Holocaust journal 1_Kipp
Transcription
Holocaust journal 1_Kipp
Journal of Genocide Research (2007), 9(4), December, 601–615 The Holocaust in the letters of German soldiers on the Eastern front (1939– 44) MICHAELA KIPP During the Second World War (1939– 45) the German forces’ mail service delivered some 44 billion letters written by soldiers home to their spouses and families. Writing these letters and reading the responses from their loved ones was of considerable importance to the soldiers as well as to their families. For most of them, it was the only way to keep in touch during months of separation. In hazardous times there was a heightened need for news on both sides, be it simply a reassurance of someone’s well-being, or letting someone know that one was still alive. There was so much the soldiers experienced in combat or in the occupied territories which they had never been prepared for. For many of them, it seems to have been too difficult to talk about their more disturbing experiences, and, of course, there was surveillance and censorship of forces’ mail. Consequently, a large portion of the extant letters read rather tritely. Still, there are millions of letters which bear witness to the experience of the war from the perspective of the soldiers actually involved, addressed to the persons that mattered most in the authors’ lives, some of them actually written in the face of death. These letters are a valuable source for the study of the motivations of German Wehrmacht soldiers, including perpetrators of war crimes and genocide actions. Many of the letters may have been lost, some actively destroyed by their addressees or by their heirs, others just thrown away, as nobody was interested in them any longer. But there still exist countless numbers of letters both within families and in public archives. This article details research about the knowledge of German soldiers concerning the mass executions of Jews in Eastern Europe during the Second World War, as it can be discerned from their letters.1 It examines the soldiers’ perceptions and justifications of criminal missions committed by their own comrades or in which they were actually involved, and their interpretations of the facts and rumours they heard about the extermination of the Jewish population. It thus contributes to the development of a more “down to earth” approach to the big question: how could “the unthinkable” happen? ISSN 1462-3528 print; ISSN 1469-9494 online/07/040601-15 # 2007 Research Network in Genocide Studies DOI: 10.1080/14623520701644424 MICHAELA KIPP The answer must draw on the ways in which the soldiers interpreted the situations they experienced and on their understanding of the actions they took part in. In order to enhance our understanding of the conditions for the participation of ordinary men in mass murder and other atrocities, it is crucial to pay particular attention to the shared beliefs and commonplace convictions that had already been common to most of the soldiers prior to and beyond the official Nazi indoctrination. 1 There is no “Holocaust” to be found in the letters of German soldiers from the Eastern front in World War II. This was not because the term had not been coined yet, and was certainly unfamiliar to those involved,2 nor because of the fact that many soldiers actually didn’t see much of the killing. Nor was the reason for this conspicuous absence that the soldiers preferred not to write to their wives and relatives about such a nasty theme, just as they kept silent about other sore points like, for example, their own death.3 Indeed there are some astonishingly frank descriptions and commentaries about different forms of atrocities against Jews, in spite of the censorship,4 and there are also many more or less concealed hints, insinuations or euphemisms about extermination actions going on. Some examples will shortly illustrate this.5 The following quote is from a letter of an ordinary soldier on his way to the Eastern front, dated early December 1942. It shows his knowledge about frequent transports of Jews to Auschwitz. Even though he was just passing trough the area, he knew that the Jewish passengers were all supposed to be killed shortly after their arrival: Up here you see many prison camps assigned to do construction work and other things. There are Jews coming here, that is to say, to Auschwitz, seven or eight thousand a week who die a “hero’s death” before long. You see, it’s quite good to get around a great deal.6 In the next letter from the end of August 1943, a technical company sergeant clearly realizes the underlying intent of burning down the ghetto in Bialystok, Poland, and he approves of the plan not to let any Jews escape: There’s not much new to tell from here; during the last couple of days the ghetto got smoked out. Unfortunately some of the Jews managed to skedaddle; and from time to time we have some minor shoot-outs.7 In the following passage, dated September 1942 in Baranowitschi, White Russia, a reserve officer briefly mentions some apparently horrible actions in the ghetto. He insinuates that this did not happen for the first time and that it was carried out in a way that was still shocking for him and his comrades. It was not easy for him to talk about this theme: You know our mood isn’t improved very much by all these actions, nor by the lack of work. Currently a new action against Jews is making some impression on us; I prefer to spare you the details of what I saw today while walking past the affected quarters.8 602 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS Of course, on many occasions soldiers fighting in the East got to know about individual events in their vicinity or heard rumours about something “big” going on in order to solve the “Jewish Question” in Eastern Europe. Many of them became involved in killing actions by providing the necessary infrastructure, for example, by putting up barricades. Fewer actually participated in killing commandos, where they were ordered to shoot on helpless Jewish civilians. Some actively sought to join massacres on their own initiative.9 Many soldiers, deployed behind the front lines, became eye-witnesses of mass executions carried out by the SS “Einsatzgruppen,” special killing taskforces.10 They also saw the terrible situation of Jews in the ghettos or labour camps, where forced labourers were employed for military aims. On their way back home for holidays, some soldiers coming from the fighting zones showed photos to their comrades on the trains depicting hanged civilians, mass executions or other atrocities.11 Thus they found opportunities to communicate in a relatively unrestricted way and they could give some material evidence underlining their accounts of the extermination activities under way—which, at first, were hard to believe for many Germans too. 2 However, these accounts were disparate in various ways. There were tremendous differences in knowledge among the soldiers about the killings, they had different personal experiences and developed different interpretations of the events. The accounts that can be seen in the letters written by the soldiers reveal a strong correlation between the point of time in the course of the war, the place where a soldier happened to be deployed, and the possibility for a soldier to be either personally involved in extermination actions or to obtain first-hand knowledge about the genocide. Most of the major anti-Jewish crimes the German army were entangled with happened during the first weeks and months of the military advance in the summer of 1941, or were committed in the occupied areas behind the front line.12 Furthermore, the letters document considerable asynchronicities (“Ungleichzeitigkeiten”), because not all the German soldiers had joined the “Barbarossa-Feldzug” from the beginning in 1941. The range of their tasks was very broad and they came to different places on various routes. All in all, much of the extent of their involvement in the genocide depended on particular circumstances, local military leaders, the group dynamics of comradeship and the social dynamics of their interaction with the resident civilians, as Christopher Browning has shown.13 In contrast to the implication of a fixed term like “Holocaust,” the actors and perpetrators of many genocide actions had no consistent, homogeneous idea of what was going on. They participated in single actions often without a clear picture of the total amount of murder and destruction, and sometimes without being able to imagine, at least, that there was a real plan for a systematic extermination of the European Jews. A sample survey of the letters written by German soldiers in the Second World War clearly shows that the average soldiers’ perception of the killings did not see them as a part of a monolithic, teleological incident 603 MICHAELA KIPP of an anti-Jewish genocide. Instead, the soldiers went through their own military incidents, having personal experiences and developing their own interpretations from a subjective point of view. The following excerpts show the broad range of reasons given by soldiers for irregular military actions against Jews in the Soviet Union. Early in July, 1941, a major considered mass executions of Jews, actually part of a pogrom in a town in Ukraine, as a “regular” expiatory action against irregular fighters, according to established conventions of war. In this frame of interpretation, an act of aggression became an act of war-induced (“kriegsnotwendig”) deterrence: In the old citadel 1000 Jews will be shot dead on this day. This is a reprisal for the 2800 Ukrainians who were shot in Bolshevik times. In return, 5600 Russians will now give their lives. Two officers, whom I sent out searching for wire and iron, reported that the Jews died without making any sound. After this human tragedy, which is unfortunate but a necessary measure to discourage the uprising insurgents, we experienced over the following days how a large section of the looters simply left their stolen goods on the street.14 Apparently it was important for this officer to establish a link between the imminent execution of local Jews and a particular mass murder committed earlier “in Bolshevik times” by the “Russians.” The inherent logic of the somewhat confusing argument in the letter was: the execution must be considered a legitimate retaliation for the political murder of allegedly 2,800 Ukrainians by the Soviet regime in the past. According to the conventional proportion of 2:1 in such cases,15 now twice as many civilians from the Soviet-Russian side (i.e. the “5600 Russians”) had to be shot. This measure of reprisal was started by killing 1,000 Jews, who were considered representatives of the Bolsheviks—and were, indeed, the easiest prey to hand. In the following letter, from mid July 1941 in Romania, a lance corporal constructs the Romanians as “good example” demonstrating how to deal with the Jewish population. Solving the “Jewish Question” thus becomes a project of international concern. In the eyes of this writer, the killing of men, women and children is a legitimate act of self-defence, because the Jews were considered to have been the ones who allegedly started the killings: Here the Jewish issue is solved somewhat differently. The Romanians drove all the Jews together and shot them dead regardless of whether they were men, women or children. At the beginning it was the other way round.16 An ordinary soldier, mid August 1941, on the advance in Russia, relates his experiences of inhumanity on the rush with the war as an existential battle of life and death. The Jews stand for his feeling of alienation. They deserve to be shot, because otherwise they would become dominant: The many hundred kilometres we have covered showed us the roughness and the cruelty of this battle. It is impossible to describe all the details, but it is a matter of life and death. The deeper we got into Russia, the more we met Jews. These guys are just as cheeky as in the 604 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS most peaceful times. One should put even more of these guys against the wall than has been done so far.17 A lance corporal described the hanging of “gunwomen” and Jews in September 1941 as a conventional reaction to sabotage in the partisan war. The victims deserved it. It seemed evident to this soldier that Jews were partisans and that women couldn’t be regular fighters, even if the Red Army had all-female battalions: Recently one could see a number of gunwomen in a procession of prisoners, and there were seven Jews hanging on a gallows, seven out of a group of fourteen who had parachuted behind our lines in order to carry out sabotage. From the upper parts of the front we get some very uplifting news; we’re eventually going to reach a decision pretty soon in the East.18 It is not the purpose of this article to claim that one could not find anything but incomprehensible differences in the descriptions of anti-Semitic actions. There is no doubt that the socialization in the national socialist institutions from “Hitlerjugend” to “Arbeitsdienst” left heavy traces in the understanding of the situation by the soldiers in the East. In this context, of course, the Wehrmacht indoctrination played a crucial role.19 The letters demonstrate that Wehrmacht soldiers had taken on board a great deal of their Nazi “education,” which was, moreover, frequently reinforced through speeches by their commanders before the soldiers were actually sent to carry out killing actions. But it is worthwhile to take a closer look at the actual perceptions the soldiers noted in their letters and at the interpretations of their experience which they developed. One problem of the research emphasizing indoctrination as a unidirectional, sender– receiver process of mass communication is that it involves a number of questionable preconditions: propaganda only functions in special circumstances, people have to be positive about the items beforehand, and, most importantly, it has to be compatible with their everyday convictions. In order to enhance our understanding of the conditions for the participation of ordinary men in mass murder and other atrocities, it is necessary to take into account the soldiers’ efforts to make sense of their experiences during the war of extermination, paying attention in particular to the shared beliefs and commonplace convictions that were familiar to most of the soldiers prior to and beyond the Nazi propaganda. To realize that not only the victims but also many of the perpetrators had no clear idea about the total amount of the exterminations might help us in understanding how the “unthinkable” could happen. For the soldiers to “function” and carry out their part in this war, it was necessary that they somehow develop their own explanations of the atrocious situations they experienced and their own understanding of what they thought they were actually doing. One of the conditions for the systematic extermination of the Jewish population was that many of the perpetrators could not see, or even imagine, the bigger picture. Moreover, most soldiers refused to communicate about their cruel, awkward experiences.20 Some of the perpetrators might actually have believed in their own myths of “clean” warfare in the East. Of course this should not serve as an excuse in any way. 605 MICHAELA KIPP But to take into account the subjective dimension of the soldiers’ and perpetrators’ actual experience and their own understanding of what they were doing might help to analyse the reasons these people seem to have thought they had for taking part in the anti-Jewish actions and mass murder, even if they were not committed antiSemites. A homogeneous term like “the Holocaust,” in this respect, appears rather as an epistemological obstacle, because it obscures the subjective dimension of warfare. 3 As I have already stated, many soldiers developed their own explanations for ongoing activities against Eastern European Jews. These explanations are marked by one widely shared point in particular: they usually argued along the lines of the logic of military action. The distinctive reference point was military rule, even when crimes were committed. Most of the descriptions we find in the accounts of participants are embedded in a broader context of military actions, for example: . mass shootings, as in the case of the liquidation of civil hostages, are justified as acts to prevent terrorism, . hanging of civilians as an act of revenge or deterrence in the partisan war, . massacres of hundreds or thousands of people are described as necessary in order to establish law and order in the occupied territories, . the killing of women and children is described as necessary in order to prevent sabotage (because they were seen as aides or sometimes as protective shields of the partisans), . deportations are described as a sweeping of the dangerous fighting areas for the sake of the ordinary inhabitants, . the setting up of ghettos as quarantine areas was said to protect the non-Jewish residents from plagues attributed to the Jewish population, . forced labour was justified as a result of wartime necessities (i.e. building of trenches) and as a means to discipline the barbaric Jews.21 This form of interpretation helped to normalize and legitimize the genocide by counting the killings as part of usual warfare activities—cruel, but necessary in order to win the war and save one’s own lives. They were presented as the soldiers’ natural lot and an unavoidable part of their sometimes brutal duty. The classification of anti-Semitic crimes committed by members of the Wehrmacht as “average” warfare atrocities was an effective strategy to play the matter down, not only during the war, but also in the public discussion up to now.22 In addition, this line of argument fits very well within the picture of the brave heroic soldier, which was broadly accepted in early twentieth century Germany and radicalized by the Nazis. In particular, one can show how the virtue of toughness had been made subservient to the needs of exterminatory combat. The semantic pattern of “toughness” served as one of the main arguments for soldiers to 606 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS overcome personal feelings of dislike or even disgust, moral doubts or the longing for their families and wives. This gendered ideal of military manliness served as a barrier against the negative emotions linked to war activities.23 The ideal of martial masculinity was also invoked in order to dehumanize the persons the soldiers were supposed to fight against. For example, the female fighters of the Red Army and partisan women were perceived as monstrous gunwomen, “entartete Flintenweiber,”24 worse than male soldiers and even more dangerous than male partisans—possibly because they were destroying the social order of the war and because the soldiers couldn’t figure out their supposed reaction.25 According to the classic conventions of war, women, like children and the elderly, were officially exempted from being a possible target of military action. During the partisan war that the German Wehrmacht became involved in on the Eastern front, however, any woman, and especially any Jewish woman, was suspected of being a partisan (or an aide to them, which was actually considered as the same). Therefore they, too, could be killed by German soldiers in what was to be counted as a form of “military action” without any judicial process—and sometimes this was explicitly ordered by military commands.26 A quotation from a letter should illustrate the function of this pattern of martial masculinity as a stereotype for racial distinction; actually, it is a comparatively positive quotation about the people of Estonia: “The Estonians are quite decent folks, just a bit soft.”27 One advantage of this category might have been its lack of concreteness: “soft” can be almost anything that you can’t describe clearly and that is perceived as somehow negative in comparison with the German virtue of strict discipline and male toughness. Still, some events were so clearly incompatible with any form of classical warfare that they could not be explained or legitimized by army needs, “normal” war-induced problems, or a martial ideal of male soldierly identity. The killing of helpless, uninvolved civilians, especially of women, children and the elderly, didn’t fit in with any “rational” logic of war. In order to cope with such cases, many soldiers drew on older, more traditional interpretations of the world and of their place in it, like bourgeois ideals of purity and the (auto-) stereotypes of “clean and neat Germans”28 and the “dirty East.”29 The soldiers used patterns of meaning familiar to them from their everyday life before the war.30 These patterns were diffuse and therefore stable enough to integrate a lot of different actions by adding an external motivation to them. The discourse of defining “cleanliness and order” as typically German attributes often resulted from the juxtaposition of these attributes with others, in particular during the occupation of Eastern European countries. It played an important part in stabilizing the national identity of the soldiers. A quotation from a letter from 1944 illustrates this: How modest one gets over here! Almost indecent. Doing one’s daily toilet is cancelled because we cannot bring up water. You just rinse your mouth with a sip of coffee, the beard grows, blossoms and thrives! Anyway, you must not think in normal human (German) terms at all, for then you would go mad!31 607 MICHAELA KIPP “Normality” in this example is assumed to be equivalent to “human terms,” which in turn is associated with the familiar German standard of living. This reveals precisely an underlying assumption that German habits are absolute, unquestioned standards. During the campaign, it was the troop commanders and the regular announcements to the German combat troops, “Mitteilungen für die Truppe,” that reinforced the idea of the need—and the right—to implement German cleanliness aggressively. In December 1941, it was announced by No. 163 of the central organ of the Wehrmacht headquarters that: Whoever has seen the dilapidated villages, the rotten ways, and miserable little towns in these foreign places knows what a gift it is to belong to the German people whose populace have been building up Germany for many generations and have created, compared to the East, a tended garden, a jewellery box.32 Compared to this ideal of their German fatherland, the living conditions the soldiers actually experienced in the Eastern European countries could only be considered unacceptable. As Soldier Hans N. wrote home to his family in 1944 from Russia: But, as I just mentioned accommodation, I now want to say something about our landlords. The employees are nearly completely composed of grandfathers, grandmothers, mothers and children, all great-grandchildren. If possible, we chose the “best” accommodation, but one could always say: how are you living! [. . .] Excuse me, but if the following descriptions are to be truthful, if I shall not just let fundamental points slide, then you for your part must switch off your aesthetic feelings a little bit. We already threw ours overboard—had to do it.33 By comparing hygienic standards and discussing questions of “purity” and cleanliness, the soldiers developed a strong impulse for identification with their German fatherland and with the alleged fight for civilization, as can be seen in the following letter: One just notices here how beautiful our home country is. The social deficiencies are impossible to describe. Dirt and mud. A great percentage of inhabitants are Jews. And then the “solution” follows: All the more urgent was the solution of the Jewish question. It is now pushed forward energetically by the Hungarian government according to the German model. A complete elimination is just necessary to give the miserable Russian people better living conditions.34 This mission of the German soldier—to clean up the country and to put things in order—was understood on a concrete level as building roads and cleaning streets, but also transferred to a higher level of hygienic elimination of “infectious,” socially “poisonous” and “parasitic” Jews. This corresponded to parts of official Nazi propaganda, as, for example, the following quotation form an article in the regional Lippische Staatszeitung, dated May 16th, 1943, shows: 608 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS The thing a physician needs to accomplish must be the complete elimination of the Cholera, what our people need to accomplish must be the complete elimination of the Jews.35 In addition, and in a narrower context, the army was indoctrinating its soldiers with similar slogans, as can be seen in a Wehrmacht training booklet from 1939: But we fight the world Jewry (“Weltjudentum”) as one must fight a poisonous parasite; with them, we do not only hit an enemy of our people, but a plague of all peoples.36 The idea of cleaning up whole areas from human “dirt” can be found in many letters, especially those from the war against the partisans, which echo the military terms used in the special actions against the partisans: The “Säuberungsaktion” (cleansing action), the formulation “contaminated with partisans” and the so-called “cleansing” of areas which were subsequently defined as “clean of Jews” (“judenrein”). To understand the coherence of these patterns of description, one must keep in mind that Jews were considered to be partisans in any case.)37 These often criminal military actions were executed according to orderly, rational rules following processes of classifying, sorting and then eliminating things and people that didn’t fit into the constructed order. Basically the procedure followed—in a way—the cognitive script of tidying up in everyday life. Falling back on well-established civil patterns of action, the soldiers could overcome uncertainties when confronted with brutal actions that would not fit into their ideas of warfare and soldierly logic. 4 In summary, it is not difficult to find countless quotations about different crimes against Jews in the letters German soldiers wrote home from the Eastern front. Most of them heard of, many saw and some of them—certainly a lot more than those who would admit it after the war—committed acts of genocide. Often they might not have been fully aware of actually being part of an abhorrent master plan to kill the entirety of European Jewry. But many soldiers on some occasions came to places where they could no longer ignore the true nature of the ongoing mass murder. Many of them were searching for explanations for the extraordinarily cruel conduct of this extermination war. The longer the soldiers were part of the Eastern campaign, the higher the probability was that they acquired some form of practical knowledge, collected evidence and formed conjectures about the acts of extermination committed against the Jewish population. Besides military euphemisms and everyday racisms, one can also find realistic judgements about the situation—for example, when the number of killings mentioned by soldiers reaches the thousands, when they write about the “fiasco” of the Jews,38 their total material exploitation, the nature of the labour camps and about mass executions, children starving to death, or about the fact that in some areas there was simply no Jewish population left. Only a minority drew on the arguments provided by the National Socialists’ ideology which claimed that the annihilation of the Jews had to be the primary aim in this war, because the Jews 609 MICHAELA KIPP were seen as the creators of Bolshevism and therefore as the “real,” but elusive, aggressors against a peaceful Germany, Europe and world, as Omer Bartov claims.39 Obviously this was much too far-fetched for the soldiers’ perspective and incompatible with the impressions of Jewish civilians they had gained from their missions. Let me close my considerations with some of the rare examples of more unrestricted descriptions about the alarming situation of the Jews, their starving to death and of mass shootings carried out by German troops. At the end of May 1942 in Brest/Bug, a reserve officer realized the fatal situation of the civilians in the occupied territories who suffered from hardships, forced labour and hunger as the consequence of severe mismanagement by the German administration. Regarding the Jews, he mentions the practice of beating them up and “wild” executions by the guards. The letter describes the method of extermination through exhaustive work: I am concerned about the nutrition of our Polish civilians whose work efficiency is decreasing rapidly. We only get so much food for them as to provide for a meagre soup five times a week with 60 hours of labour. The extra supply they get from the city’s civil service is absolutely insufficient. It is even worse for the Jews, some of them just collapse of hunger during urgent street construction. No flogging or shooting will solve that.40 The letter of an ordinary soldier, from the end of June 1943 in Dünaburg, Latvia, concedes that German soldiers were not seen as liberators by the local residents. The author assumes a clear causal link between the way the Germans treat the local population and the reputation they have. The soldier openly talks about destructions, mass executions and a regime of terror and arbitrary rule: The people here do not mean well to us Germans. The city of Dünaburg is half in ruins. 75% of the population used to be Jewish. They themselves—mostly before the Germans arrived— blew up or burned down their houses. Subsequently 30 000 Jews were shot not far from the city. In addition we executed other people over nothing. For these reasons, the population don’t like to see the Germans anywhere. People are suspicious.41 In mid July 1942, two months after the previously quoted considerations about malnutrition, the same reserve officer in Brest/Bug wrote about the mass murder of Jewish men, women and children. With a cynical twist he shows that he was well aware of the hideous logic of total exploitation: In Bereza—Katuska, where I stopped at noon, they had just shot 1300 Jews the day before. They were taken to a pit outside the city, then men, women and children had to take off all their clothes and were finished by shots to the neck. The clothes were disinfected and then reused. I am convinced, if the war lasts longer, it will become necessary to make sausages out of the Jews and feed them to the Russian prisoners of war or the trained Jewish workers.42 To understand the individual scope of interpretation, it is important to make clear that these, in a way more “objective” remarks, were also impressions noted by German soldiers. Nevertheless, we must keep in mind that such voices were in a minority. It is a remarkable fact that a considerable part of the systematic extermination of the European Jewry was committed by ordinary soldiers and members of the German military who somehow convinced themselves that this 610 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS was part of their military duties. They should, and often could, have known better. The written comments prove that many soldiers had some bad suspicions. Most of them took some pains to play down these suspicions—often with the help of the corresponding answers from their relatives.43 Obviously there were some sadists and extreme anti-Semites who enjoyed the power to kill. But as a compulsory army, unlike the SS taskforces, the majority of the Wehrmacht did not consist of deeply convinced Nazi members. Therefore, one can hardly overestimate the importance of these widespread strategies of affirmative interpretation, forced misreading and deliberate ignoring of the possibility of a German genocide against the European Jews. 5 Keeping this in mind, we might think differently about a controversy between Christopher Browning and Arno Mayer. Browning criticized Mayers’ interpretation of the Holocaust as a mere “by-product” of the anti-Bolshevik war, arguing that even before the war had begun the plans for a total reordering of Europe along racial lines had been drawn up in Berlin. But I think he was overreaching in the conclusion to his critique: For Mayer Jews were killed because they were identified with Bolshevism, because they were expendable labour, because they were easier prey than elusive partisan bands, because the Germans were increasingly enraged over their impending defeat, and so on. They were killed, according to Mayer, for every conceivable reason but the most simple and obvious: They were killed because they were Jews.44 To Browning, Mayer was simply wrong in this analysis because he ignored Hitler’s racial anti-Semitism as the most important reason for the war in the East. In contrast to this, I would argue that it is essential to differentiate between Hitler’s intentions—or even broader: the Nazi ideology—and the motives and pseudo-legitimations of the soldiers as the perpetrators of these plans. Thus, it is possible to find some reasons for their actions which reach far beyond the national socialist world-view with its anti-Semitism and racism. Only a few of these can be characterized as being partially identical with the aims of the national socialist movement (“Teilidentität der Ziele”), as has been said about the military leaders and their plans for the Wehrmacht as an institution.45 In fact, the absence of blind, ideologically induced hatred among the vast majority of soldiers involved in the killings, the predomination and radicalization of average, apparently harmless convictions from everyday life as seen in the letters (like the intolerant dictates of hygiene or strict “German” order), is actually much more disturbing than discovering that all the perpetrators were committed anti-Semites. Browning and Mayer pursue quite different questions. Browning’s emphasis on the Nazis’ plan for a “Final Solution” shows his interest in the underlying purposes of exterminating the Jews, while Mayer struggled with the detailed circumstances that enabled the historical actors to carry out these plans. Thus the latter talks about the concrete practical conditions of the mass killings, the former about 611 MICHAELA KIPP the responsibility of those who initiated the genocide. Without either of these prerequisites, the genocide would not have happened. From the controversy that has arisen between these two important lines of research, we can learn that the polarization between “systematic extermination” and “unintended results”—as far as the genocide against the European Jews during the Second World War is concerned—is inappropriate and doesn’t catch the point. For the German soldiers during their combat in Eastern Europe there was nothing like “the Holocaust,” despite—or rather because of—the fact that they were part of the genocide. One could not reduce the killings to a simple formula. In contemporary discourse, in Germany and in many other countries, the term “Holocaust” is often used as a mythical chiffre. That makes it very unspecific. It impedes our understanding of concrete circumstances and of the actual motivations of ordinary perpetrators on a lower level than the strategic planners and the Nazi elite. Therefore, it might be better to abstain from using the term. In this bottom up context, it seems more useful to talk about the concrete frames of action that are involved: about either military crimes, or genocide actions, or pogroms, or the brutalized partisan war, or mass shootings or single excesses—instead of using a catch-all term that veils more than it illuminates. Reading the letters of the soldiers, one becomes sensitive to the fatal power of the essentially different views, standpoints and motivations which ultimately added up to a catastrophe. Acknowledgements The author wishes to thank Professor Heinz-Gerhard Haupt, Donald Bloxham, Dominik Schaller, Jürgen Zimmerer, Sven Oliver Müller, Eberhard Ortland and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful remarks on earlier versions of this paper. Notes and References 1 The generalizations are based on a three years’ study of primary sources in several archives (StA Detmold, StA Osnabrück, Feldpostarchiv Berlin, BfZ Stuttgart, Stürmer-Archiv Nürnberg, BA-MA Freiburg, BA Koblenz) with 17 series of about 200 up to 4,000 letters each, and over 1,250 odd pieces, for my dissertation: “‘Spring clean in the East.’ Patterns of ‘order’ and ‘cleanliness’ among German ‘Wehrmacht’ soldiers and their perception of the Nazis’ extermination warfare in Eastern Europe 1939–1944” (University of Bielefeld, forthcoming). 2 According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word holocaust was first used to describe the ongoing catastrophe and imminent extinction of the Jewish people as early as 1942, even before any precise knowledge about Nazi extermination camps and incineration practices was available, in an article by the historian Ben Zion Dinur (Dinaburg) for the London News Chronicle. However, it was only after the war that the term was frequently (and since the 1960s more and more exclusively) applied by English-speaking authors to refer to the genocide against the European Jews. In Germany, it gained acceptance only in the 1980s after the 1979 broadcast of the American TV series Holocaust. See Wolfgang Benz, Der Holocaust (Munich: Beck, 1999). 3 For the main topics in soldiers’ letters, see Klaus Latzel, Deutsche Soldaten—nationalsozialistischer Krieg? Kriegserlebnis—Kriegserfahrung 1939–1945 (Munich and Paderborn: Schöningh 1998); Martin Humburg, Das Gesicht des Krieges. Feldpostbriefe von Wehrmachtssoldaten aus der Sowjetunion 1941–1944 (Wiesbaden and Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1998). 612 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS 4 Editions of letters: Walter Manoschek, ed., “Es gibt nur eines für das Judentum: Vernichtung.” Das Judenbild in deutschen Soldatenbriefen 1939–1944 (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1997); Ortwin Buchbender and Reinhold Sterz, eds, Das andere Gesicht des Krieges. Deutsche Feldpostbriefe 1939–1945 (Munich: Beck, 1982). 5 Quotations in this article—if not quoted differently—are from the archive of collection Sterz, BfZ Stuttgart, Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg. 6 7.12.1942, Sold. Sigbert M., 22 091, Trägerfrequenz Zug 28, z.Zt. on the train (on the way to the front): “Hier oben sieht man so viele Strafgefangenenlager, die Bauarbeiten und noch so verschiedenes machen. Juden kommen hier, das heißt in Auschwitz, wöchentlich 7-8000 an, die nach kurzem den ‘Heldentod’ sterben. Es ist doch gut, wenn man einmal in der Welt umher kommt.” 7 23.8.1943, Uffz. Heinz K., 3. techn.Kp./F.F.S. C 21, Bialystok: “Hier bei uns gibt es nicht viel Neues, die letzten Tage wurde das Ghetto hier ausgeräuchert. Leider konnten aber einige Juden türmen gehen, und ab und zu gibt es noch kleinere Schießereien.” 8 23.9.1942, Zahlm.d.R., Heinrich K., 37 634, H.K.P.610, Baranowitschi: “Daß unsere Stimmung durch die Taten und Arbeitslosigkeit nicht gerade gehoben wird, ist wohl klar. Zur Zeit sind wir außerdem durch eine neue Judenaktion beeindruckt; Einzelheiten, die ich Dir ersparen möchte, sah ich heute bei einem Gang längs des betreffenden Wohnviertels.” 9 About the Wehrmacht and its perpetrators see Stephen G. Fritz, Frontsoldaten. The German Soldier in World War II (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1995); Harald Welzer, Täter. Wie aus ganz normalen Menschen Massenmörder werden (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2005); Jochen Böhler, Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg. Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939 (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2006). On the juridical differences between active mass murders, perpetrators by command, bystanders, etc., see Herbert Jäger, Verbrechen unter totalitärer Herrschaft. Studien zur nationalsozialistischen Gewaltkriminalität (Olten: Suhrkamp, 1967), p 141. 10 Helmut Krausnick, Hitlers Einsatzgruppen. Die Truppe des Weltanschauungskrieges 1938–1942 (Frankfurt: Fischer, 1985). 11 Peter Jahn and Ulrike Schmiegelt, eds, Foto-Feldpost. Geknipste Kriegserlebnisse 1939–1945 (Berlin: Elefanten-Press, 2000); Klaus-Michael Mallmann, Volker Rieß and Wolfram Pyta, eds, Deutscher Osten 1939–1945. Der Weltanschauungskrieg in Photos und Texten (Darmstadt: WBG, 2003). 12 On the varying involvement of soldiers in crime actions, depending on their position in the army and place and time of deployment, see Christian Hartmann, “Verbrecherischer Krieg—verbrecherische Wehrmacht? Überlegungen zur Struktur des deutschen Ostheeres 1941–1944,” Vierteljahreshefte für Zeitgeschichte, Vol 1, 2004, pp 1–76. 13 Browning’s findings for the social dynamics in the police battalion are mostly of general interest and can be transferred to the soldiers of the Wehrmacht. See Christopher R. Browning, Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland (New York: Harper Collins, 1992). 14 11.7.1941 (written probably in Lemberg), Mj. Hans S., 33 691, Stab/Pi.Btl.652: “In der alten Zitadelle werden an diesem Tage 1000 Juden erschossen. Es ist dies eine Vergeltungsmaßnahme für die zur Bolschewistenzeit erschossenen 2800 Ukrainer. Dafür lassen jetzt 5600 Russen ihr Leben. Zwei Offiziere, die ich auf die Suche nach Draht und Eisenzeug geschickt hatte, berichten, daß die Juden gestorben wären, ohne irgendeinen Laut von sich zu geben. Nach dieser menschlich wohl bedauernswerten aber als abschreckendes Beispiel für das überhandnehmende Freischärlertum unbedingt notwendigen Maßregel erleben wir es, wie am nächsten Tage ein großer Teil Plünderer ihr gestohlenes Gut einfach auf die Straße setzten.” 15 Explanation of the military term “reprisal” by Lassa Oppenheim in H. Lauterpacht, ed., International Law. A Treatise, Vol. 2, War and Neutrality (London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1935), pp 447f.; compare Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung, ed., Verbrechen der Wehrmacht. Dimensionen des Vernichtungskriegs 1941–1944 (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 2002), p 24. 16 18.7.1941, O’Gefr. Georg B, 06 208, 13.Kp./Inf.Rgt.42, 46.Inf.Div.: “Hier wird auch die Judenfrage etwas anders als bei uns gelöst. Da treiben die Rumänen alle Juden zusammen und erschießen sie, ganz gleich ob Mann, Frau oder Kinder, denn zuerst war es umgekehrt.” 17 17.8.1941, Sold. Erich L., 24 768, Stab/Geb.Pz.Jäg.Abt.44, 1.Geb.Div.: “Die vielen hundert Kilometer, die wir nun zurückgelegt haben, zeigten uns die Härte und Grausamkeit diese Kampfes. Es ist mir nicht möglich, dies alles im einzelnen zu schildern, aber hier geht es wirklich um Sein oder Nichtsein. Je tiefer wir nach Rußland vorfuhren, um so mehr trafen wir auf Juden. Die Kerle sind noch genauso frech wie im tiefsten Frieden. Man sollte eigentlich noch viel mehr dieser Ausgeburten an die Wand stellen, als bisher geschehen ist.” 18 25.9.1941, O’Gefr. Richard T. v. F., 28 774, 2.Kp./Pi.Btl.70: “In einem Gefangenenzug konnte man neulich auch eine Anzahl Flintenweiber sehen, dann an einem Galgen sieben Juden hängen, die zu 14 für Sabotagezwecke hinten mit Fallschirmen absprangen. Von den oberen Fronten hört man ja wieder allerhand Erhebendes, es geht wohl heuer im Osten doch vollends auf’s ganze.” 613 MICHAELA KIPP 19 Wolfram Wette, Die Wehrmacht. Feindbilder, Vernichtungskrieg, Legenden (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2005); Omer Bartov, Hitler’s Army. Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995); on the indoctrination of the killing taskforces compare: Jürgen Matthäus, Ausbildungsziel Judenmord? “Weltanschauliche Erziehung” von SS, Polizei und Waffen-SS im Rahmen der “Endlösung” (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2003). 20 As, for example, Ernst G., who wrote to his wife, December 25, 1941: “Was in den letzten sechs Tagen vor sich ging, wirst Du in meinem Tagebuch suchen. Aber es befindet sich dort, wo ich auch die anderen vielen Dinge lassen mußte. Nur in meinem Hirn. Und dort ist auch ein dicker schwarzer Strich. Schweigen wir darüber.” Same author, April 21, 1942: “Bobi, vielleicht weißt Du, was in dieser Zeit hier los war. Ich will nicht mehr darüber sprechen, und möchte nicht daran denken.” Both Feldpost-Archiv Berlin. 21 See note 2. 22 On the tendency to play down the role of German soldiers for the realization of the Holocaust compare: Hannes Heer, Vom Verschwinden der Täter. Der Vernichtungskrieg fand statt, aber keiner war dabei (Berlin: Aufbau-Verlag, 2004); Harald Welzer, Sabine Moller and others, “Opa war kein Nazi.” Nationalsozialismus und Holocaust im Familiengedächtnis (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2002). 23 Thomas Kühne, “Kameradschaft—‘das Beste im Leben eines Mannes’. Die deutschen Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkriegs in erfahrungs- und geschlechtergeschichtlicher Perspektive,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft, Vol 22, 1996, pp 504 –530. 24 Two examples: 26.7.41, Sold. Werner F. 34 911 ¼ 4.Kp./Fla.M.G.Batl.(schw.)mot. Z 52, Slg. Sterz.: “Gestern sah ich eine der Megären vom russischen Frauenbataillon. Sie trug schwarze Pumphosen, schwarze Bluse und eine weite, schwarze Schirmmütze und sah entsetzlich fies aus.” September 14, 1941, Lance Corporal Heinrich D., 7. Komp. Schtz. Regt. 4., in front of Leningrad, diary of the 20-year-old soldier about the East campaign, 1941– 42, StA Detmold, D 70 B Nr. 16: “Dazwischen Flintenweiber, die den russischen Kompanien zugeteilt, dieselbe Uniform wie die Soldaten trugen und ebenso wie sie entmenschte Wesen, mit Gewehren, am M.G. und schweren Waffen kämpften. Da lagen sie nun von der tödlichen Kugel getroffen. Im Todesschmerz hatten einige ihre Uniformblusen aufgerissen und boten nun, vom Tod niedergeworfen und entblößt, das grauenhafte Bild verhöhnter Weiblichkeit.” 25 Lutz Klinkhammer speaks in this context about the “male matrix of war” (“männliche Matrix des Krieges”). See Lutz Klinkhammer, “Der Partisanenkrieg der Wehrmacht 1941–1944,” in Rolf-Dieter Müller and Hans-Erich Volkmann, Die Wehrmacht. Mythos und Realität (Munich: Oldenbourg, 1999), pp 815–836. Compare for World War I: Hanna Hacker, “Ein Soldat ist meistens keine Frau. Geschlechterkonstruktionen im militärischen Feld,” Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie, Vol 20, No 2, 1995, pp 45 –63. 26 Order of the “Chef des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht” with “Führerbefehl” from 16.12.1942, StAN, NOKW-068. 27 “Die Esten sind ganz ordentliche Leute, nur etwas weich.” From a soldier’s letter quoted in: Stephan Linck, Der Ordnung verpflichtet. Deutsche Polizei 1933–1949. Der Fall Flensburg (Munich: Schöningh, 2000), p 115. 28 Manuel Frey, Der reinliche Bürger. Entstehung und Verbreitung bürgerlicher Tugenden in Deutschland, 1760–1860 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1997). 29 Stephan Linck, “‘Ordnung und Sauberkeit . . .’ Briefe Flensburger Ordnungspolizisten 1944,” Sowi, Vol 26, No 1, 1997, pp 42–47; Sarah Jansen, “Schädlinge.” Geschichte eines wissenschaftlichen und politischen Konstrukts 1840– 1920 (Frankfurt: Campus, 2003); Klaus Theweleit, Männerphantasien (Frankfurt: Piper, 1977), in particular Vol 1, Chapter 2: “Vermischung der Körperränder: Schmutz, Schlamm, Sumpf, Schleim, Brei, Hinten, Scheiße,” pp 492–507. Compare the analogue expressions for torture during the French Algerian War: Kristin Ross, “Hausputz,” in Christoph Conrad and Martina Kessel, eds, Kultur und Geschichte. Neue Einblicke in eine alte Beziehung (Stuttgart: Reclam, 1998), pp 362–383. More generally, compare: Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London: Routledge and Paul, 1966); Christian Enzensberger, Größerer Versuch über den Schmutz (Munich: 1968), pp 23f.; and the special issue of the journal Sowi on cleanliness: “Sauberkeit. Geschichte einer Praxis,” Sowi, Vol 26, No 1, 1997. 30 For categories of “social knowledge,” see Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann, The Social Construction of Reality (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1966). 31 From a letter of the soldier Hans N. to his family, April 29, 1944, in Russia (Staatsarchiv Detmold, D70b): “Man wird hier ja direkt unanständig anspruchslos! Tägliches Toilettemachen entfällt, da wir kein Wasser herbeischaffen können. Der Mund wird mit einem Schluck Kaffee ausgespült, der Bart wächst, blüht und gedeiht! Man darf an normale menschliche (deutsche) Verhältnisse aber auch gar nicht denken, dann hakt es aus!” 32 Mitteilungen für die Truppe, December 1941, No 163: “Wer die verkommenen Dörfer, die verluderten Wege und die kümmerlichen Städte in der Fremde sah, der weiß, welches Geschenk es ist, dem deutschen Volk anzugehören, dessen Menschen seit vielen Generationen aufgebaut und, verglichen mit dem Osten, aus Deutschland einen gepflegten Garten, ein Schmuckkästlein geschaffen haben.” 614 THE HOLOCAUST IN THE LETTERS OF GERMAN SOLDIERS 33 From an annual report of the Soldier Hans N. to his family, 1944, in Russia (Staatsarchiv Detmold, D70b): “Doch da ich gerade bei den Quartieren bin, will ich etwas im Folgenden von den Quartierwirten erzählen. Die Belegschaft setzte sich fast ausschließlich aus Großvätern, Großmüttern, Müttern und Kindern, sämtlichen Urenkeln zusammen. Nach Möglichkeit suchten wir uns ja die ‘besten’ Quartiere aus, immer konnte man aber sagen: Wie haust ihr nur! [. . .] Entschuldigt, aber wenn die folgenden Schilderungen wahrheitsgetreu ausfallen sollen, ich wesentliche Punkte nicht einfach unter den Tisch fallen lassen soll, dann müßt ihr andererseits euer esthetisches [sic] Gefühl mal etwas ausschalten. Wir haben das schon längst über Bord geworfen—werfen müssen.” 34 A lieutenant’s letter (no date given in original): Leutnant d.SchP.d.R. St. Ordonnanzoff. im Bat.-Stab. No 3: “Hier erst merkt man, wie schön unsere Heimat ist. Die sozialen Mißstände sind nicht zu schildern. Schmutz und Dreck. Eine große Prozentzahl der Einwohner sind Juden. Umso dringender war die Lösung der Judenfrage. Sie wird nach deutschem Muster von der ungarischen Regierung jetzt energisch vorangetrieben. Eine restlose Vernichtung ist alleine schon erforderlich, um dem russischen Elendsvolk bessere Lebensbedingungen zu geben.” 35 Lippische Staatszeitung, May 16, 1943, author of the article: Prof. Dr. Johann von Leers (Staatsarchiv Detmold), quoted in Andreas Ruppert and Hansjörg Riechert, Herrschaft und Akzeptanz. Der Nationalsozialismus in Lippe während der Kriegsjahre. Analyse und Dokumentation (Opladen: Leske & Budrich, 1998), p 93: “Das Ergebnis für den Arzt muß die restlose Ausschaltung der Cholera sein, das Ergebnis für unser Volk muß die restlose Ausschaltung der Juden sein.” 36 Training book of the Wehrmacht from 1939: “Der Jude in der deutschen Geschichte,” in Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, ed., Schulungshefte für den Unterricht über nationalsozialistische Weltanschauung und nationalpolitische Zielsetzung (Berlin: Zentral verlag der NSDAP, 1939): “Das Weltjudentum aber bekämpfen wir, wie man einen giftigen Parasiten bekämpfen muß; wir treffen in ihm nicht nur einen Feind unseres Volkes, sondern eine Plage aller Völker.” 37 Tim C. Richter, “Die Wehrmacht und der Partisanenkrieg in den besetzten Gebieten der Sowjetunion,” pp 837–857. 38 “Hier erleben die Juden ihr Fiasko.” From a letter of the ordinary soldier Ernst G., February 3, 1942, in the East (Feldpost-Archiv Berlin). 39 Omer Bartov, Mirrors of Destruction. War, Genocide, and Modern Identity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), p 109. 40 28.5.1942, K.V.-Insp. Heinrich K., 37 634, H.K.P.610, Brest/Bug: “Sorge macht mir die Ernährung unserer polnischen Zivilisten, deren Arbeitsleistung stark absinkt. Wir erhalten für sie nur soviel Lebensmittel, daß wir fünfmal in der Woche bei 60stündiger Arbeitszeit eine klägliche Suppe reichen können, und was die Leute außerdem durch die städtische Zivilverwaltung bekommen, ist völlig ungenügend. Noch schlimmer steht’s bei den Juden, von denen manche bei dringenden Straßenarbeiten bei Hunger einfach umfallen. Dagegen hilft auch kein Prügeln oder Erschießen.” 41 27.6.1943, Sold. Heinrich R., 47 168, Pferde-Laz.575, Dünaburg: “Die Bevölkerung ist uns Deutschen nicht gut gesinnt. Die Stadt Dünaburg ist bis zur Hälfte auch nur noch ein Trümmerfeld. Hier lebten bis zu 75% Juden. Diese haben ihre Häuser, meist ehe die Deutschen kamen, selbst gesprengt oder verbrannt. Daraufhin sind zusammen 30 000 Juden nicht weit von der Stadt erschossen worden. Außerdem sind an anderen Leuten auch von uns viele Erschießungen vollstreckt worden über Kleinigkeiten. Der Deutsche ist einmal dadurch nirgends gern gesehen. Die Leute sind mißtrauisch.” 42 18.7.1942, Zahlm.d.R., Heinrich K., 37 634, H.K.P.610, Brest/Bug: “In Bereza–Kartuska, wo ich Mittagsstation machte, hatte man gerade am Tag vorher etwa 1300 Juden erschossen. Sie wurden zu einer Kuhle außerhalb des Orte gebracht, Männer, Frauen und Kinder mußten sich dort völlig ausziehen und wurden durch Genickschuß erledigt. Die Kleider wurden desinfiziert und wieder verwendet. Ich bin der Überzeugung: Wenn der Krieg noch länger dauert, wird man die Juden auch noch zu Wurst verarbeiten und den russischen Kriegsgefangenen oder den gelernten jüdischen Arbeitern vorsetzen müssen.” 43 See, for example, the letters between Gertrud S. and her son Helmut S. from Poland (1940) and Russia (end 1941–44), Feldpostarchiv Berlin, digital transcript. 44 Compare Christopher Browning, The Path to Genocide. Essays on Launching the Final Solution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), pp 77 –85, quotation from p 84. 45 The original quotation is from Manfred Messerschmidt, Die Wehrmacht im NS-Staat, Zeit der Indoktrination (Hamburg: von Decker, 1969), p 1. Latzel suggests one should talk analogously about the “Teilidentität der Motive” of soldiers and the national socialist movement, compare: Klaus Latzel, Deutsche Soldaten, p 370, as well as Klaus Latzel, “Wehmachtssoldaten zwischen ‘Normalität’ und NS-Ideologie, oder: Was sucht die Forschung in der Feldpost?,” in Rolf-Dieter Müller and Hans Erich Volkmann, Die Wehrmacht. Mythos und Realität (Munich: Schöningh, 1999). 615