Persecution of Germans
People of German origin have at times been persecuted due to a perception that they were linked with German nationalist regimes, particularly Imperial Germany and Nazi Germany.
By country[edit]
Australia[edit]
During World War I, when Britain declared war on Germany, naturalized Australian subjects born in enemy countries and Australian-born descendants of migrants born in enemy countries were declared "enemy aliens".[1][2] Approximately 4,500 "enemy aliens" of German or Austro-Hungarian descent were interned in Australia during the War.[2]
Canada[edit]
In Canada, thousands of German-born Canadians were interned in detention camps during World War I and World War II and subjected to forced labor.[citation needed]
During World War II, 711 Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazi regime in Europe were interned at Camp B70 in Ripples, New Brunswick at the request of Winston Churchill, who worried that there could be German spies among their numbers.[3] The prisoners were subjected to forced labor, including felling lumber and chopping wood to heat the camp. After a year of internment, the refugees were seen as valuable to the war effort, and given the option to participate in the war or find sponsorship in Canada. The camp was temporarily closed in 1941, and converted to a prisoner-of-war camp for the remainder of the war.[3]
Czechoslovakia[edit]
A few days after the end World War II, 2,000 Germans were massacred in Postoloprty and Žatec by the Czechoslovak army.[4]
In the summer of 1945, there were a number of incidents and localized massacres of the German population.[5]
The following examples are described in a study done by the European University Institute in Florence:[6]
- In the Přerov incident, 71 men, 120 women, and 74 children were killed.[citation needed]
- 30,000 Germans were forced to leave their homes in Brno for labour camps near Austria. It is estimated that several hundred died in the march.[citation needed]
- Estimates of killed in the Ústí massacre range from 30 to 700 civilians. Some women and children were thrown off the bridge into the Elbe River and shot.[citation needed]
Law No. 115 of 1946 (see Beneš decrees) provides: "Any act committed between September 30, 1938, and October 28, 1945, the object of which was to aid the struggle for liberty of the Czechs and Slovaks or which represented just reprisals for actions of the occupation forces and their accomplices, is not illegal, even when such acts may otherwise be punishable by law." As a consequence, atrocities committed during the expulsion of Germans were made legal.[7]
Italy[edit]
At the end of World War I, the majority-German-speaking[8] southern part of Tyrol was incorporated into Italy's new borders. Following the rise of the Fascist movement under Benito Mussolini, the ethnic Germans of this enclave faced growing persecution.[citation needed] Their names, and the names of the towns and places in the area, were changed to Italian. In addition, Mussolini engaged in a campaign to resettle ethnic Italians into the region.[citation needed] Many Tyroleans fled to Germany during this time, and the situation in this province became a source of friction between Hitler and Mussolini.[citation needed]
After the end of World War II, the organized persecution of Germans in South Tyrol came to an end, although ethnic strife continued for decades.[citation needed]
Norway[edit]
The children of Norwegian mothers and German soldiers were persecuted after the war (see War children).[citation needed]
German POWs in Norway were forced to clear their own minefields and then walk over them, leading to the death and mutilation of hundreds of prisoners.[9][10]
Poland[edit]
Soviet Union[edit]
As a result of the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, Stalin decided to deport Russians of German descent into internal exile and forced labor in Siberia and Central Asia. On August 12, 1941, the Central Committee of the Communist Party decreed the expulsion of the Volga Germans from their autonomous republic, allegedly for treasonous activity. On September 7, 1941, the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was abolished and about 438,000 Volga Germans were deported. In subsequent months, additional ethnic Germans were deported to the Gulag in Siberia and Central Asia from other traditional settlements such as Ukraine and Crimea.[citation needed]
The Soviets were not successful in expelling all German settlers living in the Western and Southern Ukraine, however, due to the rapid advance of the Wehrmacht (German army). The secret police, the NKVD, was able to deport only 35% of the ethnic Germans in Ukraine. Thus in 1943, the Nazi German census registered 313,000 ethnic Germans living in the occupied territories of the Soviet Union. With the Soviet re-conquest, the Wehrmacht evacuated about 300,000 German Russians and brought them back to the Reich. Because of the provisions of the Yalta Agreement, all former Soviet citizens living in Germany at the war’s end had to be repatriated, most by force. More than 200,000 German Russians were deported, against their will, by the Western Allies and sent to the Gulag. Thus, shortly after the end of the war, more than one million ethnic Germans from Russia were in special settlements and labor camps in Siberia and Central Asia. It is estimated that 200,000 to 300,000 died of starvation, lack of shelter, overwork and disease during the 1940s.[11]
Near the end of World War II and during the occupation of Germany, Soviet forces invaded German villages and raped German women en masse. It is believed by historian Antony Beevor that "a 'high proportion' of at least 15 million women who lived in the Soviet zone or were expelled from Germany's eastern provinces were raped."[12] Several thousand women committed suicide.[citation needed] On the final day of hostilities, 900 women in one village just east of Berlin took their children and drowned them in the river (followed by their own suicides) as soon as they heard the Russian guns coming.[citation needed] In all, only about 4,000 Soviet soldiers were ever punished for atrocities.[citation needed] (See also Soviet war crimes)
United Kingdom[edit]
Germans were demonized in the press well before World War I, e.g. when the Kaiserliche Marine started to challenge the Royal Navy, but particularly around 1912 and during World War I.[citation needed] The anti-German sentiment was so intense that the British Royal Family was advised by the government to change its name (which was of German origin), resulting in the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha becoming the House of Windsor.[citation needed] Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany was a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and the nephew of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom.[citation needed]
United States[edit]
During the 18th and 19th centuries, German-Americans were among the most common non-Anglophone group in the United States.[citation needed] Numerous incidents of hostility against these groups took place during the 19th century but were largely non-systematic.[citation needed] A source of particular tension was the presence of pacifist Mennonite and Amish communities, who speak a dialect of German called Pennsylvania Dutch.[citation needed]
The portrayal of Germany as "The Hun" in British World War I propaganda inflamed existing tensions. The situation came to a crisis with America's entry into the war in 1917. Anti-German rioting was widespread. Many German-language periodicals, which had numbered in the hundreds, ceased operation, particularly in the Midwestern United States. Many German-Americans translated their names or altered them to resemble English names (a trend which had begun in the 19th century). By the time the U.S. troops returned from Europe, the German community had ceased to be a major force in American culture, or was no longer perceived as German.
Although some persecution of ethnic Germans did occur during World War II, it was not widespread.[citation needed] Most of the German-American population no longer identified themselves as German, nor were they identified with Nazis in the popular mind.[citation needed] Despite this, the US government interned as dangerous nearly 11,000 persons of German ancestry.[citation needed] Only enemy aliens were supposed to be interned, but family members, some of them American citizens, were allowed to "voluntarily" join them in the camps.[13]
See also[edit]
- Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950)
- World War II evacuation and expulsion
- Expulsion of Germans from Romania after World War II
- German diaspora
References[edit]
- ↑ "German Australians suffered 'enemy heritage' persecution during war: historian". SBS News. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 ""Enemy aliens" | Australian War Memorial". www.awm.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Kevin Bissett (2013-08-03). "Internment camp for Jews in Second World War a little-known piece of New Brunswick history". Toronto Star. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ↑ Hans-Ulrich Stoldt. "Czech Town Divided over How to Commemorate 1945 Massacre".
- ↑ Memories of World War II in the Czech Lands: the expulsion of Sudeten Germans by Brian Kenety, Radio Praha, 2005-04-14.
- ↑ "The Expulsion of 'German' Communities from Eastern Europe at the end of the Second World War, Steffen Prauser and Arfon Rees, European University Institute, Florence. HEC No. 2004/1" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-10-01. Retrieved 2006-12-02. Unknown parameter
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- ↑ Benvenuto, Oscar, ed. (2008). South Tyrol in Figures (PDF). Autonomous Province of South Tyrol. p. 19. Search this book on
- ↑ VG 08.04.2006 Tyske soldater brukt som mineryddere.
- ↑ Tvang tyskere til å løpe over minefelt Archived 2007-11-28 at the Wayback Machine VG video sequence from documentary. VG 08.04.2006
- ↑ Ulrich Merten, Voices from the Gulag: the Oppression of the German Minority in the Soviet Union, (American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Lincoln, Nebraska, 2015) ISBN 978-0-692-60337-6 Search this book on ., pages 2,3,166
- ↑ Berlin - The Downfall 1945 Archived 2006-02-05 at the Wayback Machine by Antony Beevor
- ↑ "WWII Violations of German American Civil Liberties by the US Government". Archived from the original on 2006-12-06. Retrieved 2006-10-30. Unknown parameter
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External links[edit]
- NY Times book review of Other Losses by historian Stephen Ambrose
- History News Network Bacque and Fisher respond to Ambrose
- Totenbuch der Donauschwaben History of Communist Yugoslavian persecution and genocide of ethnic German minority and collection of names of the missing and dead.
- de Zayas Homepage Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, Professor and author who has studied the German expulsions and persecutions extensively and written books on the topic.
- A Legacy of Dead German Children Ten thousand German children under five died in Danish camps
- Danish Study Says German Children Abused
- A modest proposal, Time magazine, 1941
- Morgenthau's Hope, Time magazine 1945
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