also, let us not decieve ourselves that dispicable crimes are restricted to Austria. How many atrocious shootings have taken place in the USA? How many "Honour Killings" in Britain? Where are all the children that have been abducted, recently, from Spain and Portugal?
DISGUSTING!!
24 years trapped inside a cellar!!
My deepest sympathy goes out to the victims of this crime.
There are no words in any language to describe how wrong this crime is.
There is something wrong in Austria. 2 simillar cases before? Wasn't Hitler born there? Didn't Arnold admit to grabbing women?
If the Austrian govenrment wants to improve its image, they should check everyones property as soon as possible and seek help from the world to improve.
This is one of the worst crimes in human history.
A lot of thougtht should be put into what to do with this sick man.
THIS IS BAD NEWS FOR THE WORLD TO HEAR!!
Nice column. LOL @ the "xenophobia" comments- since that's about the worst you can be accused of you obviously touched a nerve.
I think there is a dark undercurrent of incest and taboo in the German culture. The stories my grandparents told me -- make me wonder about that. My German grandfather was totally authoritarian and totally into sex with young girls including me as a child. These cases have left me to wonder...its not privacy, its unquestioned patriarchy and perversion.
Hmm, I'd have to strongly disagree with the comments that say this type of sadism is somehow engrained in the German psyche. I know a lot of Germans and have spent a great deal of time there, and I find them to be some of the most thoughtful and kindest people I know.
Genocide has been perpetrated by societies all over the world throughout history, including by other Europeans such as the Belgians in the Congo, the Turks in Armenia, and the Spanish in their own country and in the new world. The Americans arguably perpetrated a genocide against Native Americans, the same way that the Japanese did against the Ainu when they first migrated to Japan centuries ago. Genocide has been led by popes and caliphs, dictators and kings and presidents. Throughout human history one society obliterating another has been the rule rather than the exception to it. The Germans were unlucky enough to have their bout with it happen recently in an age when such things could be well documented, and against a people with strong influences in other countries (as opposed to Armenians or Congolese). They also carried it out on a scale unseen in human history, which prompted the West to see genocide for what it was and ensure that it would never again be viewed as legitimate. Germany's was the genocide that made genocide unpalatable to Western society. It was by no means the first and it will not be the last.
If it hadn't been the Germans it would have been someone else. All human beings are predisposed to cruelty and murder in the right circumstances. To make the argument that this is somehow a particularly German trait is not only absurd, but it reflects a lack of understanding of human history.
I have read the above comments and I am not impressed with the need to blame the austrian culture and so on , the fact is the criminal is the father and not the rest of the austrians, i would question his ability to contiue with a normal life and carry on with his hidden life, I beleive in his own mind he thought he was entitled to do with his daughter what he liked and was in denial , he needs to be punished and show to the rest of the psychos out there this behaviour is not acceptable. It is hard to believe his layer is saying he is a broken man and is not fit to stand trial that is very worrying that somebody would even attempt to give one ounce of sympathy, of course he is a broken man he got caught.Bottom line he is caught thank god and lets hope the family can be brought back.
Having read a few different articles on this particular case, I am absolutly astounded that this man can only be charged with one crime (or perhaps two). I have no real knowledge of European law (I am American), however if this man has committed multiple acts of rape, for all we know torture, and god knows what else, why can he not be held accountable for each act?
At times I feel America goes overboard with the laundry list of charges that can be brought against a defendant i.e. evading the police, crossing state lines and other frivolous charges intended to force a guilty plea via plea bargin. However hearing that this guy has the possiblity of seeing the light of day in his life is sickening, they can charge him with a crime or two against her, but what about the other three kids that shared that cell with her, shouldn't he be charged with imprisioning them? Child Abuse? Im sure he raped her in front of them, what about that?
As I said I think America goes over the top in terms of imprisonment for petty crimes, however it seems to me the EU. is too leniant. I do believe that by comparing both the US and the EU's treatment of criminals, a happy medium could be obtained
European Polititcs from an Amerian Perspective. Ha! If it wasn't for the intelligent responses to the original article this site and especially the title would be a joke! That 'thing' called Josef is simply a human being gone horribly wrong. It doesn't matter where the hell he was born, what his history is, what his mother did to him - nothing matters! He is a maggot filled rotten apple among a cart full of beautiful apples - all varieties! Get rid of him! It makes me sick to hear the media rant and rave and condemn a whole society just to scare people and have then running to their homes in paranoid panic huddled around their television sets and rustling through the newspaper to find out when it's 'safe' to go back outside again. Look after your family friends neighbours and strangers people and you will have nothing to fear.
Perhaps Austria is notable not for predisposition to heinous crimes, but for having discovered them among other nations first. The root of humanity is desperately wicked and crimes such as this will yet be found to be taking place in many countries undetected. Watch and pray for the suffering and they will receive justice.