Nueva Germania (New Germania, ) is a district of San Pedro Department in Paraguay. It was founded as a German settlement on 23 August 1887 by Bernhard Förster and Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche to create a model community in the New World based on antisemitic eugenic ideas that were supposed to demonstrate the supremacy of German culture and society. In 1889, Förster committed suicide after the settlement's initial failure. After Förster's death and Nietzsche's return to Germany, the inhabitants took the management of the town into their own hands and distanced themselves from the ideas of its founders.
Because of its racist and eugenic antisemitic history, the town is often represented in sensationalist ways, which contemporary inhabitants reject.
Nueva Germania is located about 297 kilometres from Asunción, capital of the Republic of Paraguay. It borders on
The Nueva Germania district is watered by the rivers Aguaray Guazú and Aguaray mÃÂ, and the streams Tutytàand Empalado.
Nueva Germania was founded in 1886 on the banks of the Aguaray-Guazú River, about 250 kilometres from Asunción by five, later fourteen, largely impoverished families from Saxony. Led by Bernhard Förster and his wife, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, sister of the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche the German colonists emigrated to the Paraguayan rainforest to put to practice utopian ideas about the superiority of the Aryan race. It was the declared dream of Förster to create an area of Germanic development, far from the influence of Jews, whom he reviled. It was one of several closed German communities in Paraguay.
The colony's development was hampered by the harshness of the environment, a lack of proper supplies, and an overconfidence of the colonist's own supposed Aryan supremacy. Förster, who had negotiated the town's titles of property with General Bernardino Caballero, committed suicide only 3 years later in 1889 in the city of San Bernardino after abandoning the settlement.
According to Gerard Posner, Josef Mengele, a German war criminal, spent some time in Nueva Germania while he was a fugitive after World War II. While Mengele did indeed briefly live in Hohenau, Paraguay (from 1959 to 1960), there is little evidence that Mengele ever lived in Nueva Germania.
Today, Nueva Germania is a quiet and relatively poor agricultural community dedicated to the cultivation of yerba mate and soy beans and the raising of cattle, as well as the production of bricks. The three main languages spoken in the community are Spanish, GuaranÃÂ, and German. The two most common religions practiced are Catholicism and Lutheranism (the latter being practiced mostly by German descendants). The history of the town's foundation has led to the celebration of the mixture of German and Paraguayan cultures as a joint heritage of the town, with inhabitants often referring to themselves as Germanino. Depending on the situation, people identify as either, German, Paraguayan, or Germanino.
About 80% of the population speak the GuaranÃÂ language. The rest speak a combination of German and Spanish.
The General Directorate of Statistics, Polls and Census has reported the following:
As of 2002, about 10% of Nueva Germania's inhabitants were of mainly German origin.