[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Propaganda
Ed SONNENBURG
esonnenburg at sympatico.ca
Tue Dec 26 09:02:41 PST 2006
I think that when people hear or read true stories of what happened in
Russia or Poland
to German minorities it seems exaggerated and is just waved away as
propaganda.
>We just think that it is impossible for humans to do something so bad to
>another human. Also since these bad things happened to Germans it doesn't
>matter because they just got back what they deserved because of Hitler. To
>this day Germans are still supposed to feel mass guilt for what happened
>years ago.
>many German girls and women did get raped and had German/Russian children.
>We had a lady in our church with a child. Russian teenage girls known as
>"Flintenweiber" or rifle girls would roam in packs and when they caught
>German soldiers would brutalizeand torture them. One living man says he
>ran away and wasn't caught but he hiid and then saw these girls tie his 15
>year old friend to two different tanks and drive in opposite directions
>tearing him apart. At times when the Russians caught men between 16 and 60
>they were executed on the spot. I sometimes wonder how my grandfather
>lived and made it to Canada. Even right after the war the allies gave the
>Poles three days to do whatever they wanted to Germans. Anyone who had
>mistreated a Pole during the war was lucky to survive. Poles had already
>come onto my grandather's property and taken him away but his Polish
>servant put in good words for him and so he survived.
>Older people just don't want to talk about it. Have a tape recorder handy
>if you get some of the older people to start talking.
>
>---------------------
>A couple of dozen books were produced in Germany in that time frame, and
>all
>that I have seen would qualify as propaganda. "The call of the fatherland,"
>for example, is an odd way to refer to the forced migrations that were part
>of the deal with the Soviet-German invasion of Poland in 1939.
>
>It should be noted that when these books refer to Volhynia, they are
>referring to Polish Volhynia, not the Russian side. The migration from
>Russian Volhynia was a few years later under decidedly different
>circumstances.
>
>I think it would be valuable to gather as much information as we can from
>the survivors of that period. That would complement the official
>documentation (ie, the EWZ files) and help correct any misconceptions that
>may have resulted from the publication of those books.
>
>Dave Obee
>
>
>
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