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Cohn-Bendit's 1970s writings on sexuality between adults and children later proved controversial in 2001 and 2013.[4]
The same can be said of his statements to Radio Télévision Suisse (RTS) that same year,[5] and his statements on the French TV show Apostrophes in 1982[6]
His parents were German Jews who fled Nazi Germany in 1933. His father, Erich Cohn-Bendit [de], was a Berlin-based lawyer, self-proclaimed atheist[1] and committed Trotskyist who had worked as a defense attorney for the Rote Hilfe and represented Hans Litten. His mother, Herta Cohn-Bendit [de] (née David; 1908–1963), was born in Poznań and also worked as a lawyer. Several of their relatives who remained in Berlin were deported to Riga in 1942/43, where they either perished or were murdered.[8]
In Paris, his parents became part of a circle of Jewish intellectuals that included Walter Benjamin, Heinrich Blücher, and philosopher Hannah Arendt, whose works would later strongly influence Daniel.[9] After Erich was interned twice in 1939/1940, the family, including Daniel's older brother Gabriel Cohn-Bendit (born 1936), moved to Montauban, near Toulouse.
Following the war, they relocated to Paris and then to Cailly-sur-Eure in Normandy, where his parents ran a Jewish children's home. In 1949, the family returned to Paris when Herta took over the economic management of the Jewish École Maïmonide.[10] His parents initially planned to emigrate to the United States and therefore did not apply for French citizenship for Daniel.[11]
In 1952, Erich established a law practice in Frankfurt, while Herta and Daniel remained in Paris. Although his father applied for French citizenship for Daniel in 1958, the application remained incomplete due to missing documentation, leaving him stateless for several years. That same year, Daniel and his mother also moved to Frankfurt.[12] The move was particularly difficult for the 13-year-old Daniel, who later recalled, "I cried every night... Even when one defends immigration, you have to know that it's horrible to be forced to leave. It chokes you."[13]
In 2001, it was revealed that Cohn-Bendit had authored a 1976 article in the cultural-political magazine das da, in which he graphically described engaging in sexual activities with children under his care at a Frankfurt kindergarten.[16] In 2013, a recording was discovered wherein Cohn-Bendit described an "incredibly erotic game" with a minor. With regard to the das da article, Cohn-Bendit claimed the described activities were not based on true events and were an "obnoxious provocation".[17]
Swiss Radio Television (RTS) has undermined Cohn-Bendit's defense by citing him in their 2015 show "C'était mieux avant" (It Was Better Before). The remarks made by Daniel Cohn-Bendit in the 1975 show "Destins" are described as more than ambiguous.
"Example, Daniel Cohn-Bendit... in the TSR program "Destins" in 1975, he made more than ambiguous statements about his relationships with children: "By having experiences with kids, playing with them, having emotional and even sexual relationships, sexual in the emotional sense, caresses, etc., I learned a lot about myself".[18]
In popular culture
A modified photo of Cohn-Bendit confronting a police officer in May 1968 was used as cover art for the British punk-rock band Crisis for their 1997 compilation album We Are All Jews and Germans.[19][better source needed]
^ abcVoigt, Sebastian (2015). Der jüdische Mai '68: Pierre Goldman, Daniel Cohn-Bendit und André Glucksmann im Nachkriegsfrankreich (in German). Göttingen. pp. 142–146. ISBN978-3-525-37036-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^"Prix de l'Initiative Europeenne" [European Initiative Prize]. Institut de Recherche et de Communication sur l'Europe. 22 June 2016. Retrieved 7 June 2017.
^Stamer, Sabine (2001). Cohn-Bendit. Die Biografie (in German). p. 34.
^Romberg, Regine (2007). Athen, Rom oder Philadelphia? Die politischen Städte im Denken Hannah Arendts (in German). Königshausen & Neumann. p. 22. ISBN978-3-8260-3361-2.
^Voigt, Sebastian (2015). Der jüdische Mai '68: Pierre Goldman, Daniel Cohn-Bendit und André Glucksmann im Nachkriegsfrankreich (in German). Göttingen. p. 177. ISBN978-3-525-37036-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Gabriel Cohn-Bendit, Obsolete Communism: The Left-Wing Alternative, trans. Arnold Pomerans (London: André Deutsch Ltd., 1968), p. 133.
"Germany Yesterday and Today: A Discussion with Jean-Paul Sartre, Alice Schwarzer and Daniel Cohn-Bendit". Telos 41 (Fall 1979). New York: Telos Press.