Albert Battel |
While some of those officers claimed after the
war they had no choice but to take part in the Holocaust each man had a choice.
Bernie refused to take part and asked for a transfer to a front line unit.
Instead, he was transferred to an intelligence unit investigating war crimes.
Bernie’s
actions are supported by real life. At the Berlin exhibition referred to in the
last post it was stated:
"There was certainly no such
thing as an obligation to obey orders," said police historian and project
manager Detlef Graf von Schwerin. No evidence has been found that suggests
refusal to take part in a mass execution would have had negative consequences for
policemen, but very few dared to defy orders, he said.
One of the most powerful examples of direct
action involved Dr. Albert Battel. As set out on his page at The Righteous
Among the Nations page at the Yad Vasham website:
When the SS prepared to launch their
first large-scale “resettlement” (liquidation) action against the Jews of
Przemysl on July 26, 1942, Battel, in consort with his superior, ordered the
bridge over the River San, the only access into the Jewish ghetto, to be
blocked. As the SS commando attempted to cross to the other side, the
sergeant-major in charge of the bridge threatened to open fire unless they
withdrew. All this happened in broad daylight, to the amazement of the
local inhabitants. Still later that same afternoon, an army detachment
under the command of Oberleutenant Battel broke into the cordoned-off
area of the ghetto and used army trucks to whisk off up to 100 Jews and their
families to the barracks of the local military command. These Jews were
placed under the protection of the Wehrmacht and were thus sheltered from
deportation to the Belzec extermination camp. The remaining ghetto inmates,
including the head of the Judenrat, Dr. Duldig, underwent “resettlement” in the
following days.
His actions were reported up the SS command
and reached Heinrich Himmler but Battel was only reprimanded. He was
subsequently promoted. Himmler vowed to have him prosecuted after the war.
I do not know if it made a difference but
Battel was a lawyer.
Stangl tried to say he would likely have been
shot if he had not built and commanded Sobibór. His assertion
of what happened to someone who said “no” was not supported by the example of an
Auschwitz doctor, Dr. Hans Münch who refused to take part in the selection
process of prisoners arriving at Auschwitz on who would go immediately to the
gas chambers.
While working as a research pathologist at a
medical institute near Auschwitz. Directed to work on mass immunization
techniques because of typhoid and typhus epidemics he did immunization
experiments but subverted the intent by ensuring they were harmless and getting
extra rations for those participating.
Gitta Sereny interviewed Dr. Münch:
It was in mid-1944 that he finally felt forced to take a
stand. A new camp commandant decided that as all the SS doctors were being
overworked the two Rajsko research physicians had been sufficiently coddled,
and would now have to take part in the selection. ‘I traveled to Berlin and
told my department chief that doing that was against all my medical ethical
principles and that I refused. He asked who had ordered me to do it, and said
that certainly I didn’t have to'.
His assistant, Dr. Delmod, initially refused
but, after being worn down by triple shifts and visited by his wife, was talked
into taking part in the selections. Dr. Delmod committed suicide at the end of
the war.
After the war forty SS doctors from Auschwitz
were tried in Poland. Dr. Münch was the only one acquitted.
What it took to resist being drawn into the
killing was strong character.
By the time I completed German Requiem I say he did not sacrifice his honour. He did not
conspire against the Nazi state but focused on surviving the war. (Nebe, after returning
from his command in Russia, was a member of the 1944 conspiracy to kill Hitler
and was executed for his actions.)
Bernie was never an angel but he refused to
join in mass murder.
****
Kerr, Philip – (2004) - Dark Matter; (2016) - March Violets; (2016) - The Pale Criminal; (2016) - A German Requiem; (2016) - Berlin Police and the Holocaust - Part I and Part II
You put that very well, Bill. Bernie is no angel, but he does have character and he does have strength. And so did the people who, in real life, refused to participate in the Holocaust. There is always a choice people can make, and your examples show that clearly.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I hope we are more ready to confront fanaticism earlier in politics as a result of the examples of the 20th Century.
ReplyDeleteInteresting topic. I can't read about WWII, but as we discussed earlier, there were many resisters in all ways throughout Europe, including children and teenagers. Read about an 18-year-old woman in Malta who used a machine gun in the resistance; unfortunately, she was caught.
ReplyDeleteSo was an uncle of an artist I've met. He was in the Dutch resistance but was caught so the artist never met him.
In Germany, the New York Times a few years ago reported that 800,000 people were in jail for opposing the Third Reich. Many did not survive, but they protested in one way or another, including Sophie Stoll and her compatriots in the White Rose.
Aside from the political murders, there are sociopaths around the world, including in the States. The gun violence is unfathomable, mostly carried out by young white men. What are the reasons? Alienation, depression, etc.
Yet in Canada where I think the gun ownership rate is about the same, there is barely any gun violence compared to the States. I wonder what the differences are, maybe jobs, education, health care are available. Also, I think the racism here is much worse due to the history of slavery and Jim Crow segregation.
Kathy D.: Thanks for the comment. Canada's homicide rate is about one-third of America. While many Canadians have long guns it is difficult to get assault weapons and very difficult to get a handgun. We have our own issues with racism.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you do, especially with racism towards First Nations. That exists here, too, given the conditions of life, discrimination against and impoverishment of Native peoples.
ReplyDeleteKathy D.: Thanks for the comment. I live in a province with 10% of our population being indigenous we have many issues to resolve in the future.
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