Taking Over the Universities
Even as the Gestapo was organizing its
program of terror and intimidation, one group after another was pledging its
support to National Socialism. That process could most clearly be seen in the
nation’s universities, which had always boasted of their autonomy. Peter
Drucker, an Austrian economist, was then a lecturer at Frankfurt University.
Fearful of Hitler’s plans for Germany, he was prepared to leave the country but
hoped that it would not be necessary to do so. An incident convinced him
otherwise.
What made me
decide to leave right away, several weeks after Hitler had come to power, was
the first Nazi-led faculty meeting at the university. Frankfurt was the first
university the Nazis tackled, precisely because it was the most
self-confidently liberal of major German universities, with a faculty that
prided itself on its allegiance to scholarship, freedom of conscience and
democracy. The Nazis therefore knew that control of Frankfurt University would
mean control of German academia. And so did everyone at the university.
Above all,
Frankfurt had a science faculty distinguished both by its scholarship and by
its liberal convictions; and outstanding among the Frankfurt scientists was a
biochemist-physiologist of Nobel-Prize caliber and impeccable liberal credentials.
When the appointment of a Nazi commissar for Frankfurt was announced
(around February 25 of that year) and every teacher and graduate assistant at
the university was summoned to a faculty meeting to hear this new master,
everybody knew that a trial of strength was at hand. I had never before
attended a faculty meeting, but I did attend this one.
The new Nazi
commissar wasted no time on the amenities. He immediately announced that Jews
would be forbidden to enter university premises and would be dismissed without
salary on March 15; this was something no one had thought possible despite the
Nazis’ loud anti-Semitism. Then he launched into a tirade of abuse, filth, and
four-letter words such as had been heard rarely even in the barracks and never before
in academia. He pointed his finger at one department chairman after another and
said, “You either do what I tell you or we’ll put you into a concentration
camp.” There was silence when he finished; everybody waited for the
distinguished biochemist-physiologist. The great liberal got up, cleared his
throat, and said, “Very interesting, Mr. Commissar, and in some respects very
illuminating: but one point I didn’t get too clearly. Will there be more money
for research in physiology?”
The meeting
broke up shortly thereafter with the commissar assuring the scholars that
indeed there would be plenty of money for “racially pure science.” A few of the
professors had the courage to walk out with their Jewish colleagues, but
most kept a safe distance from these men who only a few hours earlier had been
their close friends. I went out sick unto death – and I knew that I was going
to leave Germany within forty-eight hours.
Do You Take the Oath?
Soldiers were not the only ones required
to take the new oath. A German recalled the day he was asked to pledge
loyalty to the regime.
I was
employed in a defense plant (a war plant, of course, but they were always
called defense plants). That was the year of the National Defense Law, the
law of “total conscription.”
Under the law
I was required to take the oath of fidelity. I said I would not;
I opposed it in conscience. I was given twenty-four hours to “think it
over.” In those twenty-four hours I lost the world...
You see,
refusal would have meant the loss of my job, of course, not prison or anything
like that. (Later on, the penalty was worse, but this was only 1935.) But
losing my job would have meant that I could not get another. Wherever I went I
should be asked why I left the job I had, and when I said why, I should
certainly have been refused employment. Nobody would hire a “Bolshevik.” Of
course, I was not a Bolshevik, but you understand what I mean.
I tried not
to think of myself or my family. We might have got out of the country, in any
case, and I could have got a job in industry or education somewhere else.
What I tried
to think of was the people to whom I might be of some help later on, if things
got worse (as I believed they would). I had a wide friendship in scientific and
academic circles, including many Jews, and “Aryans,” too, who might be in
trouble. If I took the oath and held my job, I might be of help, somehow, as
things went on. If I refused to take the oath, I would certainly be useless to
my friends, even if I remained in the country. I myself would be in their
situation.
The next day,
after “thinking it over,” I said I would take the oath with the mental
reservation, that, by the words with which the oath began, “Ich schwoere bei
Gott,” “I swear by God,” I understood that no human being and no government had
the right to override my conscience. My mental reservations did not interest
the official who administered the oath. He said, “Do you take the oath?” and I
took it. That day the world was lost, and it was I who lost it.
First of all,
there is the problem of the lesser evil. Taking the oath was not so evil as
being unable to help my friends later on would have been. But the evil of
the oath was certain and immediate, and the helping of my friends was in the
future and therefore uncertain. I had to commit a positive evil there and then,
in the hope of a possible good later on. The good outweighed the evil;
but the good was only a hope, the evil a fact ... The hope might not
have been realized – either for reasons beyond my control or because I became
afraid later on or even because I was afraid all the time and was simply
fooling myself when I took the oath in the first place.
But
that is not the important point. The problem of the lesser evil we all know
about; in Germany we took Hindenburg as less evil than Hitler, and in the end,
we got them both. But that is not why I say that Americans cannot understand.
No, the important point is – how many innocent people were killed by the
Nazis, would you say?… Shall we say, just to be safe, that three million
innocent people were killed all together?… And how many innocent lives would
you like to say I saved?… Perhaps five, or ten, one doesn’t know. But shall we
say a hundred, or a thousand, just to be safe?… And it would be better to have
saved all three million, instead of only a hundred, or a thousand? There, then,
is my point. If I had refused to take the oath of fidelity, I would have saved
all three million...
There I was,
in 1935, a perfect example of the kind of person who, with all his advantages
in birth, in education, and in position, rules (or might easily rule) in any
country. If I had refused to take the oath in 1935, it would have meant that
thousands and thousands like me, all over Germany, were refusing to take it.
Their refusal would have heartened millions. Thus the regime would have been
overthrown, or, indeed, would never have come to power in the first place. The
fact that I was not prepared to resist, in 1935, meant that all the thousands,
hundreds of thousands, like me in Germany were also unprepared, and each one of
these hundreds of thousands was, like me, a man of great influence or of great
potential influence. Thus the world was lost...
These hundred
lives I saved – or a thousand or ten as you will – what do they represent? A
little something out of the whole terrible evil, when, if my faith
had been strong enough in 1935, I could have prevented the whole
evil... My faith, I did not believe that I could “remove mountains.” The
day I said, “No,” I had faith. In the process of “thinking it over,” in the
next twenty-four hours, my faith failed me. So, in the next ten years, I was
able to remove only anthills, not mountains.
Their
resistance was no greater than other men’s. My education did not help me,
and I had a broader and better education than most men have had or ever will
have. All it did, in the end, was to enable me to rationalize my failure of
faith more easily than I might have done if I had been ignorant. And so it was,
I think, among educated men generally, in that time in Germany.
Reserve Police Battalion 101
Who were the perpetrators? What kind of
person massacres civilians? Slaughters old people? Murders babies? To find
answers to such questions, historian Christopher Browning studied
interrogations made in the 1960s and early 1970s of 210 men in Reserve Police
Battalion 101. The battalion was originally formed from the German equivalent
of city policemen and county sheriffs. After 1939, it and other Order Police
battalions also served as occupation forces in conquered territory. Battalion
101 was assigned to the district of Lubin in Poland.
Like the National Guard in the United
States, battalions were organized regionally. Most of the soldiers in Battalion
101 came from working and lower-middle-class neighborhoods in Hamburg, Germany.
They were older than the men who fought in the front lines. The average age was
thirty-nine with over half between thirty-seven and forty-two. Most were not
well-educated. The majority had left school by the age of fifteen. Very few
were Nazis and none was openly anti-semitic. Major Wilhelm Trapp, a 53-year-old
career police officer who rose through the ranks, headed the battalion.
Although he became a Nazi in 1932, he was not a member of the SS, although
his two captains were.
The unit’s first killing mission took
place on July 13, 1942. Browning used interrogations to piece together the
events of that day.
Just as
daylight was breaking, the men arrived at the village [of Jozefow] and
assembled in a half-circle around Major Trapp, who proceeded to give a short
speech. With choking voice and tears in his eyes, he visibly fought to control
himself as he informed his men that they had received orders to perform a very
unpleasant task. These orders were not to his liking, but they came from above.
It might perhaps make their task easier, he told the men, if they remembered
that in Germany bombs were falling on the women and children. Two witnesses
claimed that Trapp also mentioned that the Jews of this village had supported
the partisans. Another witness recalled Trapp’s mentioning that the Jews had
instigated the boycott against Germany. Trapp then explained to the men that
the Jews in Jozefow would have to be rounded up, whereupon the young males were
to be selected out for labor and the others shot.
Trapp then
made an extraordinary offer to his battalion: if any of the older men among
them did not feel up to the task that lay before him, he could step out. Trapp
paused, and after some moments, one man stepped forward. The captain of
3rd company, enraged that one of his men had broken ranks, began to berate
the man. The major told the captain to hold his tongue. Then ten or twelve
other men stepped forward as well. They turned in their rifles and were told to
await a further assignment from the major.
Trapp then
summoned the company commanders and gave them their respective assignments. Two
platoons of 3rd company were to surround the village; the men were explicitly
ordered to shoot anyone trying to escape. The remaining men were to round up
the Jews and take them to the market place. Those too sick or frail to walk to
the market place, as well as infants and anyone offering resistance or
attempting to hide, were to be shot on the spot. Thereafter, a few men of 1st
company were to accompany the work Jews selected at the market place, while the
rest were to proceed to the forest to form the firing squads. The Jews were to
be loaded onto battalion trucks by 2nd company and shuttled from the market
place to the forest.
Having given
the company commanders their respective assignments, Trapp spent the rest of
the day in town, mostly in a schoolroom converted into his headquarters but
also at the homes of the Polish mayor and the local priest. Witnesses who saw
him at various times during the day described him as bitterly complaining about
the orders he had been given and “weeping like a child.” He nevertheless
affirmed that “orders were orders” and had to be carried out. Not a single
witness recalled seeing him at the shooting site, a fact that was not lost on
the men, who felt some anger about it. Trapp’s driver remembers him saying
later, “If this Jewish business is ever avenged on earth, then have mercy on us
Germans.”
What Did People Know?
Holocaust survivor
Primo Levi was often asked, “Did the Germans know what was happening?” He replied
with a question of his own. “How is it possible that the extermination of
millions of human beings could have been carried out in the heart of Europe
without anyone’s knowledge?” He concluded:
In spite of
the varied possibilities for information, most Germans didn’t know because they
didn’t want to know. Because, indeed, they wanted not to know. It is certainly
true that State terrorism is a very strong weapon, very difficult to resist.
But it is also true that the German people, as a whole, did not even try to
resist. In Hitler’s Germany a particular code was widespread: those who knew
did not talk; those who did not know did not ask questions; those who did ask
questions received no answers. In this way the typical German citizen won and
defended his ignorance, which seemed to him sufficient justification of his
adherence to Nazism. Shutting his mouth, his eyes and his ears, he built for
himself the illusion of not knowing, hence not being an accomplice to the
things taking place in front of his very door.
In The Destruction of European Jews,
Raul Hilberg proved that
many had the opportunity to know about the killings: Organizing the
transportation of victims from all over Europe to the concentration camps
involved a countless number of railroad employees and clerical workers who had
to work the trains and maintain the records. National Railroad tickets were
marked for a one-way trip. Currency exchange at the borders had to be handled.
Finance ministers of Germany moved to seize the pensions of victims from banks,
yet the banks requested proof of death. Many building contracts and patents for
ovens and gas chambers were required...
The railroads
were an independent corporation which was fully aware of the consequences of
its decisions. The civilian railroad workers involved in operating rails to
Auschwitz were simply performing their daily tasks. These were individual
people making individual decisions. They were not ordered or even assigned. Orders
from the SS to the railroads were not even stamped “secret” because that would
admit guilt of something abnormal in the bureaucracy. The many clerical workers
who handled these orders were fully aware of the purpose of Auschwitz.
For the film
Shoah, Claude Lanzmann interviewed Walter Stier, the person responsible for
“special trains.”
Q: What’s the difference between a special and a regular
train?
A regular train may be used by anyone who purchases a
ticket. Say from Krakow to Warsaw. Or from Krakow to Lemberg. A special train
has to be ordered. The train is specially put together and people pay group
fares...
Q: ...but why were there more special trains during the war
than before or after?
I see what you’re getting at.
You’re referring to the so-called resettlement trains.
Q: “Resettlement.”
That’s it.
That’s
what they were called. Those trains were ordered by the Ministry of Transport
of the Reich. You needed an order from the Ministry...
Q: But
mostly, at that time, who was being “resettled”?
No. We didn’t know that. Only when we were fleeing
from Warsaw ourselves,
did we learn that they could have been Jews, or
criminals, or similar people.
Q: Jews,
criminals?
Criminals. All kinds.
Q: Special
trains for criminals?
No,
that was just an expression. You couldn’t talk about that. Unless you were tired
of life, it was best not to mention that.
Q: But
you knew that the trains to Treblinka or Auschwitz were –
Of
course we knew. I was the last district; without me these trains couldn’t reach
their destination. For instance, a train that started in Essen had to go
through the districts of Wuppertal, Hannover, Magdeburg, Berlin,
Frankfurt/Oder, Posen, Warsaw, etcetera. So I had to...
Q: Did
you know that Treblinka meant extermination?
Of course not!
Q: You didn’t know?
Good God, no! How could we know? I never went to Treblinka.
I stayed in Krakow, in Warsaw, glued to my desk.
Q: You were a…
I was strictly a bureaucrat!
No comments:
Post a Comment