Documents on the Expulsion of the Germans from Eastern-Central Europe is the abridged English translation of a multi-volume publication that was created by a commission of West German historians between 1951 and 1961 to document the population transfer of Germans from East-Central Europe that had occurred after World War II. Created by the Federal Ministry for Displaced Persons, Refugees and War Victims, the commission headed by Theodor Schieder consisted primarily of distinguished historians with a Nazi past.
The huge numbers of expellees from the east who arrived in the western zones of post-war Germany created an enormous logistical problem for the authorities at a time when cities were in ruins, housing was scarce and food rationed. Initially conceived as a tool for reversing the loss of German territories in the east by creating sympathy among the American and international public, the detailed documentation of the population movement was ground-breaking through its relative objectivity and its innovative combination of archive material with eye witness reports. Far from serving its original purpose, the documentation became increasingly open about the expulsions' dual nature as both counter-reaction and continuation of the atrocities committed in the same area by Germans during the war. Motivated by the Lebensraum ideology, some of the historians themselves had played an active role in these war crimes. Due to its relative frankness, the final summary volume was suppressed for political reasons and was never finished.
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Implementing the earlier Lebensraum concept, from 1938/1939 Nazi Germany expanded its territory far into the east, annexing parts of Czechoslovakia and Poland (Sudetenland, Warthegau). This was intended as only a first step towards establishing the so-called A-A line from Arkhangelsk to Astrakhan (both located in Russia) as Germany's new eastern border. Parts of Poland were "Germanized" by force, the local Polish majority population being subject to mass executions and murder as well as expelled into other parts of Poland . The Jews were systematically killed. In some cases German historians were involved in determining the fate of villages based on racial criteria. Ethnically German minorities from further east and settlers from within Nazi Reich were invited to settle in the annexed areas. Thousands of children from the occupied territories were kidnapped and examined according to racial criteria. Those who were eventually considered "Aryan" were given German names and thoroughly Germanized, but most were sent to orphanages, died from malnutrition or were killed in Auschwitz.
The project had its roots in initiatives in the British and American occupation zones that preceded the foundation of West Germany in 1951. At the time German politicians expected that a peace treaty would offer the chance for a revision of Germany's new eastern border.[1] A comprehensive, objective scientific account of suffering by Germans, in particular as caused by the Red Army, was hoped to balance the atrocities committed by Nazi Germany and create international sympathy for claims to formerly German territories. These motivations were fully endorsed by Schieder and other commission members[2] such as Diestelkamp, who felt that Germany had missed a similar chance after it lost the First World War, and that a related Polish project[3] needed a counter-weight.[4] Domestically, the documentation of the expelled persons' fate was meant to support their integration into West German society.[5]
The commission was headed by Theodor Schieder. Its other members were Peter Rassow, Hans Rothfels, Rudolf Laun as well as Adolf Diestelkamp, who died in 1953 and was replaced by Werner Conze. Apart from international law expert Laun and archivist Diestelkamp, all were distinguished historians.[6] The monumental project is an important link, and an example of remarkable continuity, between German historical research before and after the Second World War.[7]
The commission was created in 1951 by Hans Lukaschek, the Minister for the Expelled,[8] who after the First World War served as German propaganda chief throughout the Upper Silesia plebiscite.[9] Schieder chose as members of the commission, individuals such as Werner Conze, who had previously advocated "dejewification" of territory occupied by Nazi Germany.[10] During the Nazi era in Germany, both Conze and Schieder had devoted their attention to the issue of Nazi settlement policies, including the matter of "depopulating" Poland of its Jewish population.[11][12][13] Schieder was also one of the primary authors of a document entitled Generalplan Ost which called for creating "Lebensraum" (living-space) for Germans in Eastern Europe by enslaving or starving to death the Slavs, and killing all the Jews who lived there.[14] Another person chosen was Hans Rothfels. Rothfels, while opposed to the Nazi regime and forced to emigrate from Germany during World War II,[15] was also a German nationalist who in the interwar period advocated German domination of Eastern Europe and making its population into serfs.[16]
As such, according to Hughes, the members of the commission were "consciously committed to ... propagandist activity in their government's service".[11] The propagandist aims of the German government at the time were to utilize the commission's work to keep the question of the territories lost by Germany as a result of World War II open.[17] Adolf Diestelkamp, another member of the commission, expressed the hope that the work of the commission would be a "decisive factor in our fight to win back the German east", that is, territories which Germany ceded to Poland after World War II.[2] The commission relied heavily on interest groups, including expellee organizations, to collect their sources.
Rothfels was the one who had originally proposed Schieder as head of the editorial staff, having been his teacher and a key intellectual influence during the Nazi period.[18] Younger historians, such as Martin Broszat (who researched Yugoslavia) and Hans-Ulrich Wehler (who helped research Romania), who were later to break with the tradition of Schieder and Conze, served as research assistants (see also Historikerstreit).[19]
In the immediate post war period the commission was regarded as composed of very accomplished historians.[19]
Theodor Schieder had lived in Königsberg in East Prussia since 1934.[20] In the interwar period Schieder was known as one of a group of conservative historians with little sympathy towards the Weimar republic[18] Once the Nazis seized power, Schieder directed a regional center devoted to the study of East Prussia and World War I. According to Robert Moeller, after 1945 Schieder merely transferred his ideas about one German defeat to the study of another.[18] In 1937 he joined the Nazi party himself.[18] Schieder enthusiastically supported Hitler's invasion of Poland and wrote academic papers on Germany's role as a "force of order" and a "bearer of a unique cultural mission", in Eastern Europe.[18] During World War II he advocated the "dejudaization" of territories occupied by Germany.[21] As one of the prominent proponents of German racism, he advocated maintaining German "race purity" by not mixing with other, "inferior" nationals. The aim of Schieder's research was to justify alleged German supremacy over other peoples.[22] He fled Königsberg when the Red Army approached it December 1944.[19]
After World War II Schieder was "deNazified" and kept publicly quiet about his past.[18] As a result, despite his Nazi membership, and his enthusiastic support for Nazi policies in Eastern Europe, Schieder's career took off in post War Germany.[18] He was appointed to a chair in modern history at the University of Cologne in 1947, and in the 1950s edited one of the most known historical journals in the Federal Republic of Germany.[18] However, personal correspondence with Werner Conze from this time, revealed that they still held old antisemitic prejudices.[21]
Werner Conze was a doctoral student of Rothfels in Königsberg under the Nazis, where he claimed in his research that Germans had a positive role in the development of eastern Europe.[19] Just like with Schieder's, the goal of his research was to justify alleged German supremacy over other nations and their right to take over new territories.[22] With the Nazis taking power, Conze, together with Schieder and Rothfels helped to institutionalize racial ethnic research in the Third Reich.[23] According to German historian Ingo Haar, "the Nazis made use of (this) racist scholarship, which lent itself gladly". While working for German espionage, in 1936, Conze prepared a document which portrayed Poland as backward and in need of German order and which recommended the exclusion of Jews from the legal system as Conze considered them outside the law.[23] In further work issued in 1938 Conze continued in similar vein, blaming lack of industry in Belarus on "Jewish domination"[24]
During the war Conze fought at the Eastern Front.[19] In the meantime his family fled west. At the end of the war Werner Conze ended up in a Soviet POW camp.[19] After the war, Conze moved to Munster, then to Heidelberg.[19]
Part of Schieder's purpose was to make sure that the expulsions were be established as "one of the most momentous events in all of European history and one of the greatest catastrophes in the development of the German people".[25] He sought to make sure that the publishing of "selected documents" would bring to light events which he felt had so far been "hushed up"[2] The intended audience of the commission's findings were not just Germans, but also readers in other Western countries, particularly the Allies who had signed the Potsdam agreement.[2] To that end, substantial excerpts from the five volumes published by the commission were made available in English language translation.[2]
Schieder and other members of the commission were interested in more than just sympathy for the expellees.[2] They also hoped that the propaganda work of the commission would help to convince the victorious Western allies to revise their position with regard to Germany's post war eastern borders with Poland.[2] In doing so Schieder endorsed the ties between work of his historians and the Federal Republic's desire to for revision of post-war boundary settlement, being fully convinced such result would outweigh the problem of responses from Eastern Europe.[2]
Another goal of the commission, as stated by Ministry of Expellees, was to counter the "false impression, produced by the propaganda of the opponent" that Nazi German forces of occupation in Eastern Europe "had raped robbed, terrorized, and butchered the population as long as Hitler was in power", which the ministry claimed was presented in "perverted" documents of the Polish government.[2]
The commissioned gathered and used a large number of primary sources and Schieder also wanted the volumes produced to also include supposed political context of the events.[19] Two out of the five volumes, about Romania, prepared by Wehler, and the one on Yugoslavia prepared by Broszat, included some form of analysis of collaboration by the local Germans during the war, Nazi plans and the atrocities of German occupation.[26] At the center of the project were documents prepared by expellee organizations, German government, testimonies dictated in response to questions from officials of regional expellee interest groups, and personal diaries initially written as retrospective for the author or family. Together the volumes contained 4,300 densely printed pages.[26]
While the commission was aware that first person accounts of the expulsions were often unreliable, the members believed it was necessary to utilize these in their work, as they did not trust either Nazi era sources, nor those published by post war communist governments.[27] The use of personal testimonies was part of the "modern history" approach developed earlier by Rothfels and applied in practice by the commission.[27] Both Rothfels and Schieder were concerned with the accuracy of these accounts.[27] As a result Rothfels insisted that the relevant documents were subjected to "historical standards of measurement" that characterized other historical research.[25] Schieder insisted if an account failed to pass official "testing procedures" set up by the commission, then the account would be completely excluded.[25] As a result, the commission claimed that their methods "transform(ed) subjective memory into unassailable fact".[28]
In 1953, Hans Lukaschek presented an interim report of the commission for the Oder-Neisse territory, estimating 2.167 million deaths out of twelve million expellees, including 500,000 Wehrmacht and as many aerial warfare casualties.[29] In 1958, the commission issued its final report, estimating a total of some 2.225 million deaths.[30]
The five volumes produced by the commission were entitled Dokumentation der Vertreibung der Deutschen aus Ost-Mitteleuropa (Documents on the Expulsions of Germans from East-Central Europe).[31] The first volume dealt with former German territories east of the Oder-Neisse line, the second with Hungary, the third with Romania, the fourth with Czechoslovakia and the fifth with Yugoslavia.[31] Additional three volumes included the documents used in the work of the commission.[31]
The estimates of deaths due to expulsions have been criticized by subsequent researchers. For example according to the German demographer Rüdiger Overmans it is only possible to establish the deaths of 500,000 individuals and there is nothing in German historiography which could explain the other 1.5 million supposed deaths.[32] A 1969-1974 study by the German Federal Archives found 630,000 deaths, including 400,000 in the Oder-Neisse territory after excluding 600,000 Soviet Volksdeutsche deported within the Soviet Union.[33]
Overmans and Ingo Haar state that confirmed deaths result in a number between 500,000 and 600,000.[32][33] Both believe that further research is needed to determine the fate of the estimated additional 1.5 million civilians listed as missing[34] However, according to Overmans the 600,000 deaths found by the German Federal Archives are as close to the truth as can be established with present data.[32] Haar has said that all reasonable estimates of deaths from expulsions lie between around 500,000 to 600,000.[35]
According to Overmans the difference between the more than two million missing persons estimated by the Schieder commission and the some 500,000 deaths that so far could be verified included people who never existed[30] or were never born (due to lower wartime fertility), German Jews who had been murdered by the German state, and individuals who were deported to the Soviet Union.[35] He also stated that the commission's 2.225 million number relied on improper statistical methodology and incomplete data, particularly in regard to the expellees who arrived in East Germany after the war.[35]