Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Hiding in plain sight: An unusual and controversial chapter in Holocaust history
Dateline NBC via MSNBC.com ^ | June 9, 2002 | Josh Mankiewicz

Posted on 06/09/2002 4:43:18 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur

Most people know about the Holocaust and the millions sent to their deaths in Adolph Hitler’s “Final Solution.” But what you may not know about is the thousands — perhaps hundreds of thousands — of German men with Jewish backgrounds who were able to escape extermination and how they did it by hiding from the Nazi killing machine — but incredibly, hiding in plain sight. Correspondent Josh Mankiewicz reports.

See link for rest of story


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-33 next last
I normally don't watch the network news programs but I stumbled on this absolutely fascinating story on soldiers of Jewish descent in the German Army during WWII. I'll have to dig up the book.
1 posted on 06/09/2002 4:43:18 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Weikel,Shermy, Torie;Dan from Michigan;JMJ333; bok ;Diogenes of Sinope ;spetznaz ;eodguy...
Dateline article:
“I WAS AFRAID for every minute from them,” says Nachemia Wurman. “I was suspicious for every move from them. I thought that behind me somebody’s going to kill me.”

He’s Jewish. But during World War II, Nachemia Wurman not only wore a German army uniform, he helped feed and supply German soldiers — not because he sympathized with them, but simply to survive.

Does he have any sense of guilt about that?

That he sort of was working with the same army that wanted to exterminate him?

“The best hiding place was in the mouth of the wolf,” says Wurman.

And Wurman wasn’t alone.

While Adolf Hitler was working toward the domination of Europe and the extermination of the Jews, thousands of young men of Jewish descent were serving in the Fuhrer’s armed forces.

How many of the other German boys in the army knew that your mother was a Jew?

“In the army? Nobody knew it,” says Hans-Geert Falkenberg.

Falkenberg didn’t tell anyone. Even as millions of Jews were falling in concentration camps, some soldiers — who were Jewish by Nazi standards — became decorated and distinguished German heroes. And incredibly, thousands of partial Jews served with Adolf Hitler’s personal blessing.

The irony is stunning. Even as millions of Jews were falling in concentration camps, some soldiers — who were Jewish by Nazi standards — became decorated and distinguished German heroes. And incredibly, thousands of partial Jews served with Adolf Hitler’s personal blessing.

“It’s totally shocking,” says author Bryan Marc Rigg. “In fact, when I began this research, I didn’t even believe that this was possible.”

It’s an unusual chapter in Holocaust history that might not have been publicized without the fervent, if not obsessive, work of a rather unusual historian.

Bryan Mark Rigg isn’t a grandchild of survivors or an established Holocaust scholar. In fact, he’s an earnest 31-year-old former Marine who had no real interest in the Holocaust before visiting Germany the summer after his freshman year at Yale.

“Dateline” spoke with Rigg at the place where the details of Hitler’s final solution were agreed on by the Fuhrer’s senior counselors — the infamous Wannsee villa, in Berlin, a city that’s also the birthplace of Bryan Rigg’s search for the truth about the overlap between German Jews and the German army.

“Such a beautiful place, and it was an event of unimaginable evil that took place here,” says Rigg.

“I was here in Berlin in 1992, learning German, and I asked one of my instructors if he could recommend a film I could watch to improve my German. And he told me that I should go see the film ‘Europa, Europa.’”

The film is based on the true story of a German Jew who survived the war by working for the German army and hiding his real identity. In the theater, Rigg met an older man who told him he had lived a similar life and Rigg wondered if there were more like him.

But back at Yale, where Rigg returned to start researching the Jews in Hitler’s army, his professors were underwhelmed.

“They said, basically, ‘Hey, we studied this for 20 or 30 years, and we’ve never heard about this,” says Rigg. “You should study some serious German history and not chase after some curious anomalies who will not add anything to our understanding of the Third Reich.’”

So basically, there’s probably nothing there, and if there is something there, it’s not significant anyway? “Absolutely,” says Rigg. In four years of criss-crossing Germany by bicycle and train, Rigg says he interviewed 430 former soldiers and documented thousands more who were both German and of Jewish descent.

But Rigg began the research anyway. It quickly became a sort of personal quest, and in four years of criss-crossing Germany by bicycle and train, Rigg says he interviewed 430 former soldiers and documented thousands more who were both German and of Jewish descent.

“It’s an enormous piece of work that has to be respected,” says Michael Berenbaum, a distinguished Holocaust scholar, the author of 12 books on the subject and one of the professors who warned Bryan Rigg not to waste his time trying to find these soldiers. He says he was happy to be proven wrong.

“It’s the triumph of perseverance,” says Berenbaum. “Without perseverance, this could not have been done.”

Rigg surprised Berenbaum? “Shocked me,” he says.

Rigg went on to get a doctorate from Cambridge University and to write a book called “Hitler’s Jewish Soldiers.”

That’s where the research ends and the controversy begins. In a way, that’s a little bit of a misnomer. Some of them didn’t consider themselves Hitler’s soldiers, and a lot of them didn’t consider themselves Jewish.

“Yes,” says Rigg. “The reason why I named my book ‘Hitler’s Jewish Soldiers’ was Hitler thought of these people as Jewish and they were only his Jewish soldiers.”

The provocative title has provoked a response — even from his friends.

“To call these people ‘Hitler’s Jewish soldiers’ is to presume the Nazi definition of who is Jewish,” says Michael Berenbaum.

“Namely, to do it not by the religion we live, by the identity we affirm, but the accident of the blood we contain — that we have within. That’s a Nazi definition.”

The Nazis referred to children of mixed marriages as half-Jews or quarter-Jews or used the collective term, “Mischlinge.”

“Mischlinge were — it’s a horrible term,” says Rigg. “It means ‘bastard, mutt, hybrid.’ And the Nazis nowadays, it’s used for dogs of mixed breed, mutts. It just shows you what the connotation was behind the word that the Nazis used for these people.”

And by using that Nazi definition, Rigg has come up with a jaw-dropping estimate that has caught the attention of historians worldwide: Some served as a way of hiding themselves, some as a way of protecting their families. And for some, it was simply an extension of the life they had led before the war.

“I estimate that 150,000 Mischling soldiers served during the Third Reich,” says Rigg.

If true, that would represent less than one percent of the German armed forces, and several Holocaust scholars say even that estimate of 150,000 Mischling soldiers is way too high. Rigg says he bases his estimate on birth and mixed-marriage records. But his larger point is that their existence in the German military — no matter what the number — is in itself significant.

How could it have been that the Nazi party, so committed to eliminating Jews, not just from in Germany but elsewhere in Europe as well, would allow half-Jews or people with one Jewish grandparent to serve in the German army?

“Well, I think on the one hand, Hitler allowed these men to serve because he did not want to deny the Wehrmacht so many potential soldiers,” says Rigg.

So the Fuhrer’s desire to field an army was stronger than his hatred for Jews?

“Well, that might have been one reason,” says Rigg. “But it’s very difficult to find rational explanations for Hitler’s behavior.”

Just as hard to explain is why anyone of Jewish descent would have wanted to serve. In fact, at the outset of the war, men the Nazis called half-Jews were drafted. They had to serve — not in the Gestapo or the SS, both filled with true-believer Nazis charged with enforcing Hitler’s racial policies, but in the regular armed forces.

Some served as a way of hiding themselves, some as a way of protecting their families. And for some, it was simply an extension of the life they had led before the war.

Dachau was the first concentration camp the Germans built. It was built in 1933 outside of Munich. Today, large portions of the camp stand relatively undisturbed, both as a memorial and as a lesson. And to understand the lesson of what happened here, you also have to understand that long before it was fatal to be a Jew in Germany, it was an inconvenience — an obstacle to a successful life. And that’s why many Jews and partial Jews did everything they could to keep their religious background a secret.

Today Friedemann Lichtwitz is 83. His father was a Jew who went to synagogue on Friday nights. Friedemann never went with him. Like his mother, he was raised as a Christian.

He didn’t like being called Jewish. In 1935, life in Germany changed — not just for Jews, but for people of partial Jewish descent as well. That’s when Hitler passed the Nuremberg laws, which not only redefined what a Jew was, but also severely restricted the ability of Jews to work and function in society.

“Yes, you were persecuted and you couldn’t say anything,” says Friedemann Lichtwitz. “You had to keep it hidden that you were a half-Jew, as they called it, and that was not pleasant.” Hans-Geert Falkenberg, also raised Protestant, remembers having a chip on his shoulder about being called a half-Jew.

“If a 10-year-old boy or 11-year-old boy is told in biology by a teacher that the Aryan race is the most wonderful race and the Jewish race is minor, and the most terrible things are mixed-up people,” says Falkenberg. “So from that moment on, I tried to behave differently to prove that I was not minor.”

Falkenberg wasn’t raised Jewish or didn’t feel Jewish, but he knew that teacher was talking about him.

But in 1935, life in Germany changed — not just for Jews, but for people of partial Jewish descent as well. That’s when Hitler passed the Nuremberg laws, which not only redefined what a Jew was, but also severely restricted the ability of Jews to work and function in society.

Though many saw Hitler and the Nazi party as a political fad that wouldn’t last, Jews who could afford to began fleeing Germany in large numbers. For those who couldn’t get out, life was turning bleak. By 1939, Jews were being corralled in ghettoes, deported to concentration camps. Because they’d been drafted, many young men could only watch as their Jewish relatives left Germany. They had no choice but to stay and fight.

“I went into the army at the first day of the war,” says Falkenberg. “Yes, on the 26th of August, 1939.”

What would have happened if he hadn’t gone into the army? What would have happened if he’d left? “I would have been a deserter,” says Falkenberg.

So that was an easy choice? “There was no other choice at that moment,” he says.

Then there were young men like Helmut Kopp who used the army as a place to hide in plain sight. Although Kopp was Jewish, he was drafted and saw, in danger, an opportunity.

“At the inspection, you got a piece of paper with a sworn declaration, and you had to swear, ‘I hereby declare that my grandparents are...’” Kopp says. “And you could underline Jew, quarter-Jew, half-Jew. And I underlined ‘full Aryan,’ and I gave it to them, and that was it.”

He had no problem lying? “No,” Kopp says. “Everybody signed these forms. The majority signed ‘full Aryan.’ Jewish grandparents? Nobody did that. I told myself, well, now we’ll wait and see what happens.”

As they started joining the German army in the late 1930s, the soldiers the Nazis called Mischlinge were filled with dread, terrified both of the men they were fighting against and the ones they were fighting next to. Would life in the army protect these men from the terror that was about to roll across Europe?

When it came time for a routine army physical, Kopp panicked. He was circumcised — a dead giveaway that he was Jewish.

“We all had to stand naked before the commission,” says Kopp. “And they stared and stared, and one of them said, ‘What do you have there?’”

But Kopp was lucky, as it turned out. He’d had his circumcision late — at age 12 — and because of that, he still had scars. Thinking on his feet, Kopp told the doctor he’d had surgery for an infection. He passed the physical and got a new nickname in the process.

“Whenever I had an army physical, they always shouted, ‘Here comes Private Kopp with the Jewish penis!’ ” he says. “They just never thought that this was a circumcision.”

But according to historian Bryan Rigg, even the soldiers whose Jewish descent was known soon discovered that life in the army wasn’t half bad.

“Being a transport driver was a very brilliant job. No question,” says Falkenberg.

Geert Falkenberg was part of the German forces that invaded France in 1940. His family, including his Jewish father, had fled to England.

Did he ever think of deserting and trying to join them? “Probably I had the idea, but I couldn’t do it,” he says. “How? You know, Europe was Fascistic.”

So it was safer to just stay in the army? “Yes, certainly,” says Falkenberg. “The safest thing was to stay in the army, no question.”

Friedemann Lichtwitz says, “In the German army I was in a pretty good situation. People were not persecuted. It was a good bunch of guys. I felt comfortable there.”

But if these soldiers felt safe, their Jewish family members did not. As Bryan Rigg found out, there were many complaints from soldiers about how their Jewish relatives were being treated at home.

“Many of these men were coming home from the battlefronts, and they were finding that their families were being severely persecuted,” says Rigg. “You know, Dad lost his job, Mom was being spit on in the street — and many of these men went to their commanders and said, ‘Hey look, I served this country honorably. I have the Iron Cross, and look how they’re treating my family.’”

It may have been due to those complaints, or it may be that Adolf Hitler simply decided he no longer wanted half-Jews in his army, whatever the reason, in April 1940, Hitler ordered all of them expelled from the armed forces. And with his words, the idea that military service could protect the Mischling soldiers or their families instantly vanished. Now, the only lawful way to remain in the military was through a loophole offered by the Fuhrer himself.

In the Third Reich, it was actually possible to apply for a legal exemption from being Jewish. Partially Jewish soldiers flooded the Fuhrer’s office with applications. And remarkably, Hitler reviewed thousands of them — personally. While the issue of exemptions has been known by historians for a long time, it was Bryan Rigg who brought to light the extent of Adolf Hitler’s involvement.

“Every application that came in, he wanted photographs, front and side shots of these men, because he wanted to see how they looked physically,” says Rigg. “Did they have a big nose, big ears, or did they have blond hair, blue eyes?”

Hitler actually wrote special permissions for individual soldiers? “He had his Secretary of State, you know, formulate the legal language,” says Rigg. “But then he would sign off on them. And these certificates basically said, you know, ‘I, Adolf Hitler, declare you of German blood according to the racial laws,’ and sign it.”

And that’s how a handful of men of Jewish descent were allowed to stay in uniform and even rise through the ranks. One even became a field marshal, the equivalent of a U.S. five-star general.

Without an exemption, most of the so-called Mischlinge were kicked out of the armed services by the end of 1940. With the stroke of a pen, battlefield heroes had been marked for their eventual extermination.

Geert Falkenberg never had a chance to apply for an exemption before it was too late. He was put up for promotion, but the paperwork that promotion triggered meant his secret — that his father was Jewish — would be discovered.

“And I said, ‘Captain so and so, please stop it,’” says Falkenberg. “‘It’s impossible. I am half-Jewish, so I cannot become an officer.’ And it was too late already, he had done this.”

How long after he put in your papers was he dismissed? “That went quick,” he says.

Those who couldn’t get an exemption had to figure out how to beat the system or just hope they wouldn’t be found out. Arno Spitz managed to get promoted — perhaps because he was such an accomplished soldier. Spitz, a paratrooper, won three medals for bravery and close combat — unusual for a man who, because of his Jewish father, could easily have been in a concentration camp instead of in the army.

Spitz was, by almost any standard, a first-rate soldier.

“In my heart, I was not a soldier,” says Spitz.

In his heart he may not have been a soldier, but on the battlefield he was a soldier. “Yes,” says Spitz.

Would Hitler and those around him have described Spitz as a hard-working, dedicated, accomplished soldier, somebody they’d be proud of? “No. There is a great latitude between admiration for Hitler and serving in the German army,” he says.

So he was fighting not for the Nazis, but for Germany? “Sure,” says Spitz.

Even though Germany was controlled by the Nazis? “Yes,” says Spitz.

There’s a difference? “There is a difference,” he says.

It’s a thin distinction, but not an uncommon one. In numerous cases Bryan Rigg documented, German officers knew full well that their men were Jewish or partially Jewish and did nothing about it.

“There are many men that have said to me, you know, I went to my commander, I told him I was half-Jewish, and the commander said, ‘Hey, don’t do too much, don’t do too little, and you’re safe by me, you’re protected,’” says Rigg. “I could care less about your ancestry. For me, you’re a German soldier, you’re a loyal comrade, and that’s all I care about.”

So the U.S. military wasn’t the first place to come up with a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy? “That’s correct, yes,” says Rigg.

Consider the extraordinary story of Nachemia Wurman. A Polish Jew, he was sent to a labor camp in 1944. His father was executed there. Wurman managed to escape — once from the labor camp and again from the German military police that arrested him days later. He ran east, hoping to find the Russian army on the other side of the front.

“So finally, I came to a place, a burned-down village,” says Wurman. “I saw Germans — German soldiers. If I will escape, they will see somebody running away, they could kill me.”

Instead, he walked straight into the camp. And by the end of the day, Wurman had become Marion Schmidt, assistant chef for the German 72nd Infantry Battalion.

At night, he bunked with a supply officer, who gave him better food than the soldiers were eating. By day, Wurman worked the food line, and soon decided his new chef should look the part.

“He took me in and gave me a German uniform,” says Wurman. “Completely — with the swastika, with the belt, like a German soldier, with the hat, with boots. I looked in the mirror, I said, how could a Jewish boy be wearing the uniform from the beast?”

He was wearing the uniform of the army that had killed his father? “Yes, that’s correct,” he says.

Wurman’s mother? “Yes,” he says.

And he was thinking, “I’m lucky to have it”?

“Not I was lucky to have the uniform,” he says. “But I was lucky that I’m alive.”

One night, the supply officer called Wurman over.

“He said to me, ‘Marion. You’re a Jew?” says Wurman. “I didn’t answer. He said, ‘I know exactly that you are Jewish. But don’t be afraid. So long as I live, you’ll live.’ I didn’t open my mouth to say yes or no, nothing.”

Because he still was not sure that if he says yes… “Maybe he’s going to shoot me,” says Wurman. “But nothing happened. And I went back to sleep.”

Nachemia Wurman, a Jew, had survived discovery. He was actually a lot better off than many of the so-called Mischlinge back in Germany, because the war had begun to turn on Adolf Hitler and he’d already begun turning on them.

By 1944, the war was going badly for Germany. Its armed forces had been driven back on the eastern front. Italy’s dictator Mussolini had capitulated, and the allies were landing on the French coast.

Hitler needed lots of men — any men. Suddenly, the men the Nazis called “Mischlinge” found themselves wanted again. Only this time, it wasn’t for military service. It was for a network of forced labor camps. Geert Falkenberg was called up. He’d been told he was joining a special army-like unit. But when he arrived, he looked around and saw not other soldiers, but something else.

“Criminals, with some people who were not, could not do any military service anymore,” says Falkenberg, “with some half-Jewish people, with some gypsies and with some homosexuals.”

Falkenberg is describing a group of people, all of whom were being persecuted in different ways by the Nazis, and all of whom were unacceptable to serve in the army.

“Yes,” he says.

Friedemann Lichtwitz says, “We went to this forced labor camp and did our job. But after a few weeks, we started to realize that something is not right here. They were treating us more harshly. Eventually, it got so bad, I knew I needed to escape.”

Lichtwitz did escape. But soon, he was caught. And then he was brought to Dachau. This former hard-working radio artillery man was now a prisoner at Dachau, a concentration camp where, by the end of the war, an estimated 32,000 people had been killed.

What was it like for him to start the war serving in the army and end it at Dachau?

“I can’t say,” says Lichtwitz. “I don’t know how to answer that.”

From this camp, there would be no escape, and it’s debatable whether the living were better off than the dead.

“Basically, he just had to plan with his comrades,” says Bryan Rigg, “how they were going to sleep, because they had six people up here, and they said, OK, I lean on my left side, and you lean on your left side. And you had to stay that way the entire night.”

Six per bed? “Six per bed,” says Rigg. “What they would do is when somebody would die, so they would be able to take the food of that person that day, they would just say he’s sick and leave him in bed as long as they could.”

In the end, soldiers like Friedemann Lichtwitz, no matter how loyally they’d served Germany, were, in the eyes of the Nazis, just Jews to be exterminated. Lichtwitz began the war as a soldier; he ended it as a holocaust survivor and other survivors will easily identify with his experience.

But how will the other Mischling soldiers be viewed — as victims or villains? Bryan Rigg, who in the course of his research discovered Jewish ancestry of his own, says he knows this will be a difficult story for some people to hear, because the story of Hitler’s Jewish soldiers blurs what was, to some, a clear image of the past.

“The Third Reich and Hitler and so on, it’s not all black and white,” says Rigg. “Not everybody of Jewish descent was exterminated in the death camps. And not every German soldier serving in the army of the Third Reich was a Nazi, as we use that term today.”

There are going to be people who, when they hear Rigg say things like the Third Reich is not black and white, what they hear is, “which means, they weren’t all bad and the Holocaust didn’t happen.”

“No, absolutely not. The Holocaust did happen,” says Rigg. “My research, I think sheds new light on the Holocaust, of just how crazy, how corrupt, how bankrupt these Nazi laws were, but how deadly they also were, and how they affected hundreds of thousands of people who the Nazis called Jews, but they themselves would not have called themselves Jewish or Jews. And that’s also quite tragic.”

Rabbi Marvin Hier is dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights agency.

“The question is, will the book serve a noble purpose or will it be misused by haters who will now claim, ‘You see? The Jews were part of the Nazi equation,’” says Rabbi Hier.

“That’s the great fear.”

Should this research — or could it — lead people to sort of reevaluate their conclusions about the Holocaust?

“I think that this resistance — look the book could be used by revisionists,” says Rabbi Hier. “So revisionists will turn around and say you see? There are 150,000 Jews that served the Nazis. That would be preposterous.”

The potentially explosive issue is whether Rigg’s research encourages people to think that Jewish soldiers killed other Jews. Bryan Rigg didn’t document any examples of that. But Helmut Kopp certainly received a hostile reaction right after the war — at the emigration office, when he was trying to leave Germany.

“A man about 10 or 15 years older than me came in and said, ‘I heard you were in the German army,’” says Kopp. “I said yes, what was I supposed to do, either go to the camps or falsify documents and go along? I never killed a Jew with a weapon in my hand. And he said, ‘From the looks of you, you would kill the first Jew who comes through that door.’ He called me an anti-Semite.”

Spitz says, “I was very much hurt when my daughter thought that by belonging to the German Wehrmacht, I had somehow participated in the crimes against Jewish people. And this is definitely not so.”

A lot of Jews will tell you that the Nazis could never have achieved the power they had, or held the power they had, or done the things they did without the cooperation of the military.

“That’s right,” says Spitz. “That’s right. Still, that does not mean that the military and Nazism were identical, no.”

Spitz, like many of the Mischling soldiers Bryan Rigg interviewed, insisted he didn’t know what was really happening to the Jews until after the war. Helmut Kopp says he did know, but couldn’t say anything.

“I couldn’t,” says Kopp. “If I would have been open with my comrades, if they would know I was a half-Jew, they would have turned on me. They wouldn’t have said I was a friend anymore.”

Does he think the former soldiers who say they had no idea what was going on with the Jews, were telling the truth? “No,” says Kopp.

They knew? “If they’re saying that now, it’s just to protect themselves,” says Kopp.

Rabbi Hier says, “I’m prepared to say that their criminal culpability is not the same as being a member of the SS, the SD, or the Gestapo. But I’m not prepared to say we’ve got to give them the blanket amnesty because these fellows did not know what they were doing. That’s a lot of nonsense. They’re claiming an amnesty that they do not deserve.”

Geert Falkenberg, fighting in France, actually got letters from his Jewish grandmother telling him what was happening.

“In those letters she wrote what she expected,” says Falkenberg. “And that was so terrible, that I didn’t believe it. I couldn’t believe it.”

His grandmother died in a concentration camp.

Does Falkenberg feel guilty about what he did? “I feel guilty about what I didn’t do,” he says. “I didn’t try to save my grandmother. I didn’t have the idea. I can tell you that I had no money, no connections, all that — that’s not what I mean. I mean to go there and try to get her, and to push her about the Swiss border or so. That is what I should have done.”

But Falkenberg is a rare example. Few of these old soldiers have any regrets about the war or their role in it — in part, because of that famous German sense of duty; in part, because many feel they don’t need to apologize for donning the uniform of evil in order to survive.

When Arno Spitz talks to people today, and they ask him what he did during World War II, what does he tell them?

“Well, sure. I don’t have to,” says Spitz. “I didn’t do anything that is a crime.”

Kopp lost members of his own family to the Nazis. “Yes,” Says Kopp. “My aunt, my cousins, were sent off to Riga in 1941 and they were all murdered.”

And during that time Kopp was still fighting for the same army that was supporting the man who was killing them.

“From today’s point of view, you can’t understand that then, you didn’t think about the Fuhrer, or the nation,” says Kopp. “I thought only about myself — that either my tank or something will be hit and then I’ll be gone anyway, or I’ll make it through.”

Kopp is now 80 years old. When he looks back, is he ashamed of what he did? “No, I never was ideologically on the side of the Nazis,” he says. “As we say today, I only did my job. If I had been sent to the concentration camp, I don’t really know if I’d be alive today.”

Despite what happened to their families at the hands of the Nazis, Helmut Kopp, Gert Falkenberg and a number of these former soldiers stayed on in Germany. When asked why, Falkenberg said he felt in some way he owed his survival to a handful of Germans and wanted to be with them to help them rebuild.


2 posted on 06/09/2002 9:56:59 PM PDT by LarryLied
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
Well Hitler may have been 1/4 Jewish. He certainly wasn't an "Aryan" he was a Czech mostly.
3 posted on 06/09/2002 11:48:37 PM PDT by weikel
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: weikel
Did you see the show? The vets were good. It is amazing what people can endure and still come out sane.
4 posted on 06/10/2002 12:00:24 AM PDT by LarryLied
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
No I didn't. I don't really understand why the general staff put up with Hitler. There was a period of time between the "Roehm Putsch"( where the extreme leftist within the party were eliminated) and when the military took the Fuhrer Oath( the oldschool Prussian officers took oaths very seriously even though they generally hated the Nazis). Hitler had already done the job he had been appointed for( to prevent a communist takeover) and was then just a dangerous nut who didn't yet control the army. They should have deposed him after the Putsch and restored the monarchy, which was what most of the general staff wanted.
5 posted on 06/10/2002 12:43:48 AM PDT by weikel
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Non-Sequitur
bump
6 posted on 06/10/2002 3:02:06 AM PDT by JMJ333
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
Thanks!
7 posted on 06/10/2002 3:02:33 AM PDT by JMJ333
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
This doesn't surprise me at all, and I am really not sure what the big news is here. I saw a few minutes of some news program yesterday (perhaps this one) and had to turn when the whole conversation centered around not whether the story was true, but there were a bunch of guys complaining that it shouldn't be printed because some neo-nazi's might take it the wrong way.

So what? Some neo-nazi's take the bible the wrong way as well.

8 posted on 06/10/2002 4:11:16 AM PDT by Rodney King
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Non-Sequitur
I stumbled on this absolutely fascinating story on soldiers of Jewish descent in the German Army during WWII. I'll have to dig up the book.

Well hey there, look on your shelf right next to the book about the "Black Confederates." These people were Jews in the same way that the FMOC's of 1/8 or 1/16 "colored" ancestry were Black.

9 posted on 06/10/2002 4:32:28 AM PDT by Alouette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Alouette
Yeah, right. Except that the people in the story typically were half Jewish or at least quarter Jewish. A far cry from the 1/8th or 1/16th that you talk of. A person who was half black down south was liable to be sold to someone.
10 posted on 06/10/2002 5:34:55 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
I saw the program and was annoyed at the way Mankiewicz kept trying to get these guys to feel guilty for what they did to survive. He obviously did not grasp that there was a difference between the regular army and the SS and Gestapo troops. He also didn't appreciate that few regular army guys were Nazis, least of all these "part-Jew" soldiers.

The veterans, on the other hand, displayed a great deal dignity in discussing what had to be a difficult thing to discuss. The book by Bryan Rigg sounds fascinating.

11 posted on 06/10/2002 5:47:03 AM PDT by mountaineer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: Pinlighter
Actually, the Nazi laws which defined who was a Jew were carefully crafted to exclude Jesus Christ and Hitler himself, who believed that one of his grandparents could have been Jewish.
13 posted on 06/10/2002 10:42:09 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: Non-Sequitur,Pinlighter
Yeah, right. Except that the people in the story typically were half Jewish or at least quarter Jewish.

Eighth or quarter, and had no affiliation with the Jewish community or religion or a Jewish spouse.

A Catholic who was found to be 3/8 Jewish went to the camps as a Jew. 1/4 Jews (who didn't acknowledger their religion, of course) were to be sterilized, though I don't think that was ever implemented.

14 posted on 06/10/2002 11:06:04 AM PDT by SJackson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: Redcloak;mr.pink;copycat;Mannaggia l'America;Always Right;bribriagain;Natty Bumpo...
Worth seeing if NBC ever re-runs it.
16 posted on 06/10/2002 6:29:36 PM PDT by LarryLied
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
Thanks for the ping.
17 posted on 06/10/2002 7:19:35 PM PDT by Dubya
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
But back at Yale, where Rigg returned to start researching the Jews in Hitler’s
army, his professors were underwhelmed.

“They said, basically, ‘Hey, we studied this for 20 or 30 years, and we’ve never
heard about this
,” says Rigg.


There you go...the Ivy League, home of inquiring minds.
At least among some of the students.

I saw the episode; had read a short article about the fellow's research on freerepublic
maybe two years ago.

Gotta' salute the grit of this fellow. After doing his hitch in the Marines, goes to
Yale and follows his gut on research that his faculty advisors disdained.

I hope he's the next Stephen Ambrose (but a little more cautious at citations!). Having already
gotten a book in print involving wartime, he'll probably get the cold shoulder
from the academics, like Ambrose.
Hope he finds an academic nest at The Naval Academy or the like and starts writing
more best seller books and movie/documentary script.
18 posted on 06/10/2002 7:37:23 PM PDT by VOA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: LarryLied
“It’s an enormous piece of work that has to be respected,” says Michael Berenbaum, a distinguished Holocaust scholar, the author of 12 books on the subject and one of the professors who warned Bryan Rigg not to waste his time trying to find these soldiers. He says he was happy to be proven wrong.

Here's the biggest shocker.A history professor admitting he was wrong.

19 posted on 06/10/2002 7:51:23 PM PDT by sneakypete
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Non-Sequitur
I've come accross bits and pieces of this before, but not anything this comprehensive. It doesn't really suprise me though. Hitler essentially viewed his armies as expendable, and why not let some jewish soldiers kill Russians for him. As the war went on, the racial purity standards for the SS were dropped to the point that even non Germans, as long as they had no Jewish parents, could join. At the start of the war you had to prove your lineage sevenor eight generations.
20 posted on 06/10/2002 8:13:53 PM PDT by PsyOp
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-33 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson