Prelude to Race War: The Ideological Drivers behind German Atrocities Committed against POWs and Civilian Populations during the September Campaign of 1939
Prelude to Race War: The Ideological Drivers behind German Atrocities Committed against POWs and Civilian Populations during the September Campaign of 1939
Author(s): Roger MoorhouseSubject(s): Military history, Studies in violence and power, Interwar Period (1920 - 1939), WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), Fascism, Nazism and WW II, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Instytut Solidarności i Męstwa im. Witolda Pileckiego
Keywords: Race war; Germany; Poland; massacre; POWs; September Campaign;
Summary/Abstract: It is well known that the German invasion of Poland in 1939 was the start of the most hideous and murderous phase in Poland’s already blood-soaked history, yet the extent of the atrocities committed during the September Campaign is not widely appreciated. This article will assess, as far as is possible, what may have driven those excesses, asking whether they were primarily ideologically driven, or whether, perhaps, they can be attributed to circumstances, or to something more traditional, and less ideological in nature. First of all, it is very clear that the conduct of the invading armies during the September Campaign – German and Soviet – was exceedingly brutal. Right from the outset, German forces did not hesitate to target civilian populations – Jewish and non-Jewish – for reprisals, hostage-taking, casual brutality and outright murder. From the massacre committed at Częstochowa, in the opening days of the war, to the murder of some 600 Polish Jews at Przemyśl, to the machine gunning of over 300 civilians and POWs at Śladów on 18 September, to the massacre at Zakroczym, which followed the surrender of Modlin, German atrocities were committed, without respite, throughout the campaign. In the 1960s, the Polish historian Szymon Datner calculated that the Germans committed over 600 massacres and atrocities against Poles during the September Campaign alone (Datner, 1967, pp. 358–359). Despite his writing during the Communist period, there is no reason fundamentally to question his findings.
Journal: Studia nad Totalitaryzmami i Wiekiem XX
- Issue Year: 2020
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 364-374
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English