Top Banner
German Prisoners of War 11.5 million German POWs • declared not POWs but “Disarmed Enemy Forces” or “Surrendered Enemy Personnel• in 1947, USA had repatriated most, Britain held 500,000 France 640,000 USSR more than 890,000
11

German Prisoners of War

Feb 19, 2016

Download

Documents

Tommy

German Prisoners of War. 11.5 million German POWs • declared not POWs but “Disarmed Enemy Forces” or “Surrendered Enemy Personnel “ • in 1947, USA had repatriated most, Britain held 500,000 France 640,000 USSR more than 890,000. No “Welcome Home”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: German Prisoners of War

German Prisoners of War11.5 million German POWs• declared not POWs but “Disarmed Enemy Forces”or “Surrendered Enemy Personnel“ • in 1947,USA had repatriated most,Britain held 500,000 France 640,000USSR more than 890,000

Page 2: German Prisoners of War

No “Welcome Home”

Ex-POW returning to Passau (Bavaria), July 1945

(Photo: Tony Vaccaro)

Page 3: German Prisoners of War

Finding Work

Legless Vendor Frankfurt, October 1948

(Photo: Tony Vaccaro)

Page 4: German Prisoners of War

Finding Housing

Page 5: German Prisoners of War

Problems of Returning POWs

• no housing• residence permits refused if non-native• only limited work available (mining, agriculture, rubble clearing)

• no military or war disability pensions(345,000 officers, i.e. , professional soldiers, without civilian skills and jobs)

• lobbying organizations prohibited

Page 6: German Prisoners of War

Reason: Allied Goal of Demilitarization

“The objective of abolishing war pensions is to discredit the military class in Germany, to reduce their influence in society, and to impress upon the public that a military career bears neither honor, profit nor security.”

Report of the U.S. military government, Jan. 8, 1947 (Diehl 1993, p. 73).

Page 7: German Prisoners of War

Problems of Disabled Vets

• no prosthetics• often young and

unskilled• only ca. 50% of

disabled employed

Page 8: German Prisoners of War

“Solutions”• public welfare,

poverty• 1948: small payments

for severely disabled war veterans • French Foreign Legion

(60% German in 1946)

Page 9: German Prisoners of War

After Founding of the Federal Republic of (West-)Germany

(May 1949)• March 1950: War Victims Benefits Law

(Bundesversorgungsgesetz, BVG) covering 4,000,000 disabled vets and survivors of killed soldiers

• Dec. 1950: Returned POW Law (Heimkehrergesetz, HKG)- material support to ease transition to civilian life

(DM 150 cash, up to DM 250 clothes and personal effects)- assistance in finding employment

• Jan. 1954: POW Compensation Law (Kriegsgefangenenentschädigungsgesetz, KgfEG)

- one-time payments for war reparations work

Page 10: German Prisoners of War

Today

• 1.2 million missing soldiers and civilians still sought by German Red Cross

• In 1990, still 1.700 war blind(members of Bund der Kriegsblinden Deutschlands)

Page 11: German Prisoners of War

Literature

• Diehl, James M. The Thanks of the Fatherland. German Veterans after the Second World War. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina Press, 1993.

• Smith, Arthur L. Heimkehr aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Die Entlassung der deutschen Kriegsgefangenen. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1985.

• Vaccaro, Tony. Entering Germany, 1944-1949. Cologne: Taschen, 2001.