Orderly and Humane: The Expulsion of
the Germans after the Second World War, by R.M. Douglas
As I did with Hoover’s volume on U.S. foreign policy before,
during, and after the Second World War, I plan on writing several posts
covering this work by R. M. Douglas. From
the introduction:
Immediately after the Second World
War, the victorious Allies carried out the largest forced population transfer –
and perhaps the greatest single movement of peoples – in human history. With the assistance of the British, Soviet,
and U.S. governments, millions of German-speaking civilians living in Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, and the parts of eastern Germany assigned to Poland were driven out of
their homes and deposited amid the ruins of the Reich, to fend for themselves
as best they could. Millions more, who
had fled the advancing Red Army in the final months of the war, were prevented
from returning to their places of origin, and became lifelong exiles….altogether,
the expulsion operation permanently displaced at least 12 million people, and
perhaps as many as 14 million. Most of
these were women and children under the age of sixteen….estimates of 500,000
deaths at the lower end of the spectrum, and as many as 1.5 million at the
higher, are consistent with the evidence as it exists at present.
In this book, Douglas compiles for apparently the first time
in English a thorough study of one of the least discussed tragedies of the
Second World War, and certainly of the immediate post-war period – that of the
forced expulsion of Germans from their homelands in former-Germany-soon-to-be-Poland,
Czechoslovakia and elsewhere in Central Europe at the end of the war.
On the most optimistic
interpretation…the expulsions were an immense man-made catastrophe….
On this subject, I have considered that the fate of those
living within and between Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Russia was hopeless –
whether the two powers remained as allies, but especially if they did not. Therefore, when I consider these expulsions
and specifically the roles played by the U.S. and Britain, I wonder if any
different actions taken by these two western nations would have made any
difference. I am hoping to understand
this more fully by the time I finish the book, however at minimum Douglas
identifies the tragedy as man-made – suggesting “man” could have “made” some
other outcome. I also consider that such
tragedies, even if unavoidable, do not need to be sanctioned by third parties
(e.g. the U.S. and Britain). Here again,
I look forward to any enlightenment brought forward by the author.
That this tragedy remains relatively unknown, even among the
highest academic circles, is given evidence by the following anecdote provided
by the author:
It is, then, entirely
understandable why so many of my splendid and learned colleagues on the Colgate
faculty should have expressed their confusion to me after reading in the
newspapers in October 2009 that the president of the Czech Republic, Vaclav
Klaus, had demanded that the other members of the European Union legally
indemnify his country against compensation claims by ethnic German expellees,
as the price of his country’s ratification of the Lisbon Treaty. None had been aware that anything had
occurred after the war in respect of which the Czech Republic might require to
be indemnified.
Douglas gives some reasons why he believes that this episode
has received so little attention:
- For Germans, it invites debate about the war-time record of ethnic German minorities living in the subject countries.
- For the citizens of expelling countries, it draws unwanted attention and casts a doubtful light on carefully crafted war-related narratives.
- For citizens of the U.S. and Britain, it draws light to the complicity of their leaders in one of the largest episodes of human rights abuse in history.
Douglas does not add in this context, but elsewhere sheds light on,
another possible reason for the relative silence. It is not considered polite in mixed company
to show any sympathy toward Germans as regards the Second World War, and
especially if it might be juxtaposed to the Holocaust – therefore even the
study of such episodes might result in unwanted professional risks. This can be concluded given his need to apologize
in advance for the possibility that he might be accused of holding precisely
such views:
It is appropriate at the outset to
state explicitly that no legitimate comparison can be drawn between the postwar
expulsions and the appalling record of German offenses against the Jews and
other innocent victims between 1939 and 1945.
The extent of Nazi criminality and barbarity in central and eastern
Europe is on a scale and of a degree that is almost impossible to overstate.
The author indicates that the Western Allies went beyond acquiescence
in the operation, and in fact played an “underappreciated part” in the forced
transfers. This point will be important
for me to understand as I read through the book – again, life dealt a rotten
hand to the people stuck within and between Russia and Germany once Stalin and
Hitler came to power. Pain and suffering
was certainly a given, whether or not the U.S. and Britain became involved in
the war. But acquiescence is one thing –
being complicit is quite another.
Douglas assesses the expulsions from their earliest origins –
beginning with actions, attitudes and intrigues occurring between and among the
principle actors as early as the beginning of official hostilities. He is humble about his accomplishment,
suggesting it is only a small step upon which he hopes future scholars will
build.
I look forward to his treatment of this terrible chapter in
history.
Please be kind enough to provide accurate information concerning Nazi criminality. Information which is independent from "US" sources and includes the Jewish declaration of war in 1933 against Germany as well as US Treasury activities.
ReplyDeleteDo you have a book source or recommendation?
DeleteIn conjunction with the Douglas book, you may want to take a look at Freda Utley's book THE HIGH COST OF VENGEANCE (1948).
ReplyDeleteBe careful lest you bring the entire Zionist armamentum to bear upon you. Just remember the golden rule of Zionist propaganda. Jews were and are always lily white. Why because they are "chosen," and because they have suffered. No one else has suffered as they have. Whining and deception are their stock in trade. And read the Talmud to be appalled at this human group's utter perversion.
ReplyDelete