Ethnic Cleansing Of Germans After WW2
After Hitler's war had been lost, millions of ethnic Germans in regions that are today part of Eastern Europe were expelled -- often under horrendous circumstances. It has been proven that at least 473,000 people died as they fled or were expelled. The Nazis' crimes had been far worse, but the suffering of ethnic Germans was immense.
German refugees in Berlin. 1945 |
CLICK TO ENLARGE MAP |
One facet of the crucification of the German people was the mass scale driving away of Germans from lands that they lived in for centuries. East Prussia, parts of Poland, Czechoslovakia and other countries.
We have dealt with East Prussia (Hell On Earth) and Czechoslovakia before, but the scale of human misery is such that we felt impelled to look at the ethnic cleansing of Germans again.
The phrase "driving away" is a gross understatement of what the German people endured.
Refugee trek in the Spreewald, 1946. |
Parallel to the large waves of refugees from East Prussia, Pomerania, Brandenburg, and Silesia, began between winter 1944 and summer 1945, the systematic expulsion of the Germans from the formerly occupied territories. In Poland, the Sudetenland, the southern, northern and western border regions of Bohemia (Czechoslovakia), in German "Volga Republic" on Russian territory, in Hungary, Romania (Transylvania, Banat), Croatia (Slavonia), Serbia (Vojvodina ), Slovenia and the Baltic States: The expansionist settlement policy under the Nazi regime had claimed countless victims. Now the resentment of oppressed peoples was discharged against the German civilian population. Hatred and destruction were the answers to the violent crimes of the Nazis. Indiscriminate attacks, killings, summary executions, rape, dispossession, humiliation and repression of the hated Germans occurred . The exodus of the German population was initially only sporadic, later they were systematically expelled from Eastern Europe.
Where the Nazis had settled Germans (CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE) |
The hell on Earth that life became for Germans who underwent ethnic cleansing as Hitlerite Germany was nearing defeat (and after the defeat) has rarely been discussed outside of German-speaking countries. The taint of Nazism has been so severe that the German expellees have been victimized by both journalists and historians. Sinister motives for this phenomenon are unlikely. There has been not so much a concerted conspiracy to withhold the truth, as an embarrassed reluctance to tell it. The passions and confusions of World War II and the Cold War discouraged writers and politicians from defending a group of people who were as powerless as they were despised.
Few in the English-speaking world, even history buffs, know that, as a result of the Potsdam Conference of July-August 1945, millions of Germans lost their 700-year-old homelands in the eastern provinces of Germany and Eastern Europe. The expulsion of Germans from the East, a process that over 2 million did not survive, deserves our attention because of its implications for Europe and for ourselves. The expulsion and its attendant horrors are not overwrought fantasies of German revisionist historians.
The merciless revenge that poured over the entire German civilian population of Eastern Europe, in particular in those sad years of the expulsions from 1945 to 1948 should also awaken compassion, for in either case the common people—farmers and industrial workers, the rich and the poor—all were the victims of politics and of politicians.
Expelled Germans west of Wroclaw. 1945 |
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"There is no question of Germany enjoying any guarantee that she will not undergo territorial changes if it should seem that the making of such changes renders more secure and more lasting the peace in Europe."
Labour MP John Rhys Davies on March 1, 1945 before the House of Commons:
"We started this war with great motives and high ideals. We published the Atlantic Charter and then spat on it, stomped on it and burnt it, as it were, at the stake, and now nothing is left of it."
Churchill and US President Franklin D. Roosevelt had discussed the resettlement of populations of Germans or people of German heritage even before the US had officially declared war on Hitler. In the summer of 1941, the two men met on the British battleship HMS Prince of Wales anchored off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, to hash out the details of an Atlantic Charter for a postwar political order.
Once the Nazis had been destroyed, the two leaders decided, self-determination and other rights removed by violent means would be reestablished in Europe. However, there should be no territorial changes that did "not accord with the freely expressed wishes of the peoples concerned."
The Polish and Czechoslovakian representatives were briefly dumbstruck, but then vehemently rejected the very notion. Czech President-in-Exile Edvard Benes, for example, demanded the forcible resettlement of Germans, and even proposed what he called a "painful operation" -- with success. The Allies gave in. They said the charter didn't necessarily apply to Germany. After all, it wasn't a "bargain or contract with our enemies." As early as September 1942, British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden told the Czechs that his cabinet would "agree in principle to resettlement." Meanwhile, Roosevelt indicated to the Poles that he wouldn't object to resettlement.
When the victorious Allies met in Potsdam in the summer of 1945 to lay down the new borders of Europe's nations, Stalin flippantly remarked that there weren't any Germans left in the territories they were handing over to Poland. "Of course not," said US presidential advisor William Leahy to Harry Truman. "The Bolshies have killed them all!"
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WHEN GERMANY ATTACKED POLAND IN 1939, THE ETHNIC GERMANS THERE SUFFERED....
Germans had suffered even when the war began.....
The first
victims of the war were Volksdeutsche, ethnic German civilians resident
in and citizens of Poland. Using lists prepared years earlier, in part
by lower administrative offices, Poland immediately deported 15,000
Germans to Eastern Poland. Fear and rage at the quick German victories
led to hysteria. German "spies" were seen everywhere, suspected of
forming a fifth column. More than 5,000 German civilians were murdered
in the first days of the war. They were hostages and scapegoats at the
same time. Gruesome scenes were played out in Bromberg on September 3,
as well as in several other places throughout the province of Posen, in
Pommerellen, wherever German minorities resided.
The testimony of Marthe Kutzer
On Sunday, September 3, 1939, Polish soldiers again forced their way
into our home to conduct a search for weapons. The men had to
wait out in the yard. The soldiers demanded the motorcycle owned
by my son, the Rev. Richard Kutzer. My son had to keep his arms
raised while a soldier got on the motorcycle, asking how it worked.
Eventually my son was taken away by the soldiers. They were just
kids, 16 and 17 years old. Just as they got to the corner of the
street I saw them hit my son in the stomach with a rifle butt. I
saw this from a window. My son stumbled around a bit. Then
one of the soldiers hit him again, this time across the shoulders.
My son fell to the ground, writhing in pain. They stood him
upright and ordered him to raise his hands again. Then they led
him away. My husband, Otto Kutzer, and a man named Richard
Hoffmann saw this, too. Both are now dead as well.
POLAND
WHEN THE RUSSIANS CAME TO EAST PRUSSIA IN 1945.....
NEMMERSDORF
In the
winter of 1945, waiting for the imminent arrival of the Soviet troops,
the Germans living in Poland, moved to the west, and the local Polish
population started mass violence against the refugees. In spring of
1945, the whole Polish villages specialized in looting fleeing Germans -
men killed, women were raped.
Already February 5, 1945, Prime Minister of the interim government of Poland Boleslaw Bierut issued a decree on the transfer under Polish control of former German territories east of the Oder-Neisse line.
May 2, 1945 a decree was signed that all property abandoned by Germans automatically passed into the hands of the Polish state.
The
remaining German population was subjected to persecution on the model of
that were practiced in Nazi Germany against the Jews. Thus, in many
cities, ethnic Germans were obliged to wear the insignia, mostly a white
bandage on the sleeve, sometimes with a swastika.
By the
summer of 1945 the Polish authorities began rounding up the rest of the
German population into concentration camps, typically meant for 3-5
thousand people. In the camps only adults were sent, while children were
taken away from parents and put either in shelters or in Polish
families - in any case, their further education conducted in a spirit of
absolute Polonization. Adults were used for forced labor, and in the
winter of 1945/1946 the death rate in the camps reached 50%.
The
policy of interning German population was actively implemented until the
fall of 1946, when the Polish government decided to initiate
deportation of surviving Germans. It signed on September 13 a decree on
the "department of German nationality of the Polish people." However,
the continued operation of the concentration camps og Germans had begun
an important component of the economy of Poland, and the deportation of
all Germans was postponed, despite the decree. In the camps, the
violence against German prisoners continued. In the Potulice camp between 1947 and 1949, hunger, cold, disease, and abuse by guards killed half the prisoners.
Final deportation of Germans from Poland was started only after 1949.
Final deportation of Germans from Poland was started only after 1949.
WHEN THE RUSSIANS CAME TO EAST PRUSSIA IN 1945.....
It was a deceptively
beautiful summer. Never before had the light of East Prussia seemed so
bright, the sky so high, the countryside so vast, as in 1944, wrote Hans
Graf von Lehndorff, a doctor and chronicler, in his diary. And yet the
streets were already filling with columns of refugees; Germans from
Lithuania, whose abandoned cattle roamed the countryside. Light tremors
echoed distant detonations. Sometimes at night, a red glow was visible
in the east, where border towns along the Niemen River were burning:
Unmistakable signs that Soviet forces were moving inexorably closer.
They arrived on
October 21. Red Army soldiers pushing through the East Prussian village
of Nemmersdorf massacred some 30 old people, women and children, leaving
in their wake houses full of dead bodies. Thoughts about the sky, light
and countryside were replaced by shock. When the East Prussian front
collapsed in mid-January, the destruction and violence wrought by the
Soviet troops surpassed anything the Germans had ever suffered. The
inhabitants of eastern parts of East Prussia were the first to flee in
blind panic.
NEMMERSDORF
An eyewitness to the Soviet invasion of East Prussia, Dr. Heinrich Amberger, made the following report:
The Testimony Of Emil Radiins, a member of the Volkssturm, or civilian militia, gave the following account:
"On October 23, 1944, just before 8 A.M., I arrived in Nemmersdorf in the company of Regional Commissar Wurach. We had orders to ascertain whether or not people had been shot there. Entering the village from the west, we immediately saw nine bodies lying in a ravine. There were three women, three men and three children, all with head wounds. In the village itself we found a civilian shot dead in front of the fire station; another dead in the cow stall of his barn; a woman sitting in a room with her hands folded, shot dead. Her legs were covered by a comforter, which leads one to believe she didn't even resist or run off when her home was invaded. Her home had obviously been ransacked, everything was a mess. Another woman who had been shot was still crouching next to a wagon parked in the street; she had her hands in front of her face. Near the bridge, in front of a house, an elderly woman lay in the street next to a younger woman and a child. In one house I discovered a young woman whose legs were still spread apart. I remember her now as the same woman whom the doctor had examined, determining that she had been sexually assaulted. In that same room were the bodies of an old man and woman, both with head wounds. We put the bodies in order and carried them to the cemetery"
The rape and killings were part of an unsaid official policy of Stalin to rid East Prussia of Germans. It was annexed soon after the war.
This first
official acceptance of the principle to uproot hundreds of thousands of
people was followed, in the summer of 1943, by its acceptance by
Roosevelt and Stalin.
Further
provisional decisions concerning the expulsion of Germans were made at
the Tehran Conference in December 1943. Since Stalin wanted to keep the
eastern half of Poland, which he had occupied according to the terms of
the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of September 1939, some form of compensation
had to be found for Poland. East Prussia would be ceded to Poland,
perhaps Upper Silesia as well. The German populations would have to be
removed. Whatever Poland would lose in the east, it could gain back in
the west. Churchill demonstrated his thoughts on a Poland shifted
westward with the help of three matchsticks. Stalin was quite pleased.
Many ethnic German refugees in the east were herded onto freight trains bound for the west. Scores died from the violence and stress associated with these deportations by trains. |
POLAND
EXPULSION OF GERMANS FROM CZECHOSLOVAKIA
The
forced resettlement of the German inhabitants of Silesia and Pomerania
had already set the stage for yet more mass suffering. Back in late
summer 1944, the Soviet Union had signed a secret pact with the
Kremlin-friendly Polish National Liberation Committee confirming the
Oder-Neisse Line as the eastern border of Poland no matter what future
conferences with the Western Allies would agree at a later date. In so
doing, Russia had secured itself regions inhabited by some 7.5 million
Germans.
The first major flood of refugees there began streaming westward in January 1945. In the following months, more than 3 million Germans tried to flee the oncoming Red Army.
When the Soviets and Poles divided the country into five voivodeships, or administrative districts, in March of that year -- again in secret -- the forced resettlement of Germans had already been planned in detail. It began immediately after the cessation of hostilities, first in the new West Poland, and then throughout Pomerania, Silesia, Masuria and the Gdansk region from mid-June onward.
The organizers wanted the resettlement to be "quick and ruthless," though the survivors remember it as more of a "wild expulsion." With the backing of police officers and militiamen, army units encircled the inhabitants in their towns and villages.
"The Germans are to be treated like they treated us," ordered the leadership of the 2nd Polish Army. The aim was to be so "tough and decisive" that the Germans would end up fleeing of their own accord. "The Germanic vermin should thank God they still have a head on their shoulders," boomed one general.
The first major flood of refugees there began streaming westward in January 1945. In the following months, more than 3 million Germans tried to flee the oncoming Red Army.
When the Soviets and Poles divided the country into five voivodeships, or administrative districts, in March of that year -- again in secret -- the forced resettlement of Germans had already been planned in detail. It began immediately after the cessation of hostilities, first in the new West Poland, and then throughout Pomerania, Silesia, Masuria and the Gdansk region from mid-June onward.
The organizers wanted the resettlement to be "quick and ruthless," though the survivors remember it as more of a "wild expulsion." With the backing of police officers and militiamen, army units encircled the inhabitants in their towns and villages.
"The Germans are to be treated like they treated us," ordered the leadership of the 2nd Polish Army. The aim was to be so "tough and decisive" that the Germans would end up fleeing of their own accord. "The Germanic vermin should thank God they still have a head on their shoulders," boomed one general.
Torture
was systematic and murder commonplace in many of the Polish detention
camps. An estimated 60,000 Germans are believed to have died in this
way. Countless other candidates for deportation were beaten, plundered,
and humiliated before being herded onto freight trains bound for the
West. Many died from the violence and stress associated with these
deportations by train.
The expulsion applied to all Germans. Poles who had been classified as German citizens under the Nazis' "German People's List" were made to undergo "rehabilitation" procedures. Anyone who was rejected by this process was deported as a "hostile element." A law enacted on May 6, 1945 threatened the death penalty for any Poles who aided such people.
The mass deportation continued until the end of 1946. On Dec. 17 of that year, some 1,800 Germans were chased out of the region in and around the city of Stolp (known today as Slupsk). At 7 a.m. they were told they had until midday to leave the city. One of those affected told the West German parliamentary investigators that most of their luggage was stolen from a courtyard "where a Pole stood with a whip in his hand, wildly lashing out at us." He recalled that some "men and women had to strip naked. Jewelry and valuables were taken off them." The last of the expellees were made to wait at the train station until late at night in temperatures of minus 20 degrees Celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit) before militiamen pushed and kicked them onto unheated freight trains.
Many Poles had themselves been driven westward by the Soviets during the Russian occupation of eastern Poland. Some of them therefore sympathized with the hounded Germans, and tried to help. The new administrative chief of Lower Silesia threatened to punish "the use of indiscriminate or excessive cruelty." But this had little impact on the brutality with which the Germans were thrown out.
The expulsion applied to all Germans. Poles who had been classified as German citizens under the Nazis' "German People's List" were made to undergo "rehabilitation" procedures. Anyone who was rejected by this process was deported as a "hostile element." A law enacted on May 6, 1945 threatened the death penalty for any Poles who aided such people.
The mass deportation continued until the end of 1946. On Dec. 17 of that year, some 1,800 Germans were chased out of the region in and around the city of Stolp (known today as Slupsk). At 7 a.m. they were told they had until midday to leave the city. One of those affected told the West German parliamentary investigators that most of their luggage was stolen from a courtyard "where a Pole stood with a whip in his hand, wildly lashing out at us." He recalled that some "men and women had to strip naked. Jewelry and valuables were taken off them." The last of the expellees were made to wait at the train station until late at night in temperatures of minus 20 degrees Celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit) before militiamen pushed and kicked them onto unheated freight trains.
Many Poles had themselves been driven westward by the Soviets during the Russian occupation of eastern Poland. Some of them therefore sympathized with the hounded Germans, and tried to help. The new administrative chief of Lower Silesia threatened to punish "the use of indiscriminate or excessive cruelty." But this had little impact on the brutality with which the Germans were thrown out.
EXPULSION OF GERMANS FROM CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Because
the Wehrmacht had only retreated from Czechoslovakia in early May 1945,
more than 3 million Germans there suddenly found themselves completely
defenseless. On May 5, an uprising of communist and radical nationalist
groups began against the last remaining occupiers. Here too, ethnic
Germans were hunted down.
The
"elimination of the German minority," which the Czech
government-in-exile had planned back in 1944, became the official policy
of the Czech National Front, and one it pursued ruthlessly from early
April 1945 onward. The main players in this were the partisans and
forces belonging to the "Svoboda Army," which consisted of Czech units
that had fought alongside the Red Army. Across the country, Sudetenland
Germans, named after the German-settled region near the Sudeten
Mountains, were forced to leave.
Thousands of Germans living in Prague were interned, robbed and mistreated. Else S., who was held at the country estate of a certain Prince von Lobkowitz, later described how she was forced to work "from early morning into the night" for 13 months. "Food," she said, "was available in the pig troughs. … We were so starving that we even ate the poisoned rodent bate we were supposed to put around the potato sacks. One old man went to get a tin can from the garbage pile and was caught by a guard. We all had to line up and watch as the old man was made to strip to the waist, stand on one leg with his arms raised and shout: We thank our Führer -- all the while he was whipped until, covered with blood, he collapsed."
Armed troops fell upon the Germans in towns like Tetschen (Decin), Aussig (Usti nad Labem), and Königgrätz (Hradec Kralove), killing thousands in the process.
Excuses were easy to find. For instance, when fire broke out at a factory in Aussig, the finger of suspicion was immediately pointed at German saboteurs. Thereupon an armed mob staged a bloodbath in which an estimated 2,000 people -- mostly elderly people, women and children -- were beaten to death, shot or simply flung off the bridge into the Elbe River.
At 9 p.m. on the evening of May 30, 27,000 German inhabitants of Brünn (Brno) were given just ten minutes to dress their children and pack. Armed men then forced them into long columns headed out of the city for a march toward Austria. Women and children were interned on open fields for many months. A writer for Britain's Daily Mail newspaper reported that the field had "become a concentration camp." Such intimidation proved effective: Three-quarters of a million Germans had been chased out of the country even before their expulsion was legitimized at the Potsdam Conference.
This photo shows an ethnic German woman who had been beaten near Plzen in May 1945 in what was then Czechoslovakia. |
Thousands of Germans living in Prague were interned, robbed and mistreated. Else S., who was held at the country estate of a certain Prince von Lobkowitz, later described how she was forced to work "from early morning into the night" for 13 months. "Food," she said, "was available in the pig troughs. … We were so starving that we even ate the poisoned rodent bate we were supposed to put around the potato sacks. One old man went to get a tin can from the garbage pile and was caught by a guard. We all had to line up and watch as the old man was made to strip to the waist, stand on one leg with his arms raised and shout: We thank our Führer -- all the while he was whipped until, covered with blood, he collapsed."
Armed troops fell upon the Germans in towns like Tetschen (Decin), Aussig (Usti nad Labem), and Königgrätz (Hradec Kralove), killing thousands in the process.
Excuses were easy to find. For instance, when fire broke out at a factory in Aussig, the finger of suspicion was immediately pointed at German saboteurs. Thereupon an armed mob staged a bloodbath in which an estimated 2,000 people -- mostly elderly people, women and children -- were beaten to death, shot or simply flung off the bridge into the Elbe River.
At 9 p.m. on the evening of May 30, 27,000 German inhabitants of Brünn (Brno) were given just ten minutes to dress their children and pack. Armed men then forced them into long columns headed out of the city for a march toward Austria. Women and children were interned on open fields for many months. A writer for Britain's Daily Mail newspaper reported that the field had "become a concentration camp." Such intimidation proved effective: Three-quarters of a million Germans had been chased out of the country even before their expulsion was legitimized at the Potsdam Conference.
On May 5,
1945, a Czech rebellion broke out in Prague. The memories of the
infamous Nazi massacre at Lidice in 1942 and of the Gestapo terror
inspired acts of revenge taken against German soldiers and civilians. An
armed group of Czechs succeeded in occupying the studios of Radio
Prague 2. The slogans broadcast were "Smrt Nemcum ("Death to Germans")
and "Povstani! Povstani!" ("Revolt!"). As with most revolutions, the
mobs raged out of control, leading to brutal murders. German soldiers
were disarmed, tied to stakes, doused with gasoline, then set on fire as
living torches. German civilians were arrested, mistreated and
humiliated. Several thousands were killed.
Here, American soldiers discover dead and injured Germans on the side of the road after occupying Czechoslovakia's West Bohemia region. |
Following
the German capitulation on May 8, wild expulsions of ethnic Germans
began. May 30, 1945, saw an estimated 30,000 residents of Brno chased
headlong from their homes.
The London Daily Mail reported:
Shortly before 9 P.M. young revolutionaries of the Czech National Guard marched through the streets calling on all Germans citizens to be standing outside their front doors at nine o'clock with one piece of hand luggage each, ready to leave the town for ever. Women had ten minutes in which to wake and dress their children, bundle a few possessions into their suitcases, and come out on to the pavement. . . . Once outside they had to surrender all jewelry, watches, furs and money to the guardsmen, retaining only their wedding rings. Then they were marched out of town at gun-point to the Austrian border. It was pitch dark when they reached the border. The children were wailing, the women stumbling. The Czech border guards
pushed them over the frontier towards the Austrian border guards. Then more trouble started. The Austrians refused to accept them; the Czechs refused to readmit them. They were pushed into a field for the night, and in the morning a few Romanians were sent to guard them. They are still in that field, which has since been turned into a concentration camp. They have only the food which the guards give them from time to time. They have received no rations. ... A typhus epidemic now rages among them, and they are said to be dying at the rate of 100 a day. 25,000 men, women and children made this forced march from Brno, among them an Englishwoman who is married to a Nazi, an Austrian woman 70-years-old, and an 86-year-old Italian woman.
Not far from Boehmisch-Leipa lies the town of Aussig on the Elbe River (Usti nad Labem). On July 31, 1945, there was an explosion at the cable works. Some Czechs suspected sabotage on the part of the ethnic Germans. A bloodbath followed. Women and children were thrown from the bridge into the river. Germans were shot dead on the street. It was estimated that between 1,000 and 2,500 people were killed.
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A DEPORTATION ORDER FOR THE GERMANS
County Administration Commission in Friedland.
Deportation Order!
Herrn, Frau ....
You are hereby
ordered to prepare yourselves and your entire family for departure from
the territory of the C.S.R. by 17June, 1946, 3 o'clock P.M. Each person
may take at most 30 kilos baggage. The place of assembly is the
Friedland railway station, 3:30 P.M. Apartments and houses should be
locked, keys surrendered to the police at the assembly point at the
station, along with the corresponding signature of the owner. I draw
your attention to the fact that any willful damage, destruction, etc. to
the property or its contents shall be punished by death!
For the County Commission,
V. Kysela, e.H.
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A PROCLAMATION FOR GERMANS IN CEZECHOSLOVAKIA
It has been ordered that, effective immediately, all persons of
German nationality age 6 years and up shall wear the following sign:
A white circle 15 centimeters in diameter upon which a 2 cm thick
letter "N" of black linen is sewn t whose edge is 1 cm within the edge
of the circle. This sign shall be worn on the left breast. Germans who
were members of the NSDAP, the SA, the SS, NS Public Welfare office, NS
Women s Association, NSKK, or any other division of the Party, must wear
this sign on the back.
All Germans are forbidden to ride public transportation, visit public places o fentertainment or parks!
All Germans are forbidden to leave their dwellings after 8 P.M.
If Russian or Czechoslovakian officers are met or chanced upon in the
street or elsewhere, Germans must remove their hats or caps and pass by
at an appropriate distance.
Store purchases are allowed one hour before closing.
The badges must be procured by each German himself in accordance with the prescribed design.
Non-Compliance with the above mentioned order is punishable.
Any citizen of different nationality shall also be subject to punishment for aiding, abetting or helping Germans in any manner!
The Captain of the National Guard
Service in the City of Troppau
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YUGOSLAVIA
Mrs. Tiesler's younger sister, Eva Edl, lives today in Aiken, South
Carolina. In an interview on January 9, 1993, she confirmed her sister's
account and added:
Our town was established in the 18th century by settlers from various
parts of Germany and Austria. The towns and villages in this area were
German, Hungarian, Serbian or Croatian, with distinctive costumes,
language and traditions, but our relationship was friendly. In March
1941 Germany invaded Yugoslavia and German planes annihilated a
contingent of the Yugoslavian army near our home just outside the town.
My father found one survivor, clothed him in his own civilian clothes,
and helped him to escape. He also made an effort to help members of
other ethnic groups during the German occupation, a fact that some of
them remembered when our family was in dire need in 1945 and 1946.
After the Red Army came, many men and women were shipped off to
slave-labor camps in the Soviet Union. Others were recruited for local
labor. In March 1945 we were evicted from our homes and forced to march
to Filipovo. I heard shots, cries, reports of people being killed and
women giving birth on the roadside. My grandmother and I, who could not
work, were locked into
cattle cars for approximately two days without food, water or toilet
facilities and transported to the internment camp at Gakovo. Our diet
there consisted of one ladleful of soup in the morning and again at
night. The soup was nothing but warm, salt less water containing a few
peas; the only solid food we received was a small piece of dried
cornmeal mush distributed once or twice a week. Soon there were
outbreaks of diarrhea, dysentery and other diseases. However, no medical
treatment whatever was available, and people started dying all around
me. The dead were thrown into the mass graves, which were then covered
over, leaving no trace of the identity of the victims. I myself had
developed large festering sores all over my body, with hardly any skin
left on my thighs and hips.
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Bertrand Russell who wrote in The Times for October 19, 1945:
"In eastern Europe now mass deportations are being carried out by our allies on an unprecedented scale, and an apparently deliberate attempt is being made to exterminate many millions of Germans, not by gas, but by depriving them of their homes and of food, leaving them to die by slow and agonizing starvation. This is not done as an act of war, but as a part of a deliberate policy of "peace."
... It was decreed by the Potsdam agreement that expulsions of Germans should be carried out "in a humane and orderly manner." And it is well known, both through published accounts and through letters received in the numerous British families which have relatives or friends in the armies of occupation, that this proviso has not been observed by our Russian and Polish allies. It is right that expression should be given to the immense public indignation that has resulted, and that our allies should know that British friendship may well be completely alienated by the continuation of this policy."
"In eastern Europe now mass deportations are being carried out by our allies on an unprecedented scale, and an apparently deliberate attempt is being made to exterminate many millions of Germans, not by gas, but by depriving them of their homes and of food, leaving them to die by slow and agonizing starvation. This is not done as an act of war, but as a part of a deliberate policy of "peace."
... It was decreed by the Potsdam agreement that expulsions of Germans should be carried out "in a humane and orderly manner." And it is well known, both through published accounts and through letters received in the numerous British families which have relatives or friends in the armies of occupation, that this proviso has not been observed by our Russian and Polish allies. It is right that expression should be given to the immense public indignation that has resulted, and that our allies should know that British friendship may well be completely alienated by the continuation of this policy."
The Relief Commission of the International Committee of the Red Cross reported:
On 27 July 1945, a boat arrived at the West Port of Berlin which contained a tragic cargo of nearly 300 children, half dead from hunger, who had come from a "home" at Finkenwalde in Pomerania. Children from two to fourteen years old lay in the bottom of the boat, motionless, their faces drawn with hunger, suffering from the itch and eaten up by vermin. Their bodies, knees and feet were swollen—a well-known symptom of starvation.
GERMANS AS SLAVE LABOR IN RUSSIA
A
worse fate still awaited younger, stronger Germans. At the start of
1945, Soviet authorities began picking up workers to help rebuild the
war-ravaged Soviet Union. The aim was to use German slave labor in
Soviet mines, on construction sites, farms and in timber forests.
Indeed,
the Soviet Union had been promised "reparation in kind" at the February
1945 Yalta Conference. Stalin's interpretation of this diplomatic
jargon became a nightmare for more than 700,000 German men and women,
who spent weeks on trains taking them to labor camps, in some cases
beyond the Ural Mountains. The conditions both during the transports and
in the camps were so terrible that approximately 270,000 of these
deportees died.
Eva-Maria
S. was just 16 when she was abducted by the Russians in this way. She
recounted her deportation to Siberia in a series of eyewitness accounts
that former East German human rights activist Freya Klier put together
in the book "Verschleppt bis ans Ende der Welt" (Dragged Off to the End
of the Earth). She recalled, "There were about 90 of us in one freight
train wagon when we set off. Our journey took us through Poland, where
stones often smashed against the sides of the wagons. I can't remember
all the details of the journey any more, only that several people died
in our wagon. So I immediately volunteered to help get rid of the
bodies. These were passed out by other girls, and thrown on top of the
coal in the coal-storage car. When the prisoners pulled coal out of the
bottom for their little stove, the frozen bodies slid out too. Somewhere
along the way, we once pulled about 30 corpses out of that coal car."
As
the train trundled through the ruins left over from Nazi Germany's war
effort, many of the prisoners realized why the victors were so hungry
for revenge.
Eva-Maria
S. reported, "I think Belorussia was the worst. Looking through barbed
wire on the windows, all we could see was scorched earth, destroyed
villages and blown-up factories."
On February 28, 1945, we women of Bledau were separated from our children and transported to the assembly camp at Carmitten. I remained here for about three weeks. During this period we were continually interrogated—they preferred taking us in the night— and during the interrogations we were incessantly beaten and subjected to bestial mistreatment. I'd rather not go into individual torture methods.
After three weeks we were brought to the penitentiary at Tapiau. We sat here behind locked doors and barred windows, shut from the outside world like criminals. At the beginning of March we were loaded onto trains of cattle cars headed for Russia, 48 women in one cattle car. This terrible trip took about four weeks. We ended up in the coalmines of Ruja in the Urals. Besides many other jobs we had to do heavy men's work below ground.
Our guards were Poles who especially "distinguished" themselves in their mistreatment of our men. Getting punched, kicked and hit with a rifle butt was the order of the day.
We lay in underground barracks which were totally infested with bedbugs and lice. In order to get any peace at night we had to get out and sleep in the open air. Up to 40 people a day out of a starting contingent of 2, 000 internees would die of starvation and typhoid fever. The dead were stripped naked and thrown into any open pit. For weeks on end I had to do the wash of the typhoid-infected inmates at the laundry without any disinfectant, almost the whole summer of 1945.
In October 1945, we were taken to a camp named Kistin in the Urals, which was occupied by German and other prisoners of war. All of the remaining women from the first camp were transferred here; there were about 200 of us. I estimate the losses in the first camp at more than 60 %.
ROMANIA: AN ISLAND OF SANITY IN AN OCEAN OF MADNESS
After the surrender of the government of Antonescu and the arrival of Soviet troops the new Romanian government refrained from politics of oppression of the German minority. Although in areas densely populated by Germans, a curfew was imposed, and cars, bicycles, radios, and other items considered hazardous were seized from the inhabitants. In Romania there was practically no spontaneous or organized violence against the German population. Gradual deportation of Germans from the country continued until the early 1950s, and in recent years the Germans themselves sought permission to travel to Germany.________________________________________________
Thank Information Very Good I Myself Post About This Issue's & Crimes Against German & Other's Lot No Educated People Don't Know Or Care About History Other's Want To Keep The Propaganda & Lies & Cover - Up Thank My Facebook electjoselopez@yahoo.com
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ReplyDeleteIt was absolutely Clueless as to this happening
ReplyDeletePlease don't try to mitigate this by comments on how bad Hitler was. Those who are still alive and who committed crimes against innocent German civilians should be punished but I doubt that will happen.
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