In 1953 the commemoration of the national day of mourning took place in smaller form at the
Angel of Peace. Before the Memorial Day in 1954, the soldiers' and returnees' associations clearly stated that they did not want to be mentioned at the ceremony together with the Jews and other victims of National Socialism. When the city administration learned that the soldiers' associations were preparing a big ceremony in the cemetery, they cancelled the event at the Angel of Peace in order not to intensify the separation. In the following years, the memorial service, which was initially organized by the Volksbund alone, received an increasingly military character. From 1958 the city, the Volksbund and the Arbeitsgemeinschaft soldiatischer Verbände, to which the
Hilfsgemeinschaft auf Gegenseitigkeit der Angehörigen der ehemaligen Waffen-SS (HIAG) belonged, jointly invited to the event at the cemetery. For the historian Christian Peters, it is "more than just a nuisance" that former members of the Waffen-SS called on the Mannheim population and thus also survivors of the Holocaust to an event at which the victims of persecution and resistance were also remembered. On the tenth anniversary of the end of the war, an "hour of reflection" took place at the
Angel of Peace on 7 May 1955, to which Lord Mayor Heimerich invited the Protestant theologian
Helmut Gollwitzer. Before several thousand people Gollwitzer warned, "Remembrance is duty, also and straight if it hurts". For Gollwitzer the angel of peace stood "against our flight into oblivion, with which we want to undo what happened". Since 1954, an informal wreath has been laid on the
Angel of Peace for the national day of mourning. In May 1983, the
Angel of Peace was moved to a less prominent location in square E 6 next to the hospital church, since residential buildings were to be erected at Schillerplatz. According to information from the 1990s, the
Angel of Peace served as a starting point or destination for actions of the
peace movement or
anti-fascist organizations. In 2008, Sebastian Parzer stated that Heimerich, as a person persecuted even by the National Socialists, possessed a "different instinct", which was evident, for example, in his dealings with the Jewish community of Mannheim. His concept of a central memorial service in the city centre, linked to the angel of peace, could not be implemented. According to Hans-Joachim Hirsch, the
Angel of Peace already had an "important function in commemorating the horrors of the Nazi era" alone due to its prominent former location. The attempt to „integrate broad sections of the population [must] at least in part be regarded as a failure“. Not only the Jewish community must have felt duped by the general dedication of the angel, stated Hirsch 2005. For Christian Peters, too much was expected with the hope for renewal, for which the angel should stand. Heimerich's concept was an attempt to unite contradictions that could not be united in reality. The emergence of soldiers' and returnees' associations had increased the difficulties in establishing a new tradition of remembrance of the dead. "The talk of the victims, the public thematization of the special role of the persecuted, disturbed the process of integrating millions of followers of National Socialism into German democracy," said Peters in 2001. As early as November 1954, the Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung saw the
Angel of Peace "falling for the fate of intellectual isolation; without the community that gathers around it every year, it stands in a vacuum, lacking the unifying function“. == References ==