Friday, June 01, 2012

Poland's 21st-Century Anguish

"As I stand here before you to lead the prosecution of Adolf Eichmann, I do not stand alone.  With me stand six million accusers.  But they cannot rise to their feet and point an accusing finger. For their ashes are piled up in the hills of Auschwitz and in the fields of Treblinka, or washed away by the rivers of Poland; their graves are scattered over the length and breadth of Europe.  their blood cries out, but their voices are not heard."  Gideon Hausner, Israeli prosecutor, Eichmann trial, 1961



 Poland cannot escape its history.  Hugely, it is a history forced upon it by Nazi Germany.  The Third Reich, apart from intending to conquer and subjugate the world, to have it under the control of a Supreme Germany, also had another pressing matter to attend to; the wholesale destruction of world Jewry.  Those charged by Adolf Hitler, under Heinrich Himmler et al to mount a very specific and carefully nurtured program of extermination placed death camps in many countries of Nazi-occupied Europe.


The Nazi death camp Auschwitz built in the Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany
But most of the death camps were placed in occupied Poland, because it made good sense to Nazi Germany in matters of expediting the issue of extermination, since Poland held a greater Jewish population than any other European country.  Germany preferred not to locate all or even most of the extermination camps within Germany itself; Germans considered themselves too civilized to conduct wholesale slaughter on their own turf, although anti-Semitism was so rife it would hardly have made a ripple of protest.

In all, it is estimated that eleven million people perished in those camps.  Among them gypsies, political prisoners, the physically disabled and homosexuals.  Six million Jews were methodically eliminated, their gassed bodies stacked into the crematoria and burnt, the stench of death hanging over the landscape wherever those camps existed, and they were present in countries all over Europe.  But it was in Poland that most of the camps were located.



Concentration and Death Camps

Camp

Function

Location

Est.

Evacuated

Liberated

Est. No. Murdered
Auschwitz Concentration/
Extermination
Oswiecim, Poland (near Krakow) May 26, 1940 Jan. 18, 1945 Jan. 27, 1945
by Soviets
1,100,000
Belzec Extermination Belzec, Poland March 17, 1942
Liquidated by Nazis
December 1942
600,000
Bergen-Belsen Detention;
Concentration (After 3/44)
near Hanover, Germany April 1943
April 15, 1945 by British 35,000
Buchenwald Concentration Buchenwald, Germany (near Weimar) July 16, 1937 April 6, 1945 April 11, 1945
Self-Liberated; April 11, 1945
by Americans

Chelmno Extermination Chelmno, Poland Dec. 7, 1941;
June 23, 1944

Closed March 1943 (but reopened);
Liquidated by Nazis
July 1944
320,000
Dachau Concentration Dachau, Germany (near Munich) March 22, 1933 April 26, 1945 April 29, 1945
by Americans
32,000
Dora/Mittelbau Sub-camp of Buchenwald;
Concentration (After 10/44)
near Nordhausen, Germany Aug. 27, 1943 April 1, 1945 April 9, 1945 by Americans
Drancy Assembly/
Detention
Drancy, France (suburb of Paris) August 1941
Aug. 17, 1944
by Allied Forces

Flossenbürg Concentration Flossenbürg, Germany (near Nuremberg) May 3, 1938 April 20, 1945 April 23, 1945 by Americans
Gross-Rosen Sub-camp of Sachsenhausen;
Concentration (After 5/41)
near Wroclaw, Poland August 1940 Feb. 13, 1945 May 8, 1945 by Soviets 40,000
Janowska Concentration/
Extermination
L'viv, Ukraine Sept. 1941
Liquidated by Nazis
November 1943

Kaiserwald/
Riga
Concentration (After 3/43) Meza-Park, Latvia (near Riga) 1942 July 1944

Koldichevo Concentration Baranovichi, Belarus Summer 1942

22,000
Majdanek Concentration/
Extermination
Lublin, Poland Feb. 16, 1943 July 1944 July 22, 1944
by Soviets
360,000
Mauthausen Concentration Mauthausen, Austria (near Linz) Aug. 8, 1938
May 5, 1945
by Americans
120,000
Natzweiler/
Struthof
Concentration Natzweiler, France (near Strasbourg) May 1, 1941 Sept. 1944
12,000
Neuengamme Sub-camp of Sachsenhausen;
Concentration (After 6/40)
Hamburg, Germany Dec. 13, 1938 April 29, 1945 May 1945
by British
56,000
Plaszow Concentration (After 1/44) Krakow, Poland Oct. 1942 Summer 1944 Jan. 15, 1945 by Soviets 8,000
Ravensbrück Concentration near Berlin, Germany May 15, 1939 April 23, 1945 April 30, 1945
by Soviets

Sachsenhausen Concentration Berlin, Germany July 1936 March 1945 April 27, 1945
by Soviets

Sered Concentration Sered, Slovakia (near Bratislava) 1941/42
April 1, 1945
by Soviets

Sobibor Extermination Sobibor, Poland (near Lublin) March 1942 Revolt on October 14, 1943; Liquidated by Nazis October 1943 Summer 1944
by Soviets
250,000
Stutthof Concentration (After 1/42) near Danzig, Poland Sept. 2, 1939 Jan. 25, 1945 May 9, 1945
by Soviets
65,000
Theresienstadt Concentration Terezin, Czech Republic (near Prague) Nov. 24, 1941 Handed over to Red Cross May 3, 1945 May 8, 1945
by Soviets
33,000
Treblinka Extermination Treblinka, Poland (near Warsaw) July 23, 1942 Revolt on April 2, 1943; Liquidated by Nazis April 1943

Vaivara Concentration/
Transit
Estonia Sept. 1943
Closed June 28, 1944
Westerbork Transit Westerbork, Netherlands Oct. 1939
April 12, 1945 camp handed over to Kurt Schlesinger

Poland's anger with President Barack Obama for speaking of "Polish death camps" bespeaks national guilt and a desire to alter history.  Poland did not build those death camps, did not plan the deaths of millions of people, did not sanction what occurred.  But it was also in Poland where pogroms against Polish Jews commonly occurred, where anti-Semitism was always current, where, when Jews returned to their homes after the war, they found them occupied, and where returnees were also killed by Poles.

America sought to pay tribute to a Polish army officer who risked his life to discover for himself the truth of rumours that were circulating of a massive, official undertaking to exterminate Jews on a scale unimagined: "Before one trip across enemy lines, resistance fighters told him that Jews were being murdered on a massive scale, and so he smuggled himself into the Warsaw Ghetto and a Polish death camp to see for himself", (President Obama).

Poland's tender sensibilities in this matter are well understood.  But by accusing the White House of "ignorance and incompetence", demanding an apology for the "outrageous error" they feel was committed by the president in his remarks during the ceremony to posthumously award the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honour that America can confer, they are, unfortunately, over-reacting.

They were Polish death camps, although Poland would prefer that other nomenclature identify them:  as Nazi death camps, German-fascist death camps, Third Reich death camps, just incidentally located within Poland.  Which they most certainly were.  And they are universally understood to be so.  The basic assumption is that anyone with a modicum of historical knowledge automatically equates death camps with Nazi Germany.

Most people take verbal short cuts; instead of remarking on "Polish death camp", the alternate would have sounded like: "Nazi death camp located in Poland", which it would take an extremely hyper-sensitive intelligence to intuit and utilize.  The Polish government would do that, in a strenuous effort to separate themselves from one of the most dreadful genocides of modern history; an American government would not, necessarily.

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