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Background: By summer 1943 Allied bombing raids were devastating
German cities, and worse was to come. Although the Germans put up determined
and deadly defense, they could not stop the overwhelmingly superior Allied
air forces from daily and nightly visits to major German cities. This
article presents the bombing as a serious threat, but one that Germans
are overcoming by hard work and devotion. It also promises that vague
but deadly revenge is almost ready on the German side. Germans were eager
to believe that revenge was coming, but its eventual appearance in the
form of V-1 and V-2 rockets proved too little, too late. Schwarz van Berk
was one of Goebbels’ top propagandists.
The source: Hans Schwarz van Berk, “Die ungeahnten Folgen”
Das Reich, 2 July 1943, p. 4.
Unexpected Consequences
The Bombing
War: Overcoming and Revenge
by Hans Schwarz van Berk
Amidst the smoke of Berlin’s bombed inner city, one reads the latest
foreign news reports. Two items from Switzerland: Since Sunday, all passenger
trains in Germany have been canceled; German insane asylums must add barracks,
since a Viennese doctor estimates that the number of those suffering nervous
breakdowns has increased 40%. Then there is this announcement from Washington:
Germany has to force people to serve on U-boats. And this from London:
Croatian troops have been used against the rebellious population in Vienna.
Finally a Reuters dispatch claims that the captain of a German destroyer
has committed suicide.
That’s what the foreign press has to say the morning after two heavy
bombing attacks. We’ve certainly survived things during the past 48 hours
that did not make us cleaner and more beautiful, but we are perhaps not
wrong to assume that in the meanwhile our navy and the Viennese have kept
things in order? Should we look into the matters? Should we invite that
doctor from Vienna, a master of observation, to Berlin? Or should we prefer
his young colleague who during the night took the injured from our subway
shelter and with Red Cross nurses brought them through the fiery streets
to safety, saying as he left, just as if he were coming from a party,
“Give my regards to your mother.” A student from Stargard smiled
as she rested on the ground, crinkled her nose at a motor’s exhaust, and
spoke with her friend who had taken shelter from the fire storm. Where
should she go for the coming semester? This small group of people in the
fiery oven of the city would have passed any psychological test just as
well as the silent masses with their bundles of rescued possessions in
the subway station.
During the following days, hundreds of thousands of foreigners
in Berlin went to work or walked in columns with soldiers between
the ruins to clean things up. They must have been astonished
by those who waited, who searched, who helped, by the silent
acceptance of disaster, by stoic fortitude. The world will say
of Berlin what it has said of the other bombed German cities:
the Germans are a people who stand heads high above any disaster.
No, we are not worried about our nerves, nor about what others think
of our nerves. The critical point is long past. The repeatedly bombed
cities have proven that. They have gradually become used to absorbing
bombs, and countless people have grown accustomed to living in shelters
or basements because they do not want to give up their jobs. Ever since
the “Hamburgization” [Hamburg
had been bombed heavily] of the most cunning method of
mass slaughter ever perpetrated by soldiers on women and children began,
we know enough of the most terrible terrors. There is more than enough
horror to freeze our hearts and dull our senses. Cold cruelty has been
piled on cruelty.
Steadfast
Cities
The real problems of the air war that occupy our people as
well as all European peoples are overcoming it and taking revenge.
The systematic destruction of flourishing European cities by
the English and Americans today stretches from Palermo and Sofia
to Nantes, Boulogne, Bremen, Hamburg, and Lübeck. Since the
English military has begun talking about carpet bombing, fire
storms and city-busting, whole residential sections have been
destroyed.
The first matter in overcoming the air war concerns the resistance
ability and life strength of our great European cities. The original
opinion was that they were highly sensitive organisms with a
spoiled, nervous and delicate populations. In fact, modern warfare
has brought the weaknesses of some great cities to light. We
found Paris dead and empty, deserted out of fear, as General
von Briesen, with his injured arm, greeted his marching division
at the Arch de Triumph. In March of the same year, Oslo broke
into wild panic at the mere rumor that the English would launch
a bombing attack. Milan and Turin were thrown into confusion
by bombing in 1943. Only in German cities, where one today hears
10 or 15 languages, did one fail to see even a single example
of panic or mass hysteria. This fact is probably well known to
English leaders, and they have trouble explaining it. Some papers
think that Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler has terrified
people by executions. It is not clear if they believe that themselves,
but it is a grave insult to the bombed populations who have behaved
splendidly. The Times aims a little higher. It suggests
that discipline is second nature to Germans, since they have
been oppressed so long, and only such firm discipline explains
how the attacks have so far been endured. As if an armed soldier
sat on every burning rooftop!
Deeper
Strengths
The miracle of German steadfastness has entirely different causes. The
more one attacks us, the deeper the strengths that are awakened in us.
Each of us during the heaviest bombing nights has been astonished by the
sudden appearance of brave people around us, people from whom we had not
expected it. Each of us has been amazed by the reaction of so many Germans
standing beside the few bundles they have rescued. Half grimly, half relieved,
they say: “Well, now I’ve got one less worry. I don’t need to worry
about my possessions.” It is not that we were secret nihilists, but rather
we sense that the war is best survived with the fewest possessions. It
is no longer “all or nothing.” We stand with nothing before
everything: the war is a matter of winning back our homes, our beds, our
household goods, the property we have won with so much work and saving.
Millions of Germans have suddenly been proletarianized, bolshevistically
robbed of their possessions by phosphorus bombs, entirely as Stalin would
wish, and done by his allies. Germans have united more fervently than
ever before behind the leadership, for only victory can give them back
what they have lost. One may plunge the German people very deeply into
misery, but they will never be and will never remain a nation of proletarians.
That is what they have fought against since 1918. They freed themselves
from it once by their own strength, and are striving with sure instinct
to do so again. Thus every bomb that falls on Germany releases political
energy. Our enemies have threatened our people for a long time already.
Now they have become too shameless and reckless in the talk of the peace
terms that they plan to offer. Therefore everyone who climbs out of the
air raid shelter of his burning home into the burning street knows that,
if we lose the war, men would go to labor camps and no one would be left
to rebuilt his home or the city. This is the very simple reason why each
homeless German is a good German! The English have not thought about this.
Capable
Self-Help
One senses immediately that people are dealing with overcoming bombing
on a personal level. But their larger goals are clear too, even before
the smoke clears. We do not passively accept misfortune; we work to
overcome it. A German cannot live a single day without accomplishing
something. One of the first requests after the attacks on the Ruhr,
after coffee and meat, was soap and washing material, because our women
could not live in filth. None of us wants to be a citizen of Pompeii.
Where can one find wood, paper, glass, mortar, tiles, slats, and flooring
material? Two examples from my own experience. Frau Gerda W. in K. began
to rebuild her destroyed rubber factory the next morning with the help
of 20 of her workers. None of them knew how to build walls. They asked
an 80-year old master builder for help, who gave them some advice. As
she told me, she looked all over the city for flak soldiers and when
she found one she asked: “You’re
helping to build? I have cigars and cigarettes.” In record time
her little factory and heavily damaged house were usable again. Factory
head M. in W. rescued his workers from the flames with a truck. He saw
a bombed out building and made five trips over the weekend to bring
his whole crew of 30 men and women there to work while his employees
made sure that the normal business went on as usual. All the construction
work and the cleanup was done by his staff. The result was 80 rooms
to house the largest part of the homeless families, with room in the
two lower stories for a bakery, book store, and barber.
Self-help is a German virtue that blossoms best on a foundation
of camaraderie. We are a people capable with both hand and mind,
and we cannot live without proving it. And we want our surroundings
to be comfortable, even if it is a summer house, a bunker or
a basement. How often have I thought of my first trip to Palestine:
Amidst the gray, rocky mountains I could see little green islands
in the distance with bushes and trees. They were the small gardens
that the German military railroad troops and guards had made
twenty years ago during the World War while they worked on the
supply lines. In the same way, before long emergency housing
will spring up amidst the ruins, with clothing lines and flowers
between them.
The New
Pioneers
Dealing with bombing attacks takes work. Is it too much to say that
we Germans of all peoples today are probably the fastest and best at
clearing up the ruins? Have we not shown in Poland as well as in the
north and south how quickly, even in the midst of war, we can get roads,
bridges, and buildings back in order? Are we not the only combatant
nation whose armaments minister is also a building and reconstruction
expert? Have we not created a modern labor army, a large disaster relief
force, in the Organization Todt, in Speer’s staff, in the NSKK [the
Nazi motorized auxiliary], and in the Labor Service, which
for good pay or simple idealism has trained new European pioneers?
The English have caused only destruction in Europe, but we have spent
billions in building, kept whole nations fed and employed, and not
only removed the effects of our campaigns but given countries new and
lasting works like railroads, harbors, factories, and airfields. No
German soldier can take them along when he leaves. The English when
have they have done such work for a European people?
Our Europe is already influenced by our labor. It is an energetic, dynamic,
productive Europe. With our working style it will become a Europe able
to defend itself. Who can doubt that Hamburg along with Sofia, Berlin,
and Nantes will be rebuilt in the shortest possible time? That is no
promise with a vague time frame. The work has already begun in many
cities. The toughest have stayed in the area, cleared up the ruins,
gotten to work and built anew. Some do not particularly appreciate our
diligence, which some have found burdensome, but without this virtue
our part of the earth would probably never overcome the results of this
air war, but rather quickly and finally be overwhelmed by other continents
and areas. The fame of our weapons will be ours alone; the fame of our
work will belong to all the European peoples.
Our Larger
Concern
The other question, towering over the ruins, is the longing
for revenge. To speak of it very early was natural, a way of
giving aid to someone who has suffered personal misfortune. The
question of timing the revenge is not one of technical details,
but rather of the intended purpose. The revenge must be so emphatic
and timed at the psychologically right moment so that it will
influence the course of this war. It would make no sense to repay
ruins with ruins. It will take entirely different and surprising
forms, both spiritually and politically. The war will have a
different outlook, and the responsible men on the enemy side
will face a public opinion that asks entirely different questions
than it did yesterday and today, regardless of whether they attack
Italy or the Balkans or if they finally open the second front.
No enemy maneuver, no risky undertaking, can hinder or stop revenge.
Things are in motion.
Our revenge will not be a kind of military triumph or punishment, which
our whole nation demands today. We want to put an end to unscrupulous
mass murder by an extreme and drastic blow. A peaceful observer might
think that the time is near when half the earth will go flying through
the air. Subordinating technique to an ordering will is the last great
task of Western culture. In this sense, the great masters of weaponry
of our century are the true teachers. We count ourselves among them.
In all our campaigns we looked for rapid decisions that saved human
lives. The losses among the Poles, Danes, Norwegians, Dutch, Belgians,
French, Greeks, and Serbs were so small because we won classic military
victories. Expert surgery by a leading doctor usually saves a life,
whereas a butcher tortures his victim with ever new procedures. We did
it the first way, while the English are unable to win a decision on
the battlefield. Instead they care nothing for European humanity, bringing
miseries upon it.
As much as the bombing war now rages, our new weapons will
bring about an entirely different test of nerves. They will very
quickly make the English ask how long they can continue such
a war. With as little pity as this English nation looks on the
devastation of the continent today, so, too, will we view their
hardest hour. We have bigger concerns than an island. We have
not surrendered responsibility for the continent to Stalin, as
the English have. We remain the only and last armed great power
of Europe that confronts the danger from the East on the battlefield,
not at conference tables.
[Page copyright
© 2001 by Randall Bytwerk. No unauthorized reproduction. My e-mail
address is available on the FAQ page.]
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