Posted on 11/18/2017 11:34:02 PM PST by Berlin_Freeper
Between 1944 and 1947, an estimated 12 million ethnic Germans fled or were expelled from their homes. Overshadowed by the crimes of the Nazis, their stories have often received little international attention. But these days, as Bethany Bell reports from Germany, the new arrivals from Syria have awakened old memories about what it means to flee.
Christa Nolte carefully lifted a little book out of a box of family papers.
"This is what my grandmother, Anna, took with her when we fled," she told me. "It was important for her to save it."
It was a pocket-sized Lutheran hymnal, the Silesian Church's Songbook.
Christa was a war baby, born in April 1943. Her family came from the town of Goldberg in Silesia, which back then was part of Germany. Today it's in Poland.
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.com ...
The war in Syria is pretty much over now. Just saying.
good post -
but enquiring minds want to know will Merkel chuck Seehofer and form a minority govt with the TreeHuggers & the not-quite libertarians ?
will Seehofer see the light at the last minute today ?
'Why some Germans look at Syrian refugees and see themselves as DOOMED'.
There. Fixed it.
Shared Jew-hatred?
Seehofer has a lot of inner party fighting to deal with.
Given that the Germans killed members of my family, impoverished them and destroyed and the country I was born in (then left it to the communists), my pity for Germans is exactly - NIL.
Oh I have no problem with individual Germans (so long as they are well-behaved, and most of them are), I just will never have a warm fuzzy for Germany as a concept - or for the German language, the mere sound of which sets the hair on the back of my neck standing up. (And I was born after the war.)
So if the Germans wish to commit national suicide by importing several million unassimilable Mohamedans, I wouldn’t care - except that via the G-D vehicle called The EU they have thus imported them into ALL of Western Europe, as well as bullied other nations into doing the same.
At this point I’ll refrain from commenting further lest my language get me in trouble.
The West is doomed. DOOMED. In the long run, it will be up to the Far East to save civilization from the savages.
Thanks for posting, BF. The German diaspora at the conclusion of WW II is not well known at all. My paternal Great Grandparents had left Cologne in th e1890s and moved east to Danzig. They lived only a couple of miles from Westerplatte where the war started in 1939. Six years later, the Red Army marched into Danzig and threw all the Germans out. They were told to pack and leave by sundown. They were in their sixtiees when that happened and they left their factories and home behind. They lost everything but their lives. They walked back to Cologne and lived only a few years more in a shack in some friend’s backyard. My grandparents had left Germany in 1927 and didn’t experience it.
That was 3 generations ago. I don’t think very many remember it personally.
What about the Al-Nusra Front and other non-ISIS jihadi groups? Have they also been destroyed? Will the Assad government and the Kurds be able to coexist peacefully? Or will Assad try to subjugate the Kurds?
indeed - but will he compromise today before 1800 ?
many recall it vividly -
No doubt many still remember. But that hardly explains the German mindset of sympathy toward refugees when they’re outnumbered 1,000 to 1 by people who have never seen a day of war.
All of the Germans fleeing were the elderly and women and children. Almost all of the Syrians fleeing are military age men.
To differing degrees these sort of traumatic life experiences get passed down a generation or two.
or get the hell out of Dodge!
The BBC is trying to be the caliphate’s pet western west outlet when Eurostan falls.
But for starters: German refugees didn't flee to other countries. They fled (either because they were "bombed out" of their residences in the big cities or because the Soviets were invading) to other regions of Germany - where they were usually viewed with contempt, distrust, and at best pity by the local Germans. Also, they received minimal support from the State.
Read "The German War," by Nicholas Stargardt.
Regards,
Wow...excellent post. Thank you
But for starters: German refugees didn't flee to other countries.Immaterial. They were still war refugees on the run for their lives. Whether it be for shelter or safety from shooting/bombing/etc.
As to how they were treated. Regardless of what you read many were taken care of. Maybe not by government, as that had collapsed due to losing the war. I have read accounts of even soldiers getting clothes from civilians so they could blend in and avoid detainment.
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