[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Convention success story
Richard Benert
benovich at imt.net
Tue Sep 5 13:15:13 PDT 2006
About 15 years ago I wrote an article for the AHSGR Journal on the Volhynian
German Baptists who settled in St. Paul, Minnesota and attended the First
German Baptist Church there. One thing that struck me then, and has
continued to interest me, was the apparent reluctance of these families to
make anything of their Russian background. They did not try to celebrate
their heritage, but rather had their hearts set on assimilating themselves
into American life and into the generally-German atmosphere of the church,
dominated as it was by immigrant Reich Germans. Some of them seemed to be
somewhat embarrassed about having come from such a backward place--at least
so it seemed to me. I could be wrong. But to some extent this does fit
into what Jerry said about this. He said:
> Further to Dave's comment explaining why the Volhynians might not
> consider themselves as being from Russia, there are at least 2 other
> factors that can explain some of this separateness.
>
> 1. The Volhynian Germans arrived in Russia under greatly different
> circumstances than those in other regions. Coming to work for Polish
> landlords there, they did not receive the same privileges and perks
> as those in other parts of Russia. While they shared a common ethnic
> origin, their culture and history was different.
>
> 2. The Volhynian Germans were ignored, or at best marginalized, by
> German researchers such as Stumpp, Liebrandt, and others who were
> instrumental in the early origins of the Russia German groups in
> Germany. Their books contain very little information about the
> Volhynian Germans or their history. I don't know if this was
> intentional, a result of ignorance about them, or what. It did
> however contribute to a lack of a sense of belonging and therefore
> low participation of the Volhynia Germans with the other GR groups in
> Germany.
Perhaps this is too big and complex a subject to make any brief comments on,
but nevertheless I'll make a few comments. With Jerry's first point I
basically agree. I'm sure it helped the Volga and Black Sea Germans' sense
of Russian identity to have urban areas largely run by fellow-Germans, a
fairly advanced culture and representatives participating in the Russian
government. Volhynian Germans, with some exceptions, didn't have these
advantages. After W.W. II, of course, Aussiedlers from all parts of Russia
had been reduced to conditions similar to, or worse than, those of the
Volhynian Germans, and they've been correspondingly reluctant to prate about
their Russian background.
It's also true that, in some respects, Volhynian Germans were largely
overlooked by the Black Sea Stumpp and the Baltic Leibbrandt, but don't
forget that Stumpp worked very hard in 1941 and 1942 to write glowing
reports about the Germans in Volhynia. I'm also not sure that one can say
that Volhynian Germans were ignored or marginalized by German researchers.
It's true that they were mostly ignored before W.W. I, but after the war and
the peace settlement that took several territories from Germany and Austria
and gave them to Poland, interest in Volhynia's German farmers began to
grow. Young men like Walter Kuhn, Kurt Lück, Alfred Karasek and Viktor
Kauder, all of them from either Posen, Silesia or Galicia began to worry
about the lowly condition of Germandom in Poland and began to investigate
the various German Sprachinseln ("language islands") in Poland to see if
anything could be done to save and possibly unite them in some way. So
during the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s (and greatly aided after 1933
by National Socialist ideology and money), PolishVolhynia did become an
object of study. The picture that emerged was of a people of admittedly low
cultural attainment (over 50% illiterate) but given to Wanderung (like the
ancient German tribes), hard work on the soil and the production of
offspring. (Stumpp did write an article in the late 1930s glorifying the
Volhynian fertility rate). They had made a great start in Russia up to W.W.
I, but their rewards had been stolen by the Russian government. Now they
were in a condition of starting over, a young, potentially vibrant, Stamm of
the German biological tree, if only conditions were right. It was a matter
of saving them from the Polonizing efforts of the Polish government. All
this has recently been written about by several scholars, most recently by
Wilhelm Fielitz, Das Stereotyp des wolhyniendeutschen Umsiedlers (The
Stereotype of the German Resettlers [of 1939-40]), in which he shows how the
relatively innocent early studies of the "language islands" morphed into the
fullfledged Nazi propaganda associated with the resettlement into the
Warthegau, Posen and Danzig during W.W.II.
In the end, of course, it's doubtful that the Volhynian Germans found in
these studies any source of pride, unless possibly they read and believed
the Nazi press accounts of the magnificent specimens of the German race that
were being resettled in 1939-40. Their experiences under the Nazi
resettlement program could hardly have made most of them proud of being
German. Nor was this anything new. The Volhynian Germans who had lived for
a time in Germany after W.W. I and suffered under the treatment given them
by German landowners and factories who considered them to be mere "Roosians"
had already learned to seek their identity in something other than
Germandom.
Sorry this got so long. It's a big subject and it defies brevity. We owe
much of our knowledge about Volhynia to this group of researchers, but they
may as well have written nothing for all the good they did for the
self-image of Volhynia's Germans. In this sense, Jerry's point No. 2 is
entirely valid. I think.
Dick Benert
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