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Encyclopedia > Prussian Holocaust

The factual accuracy of this article is disputed.
Please see the relevant discussion on the talk page.

The Evacuation of East Prussia refers to the events that took place in East Prussia, especially the evacuation of German population from that area as well as from other Prussian lands in 1944 and 1945. Some have claimed that it was a case of ethnic cleansing, or even genocide, and they use the term "Prussian Holocaust" to describe these events.


The evacuation started under the threat of Soviet invasion. It was completed according to the decision of the Potsdam conference about the expulsion of Germans from territories outside the post-war Germany.

Contents

German propaganda

The Soviet army initiated an offensive into East Prussia on October 1944, but after two weeks it was temporarily driven back. After that, the German Ministry of Propaganda reported that war crimes had taken place in East Prussian villages, in particular in Nemmersdorf (now Mayakovskoye, Kaliningrad) and Goldap. According to the German side, all the inhabitants of those villages were horrifically murdered.


This version of events was widely disseminated by German propaganda to increase the motivation of German soldiers in their efforts to stop the Red Army. However, the main result was eruption of panic amongst the German civilians. Fleeing from the advancing Soviet forces, the German refugees trudged in columns through snow at -25°C, while Soviet aircraft raided them. Possibly, more than 2 million people in the eastern provinces of Germany (East Prussia, West Prussia, Pomerania) died, many of frost and starvation, but many were killed by Soviet forces.


Soviet propaganda

Since the times of Imperial Russia, Russians associated Prussia with militarism. In the Soviet Union 'Prussian militarism and reaction' was presented as the cause of the First World War. The Soviets later blamed the Second World War on German militarism.


Since many Soviet soldiers had lost close family and friends at the hands of the Germans (16,900,000 Soviet civilians died in World War II, more than in any other country and nearly three times more than the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust), there was a desire to take reprisals on the Germans. Cases of shooting unarmed prisoners of war and German civilians were known even from cases at Soviet military tribunals. Also, when Soviet troops moved into Prussia, a significant number of enslaved Ostarbeiter ("Eastern workers") were freed, and knowledge of those workers' suffering certainly did not improve the attitude of Soviet soldiers towards Prussians.


The name of Nemmersdorf is presented as a symbol of the war crimes of the Red Army in Germany during the WWII. Others consider it a symbol of propaganda aimed at shifting the attention away from Nazi crimes, equalizing the Wehrmacht and the Red Army in terms of war crimes.


See also

References

  • The Struggle for Europe: The Turbulent History of a Divided Continent 1945-2002 - William I. Hitchcock - 2003 - ISBN 0385497989
    • excerpt (http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0385497997&view=excerpt)

External Links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Shofar FTP Archives: camps/auschwitz/cyanide/cyanide.002 (2664 words)
The deniers further claim that the exterior staining on the delousing chambers proves that prussian blue does not "weather away" even when exposed to the elements, so that the lesser amounts of prussian blue found in the homicidal chambers cannot be explained by weathering.
Prussian blue is a sparingly soluble salt made of three molecules of iron (II) hexacyanate ion bound to four molecules of iron (III) {9}.
Given that prussian blue begins to dissolve at a pH of 4.0, and that any prussian blue on Krema II, III, IV, V has been exposed to this rain for almost fifty years, it is surprising that any such traces remain at all.
Leuchter, Rudolf, and the Iron Blues (2770 words)
Prussian blue once formed is much less susceptible to weathering than are other forms of cyanides.
These failures to produce Prussian blue are sufficient to demonstrate that its formation at detectable levels is not a necessary result of exposure to HCN.
Whereas it would be premature to claim that I have explained why Prussian blue is present in the delousing chambers and not in the gas chambers, I have certainly shown that Rudolf's proposed mechanism is unlikely to have been operative in the homicidal gas chambers.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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