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  • German WW2 Expellees Exhibition Angers Poles

    GERMAN WW2 EXPELLEES EXHIBITION ANGERS POLES

    Expatica, Netherlands
    News And Information For Expats
    In Germany - 19 September 2006

    The issue of Germans expelled from Eastern Europe after WW2 is
    controversial, and a new exhibition in Berlin has received heated
    criticism from Poland.

    Clive Freeman visits 'Forced Paths.'

    The exhibition documents the fates of German expellees from
    Eastern Europe Wilfried Rogasch stands in the foyer of Berlin's
    Kronprinzenpalais shaking his head in disbelief at the hostile
    reactions in Poland to the exhibition he has organised.

    Entitled "Erzwungene Wege - Flucht und Vertreibung im Europa des
    20. Jahrhunderts" ("Forced Paths - Flight and Expulsion in Europe
    During the 20th Century"), the exhibition fills three rooms of the
    newly revamped Palais building on Berlin's landmark street Unten
    den Linden, and depicts the plight of millions of European refugees,
    among them many Germans, who either fled or were expelled from their
    homes at the end of World War II.

    In the biggest hall, nine mass expulsion episodes get pin-pointed,
    ranging from the Armenian massacres in 1915 to the German persecution
    of the Jews between 1933-45, and the ethnic cleansing terror in
    Bosnia-Herzegovina in the early 1990s.

    Under fire

    When it opened on 11 August, the Polish government and a large section
    of the Polish media were quick to criticise it.

    I am disappointed. I saw myself as a bridge-builder between Germany and
    Poland, not as a trouble-maker. - exhibition organiser Wilfried Rogasch
    "All expulsions and flights linked to the Second World War and post-war
    resettlements are a painful and dramatic consequence of Hitler's
    attack on Poland and Europe. This must be remembered," Archbishop
    Jozef Michalik, chairman of the Polish Episcopal Conference, said.

    He added that it must be kept in mind that German expellees' leader
    Erika Steinbach herself was born in a town near Gdansk in Nazi-occupied
    Poland as the daughter of a soldier who willingly served in Adolf
    Hitler's Nazi army.

    Daniel Pawlowicz, an MP for the nationalist League of Polish Families
    (LPR), urged Poland's foreign ministry to "react strongly" to the
    exhibition, saying its treatment of ethnic German expellees falsified
    history. The LPR is the junior partner in Poland's governing coalition.

    Pawlowicz added that the Polish government must always react in
    similar cases and "show the lines" that Germans may not cross.

    Warsaw's mayor Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz even cancelled plans to visit
    Berlin, telling Poland's TVN 24 news channel that his visit to Berlin
    could be misinterpreted in Poland and exploited.

    Judged too soon

    However Rogasch told Deutsche Presse-Agentur he was surprised by the
    "hysterical reaction" in Poland.

    "Even without seeing the contents of the show the Polish premier,
    foreign minister and culture minister had decided it was, anti-Polish,"
    he said.

    At the heart of the current dispute is a campaign spearheaded by German
    expellee groups aimed at creating a centre in Berlin remembering the
    mass expulsions of 12-14 million ethnic Germans from several countries
    of Eastern Europe after World War 11.

    Rogasch frankly concedes that the Berlin exhibition, which lasts for
    three months, is the "first step towards a permanent documentation
    centre here in Berlin."

    There has been a fiery debate over such plans, with German Nobel
    Literature Prize winner Guenter Grass - himself now in the news over
    his admission he was a teenage member of the wartime Waffen SS -
    warning three years ago that the creation of a centre in Berlin would
    open old wounds with Germany's eastern neighbours.

    Returned loans

    All expulsions and flights linked to the Second World War and post-war
    resettlements are a painful and dramatic consequence of Hitler's attack
    on Poland and Europe. This must be remembered. - Polish archbishop
    Jozef Michalik As a result of the controversy caused by the current
    exhibition, Rogasch said he had returned several exhibition art loans
    back to Poland in order, as he put it, to "avoid curators there any
    possible embarrassment."

    He added: "It was my decision. They did not ask that l should do
    so. So, yes, I am disappointed. I saw myself as a bridge-builder
    between Germany and Poland, not as a trouble-maker."

    The curator also praised several Polish museums for "standing firm"
    during a trying period.

    "Pressure has been put on these institutions by the (Polish)
    government, and by a large proportion of the Polish press," he claimed.

    "I find this quite outrageous in a country which belongs to the
    European Union, and in which scientific and cultural institutions
    should be independent of the prevailing government.

    "We are all members of the International Council of Museums, which
    is a part of UNESCO. As such, museums should be able to decide freely
    with whom they co-operate and to whom they send loans.

    Traumatic experiences

    What is your opinion of 'Forced Paths'? Write to feedback
    @expatica.com.Rogasch says while the Berlin exhibition involves
    the fate of 12- 14 million German refugees who either fled or were
    ousted from their homes in Poland, Czechoslovakia and several other
    countries in eastern Europe after World War II, it also clearly
    defines the traumatic experiences of millions of other expellees from
    other countries.

    Supporters of the centre, like German Expellees' leader Erika
    Steinbach, who is a CDU deputy, argue that it would serve as a warning
    against future expulsions.

    To its advocates, the centre is deemed a natural development, an effort
    to remember and understand an often forgotten fact: that, in the two
    years after Germany's World War II defeat in 1945, millions of ethnic
    Germans were forced to leave countries where they and their ancestors
    had lived, in some cases for centuries, and resettle in Germany itself.

    Unease

    But in Poland, such talk provokes considerable uneasiness. Most
    critics in Poland worry the planned Berlin centre could be misused by
    historical revisionists to marginalize or cast aside Nazi Germany's
    responsibility for the colossal civilian suffering which occurred
    during the Second World War.

    Wladslaw Bartoszewski, an Auschwitz survivor and former Polish foreign
    minister argues that if a centre is created then it should be located
    in Wroclaw, which prior to World War II was for hundreds of years
    the German city of Breslau.

    Wroclaw was almost entirely destroyed during the war, when it was
    bombarded and eventually over-run by Soviet troops after a desperate
    14 week German defence that lasted until four days after the fall of
    Berlin in the spring of 1945.

    Subsequently it became a classic "refugee city." Those who settled in
    Wroclaw after the war were Polish refugees from the eastern city of
    Lvov, which at the end of World War II became Soviet Ukraine's Lviv,
    where mainly ethnic Ukrainians resettled.

    Documenting history

    Warsaw mayor cancels Berlin trip over refugee exhibition Polish
    archbishop criticises Berlin exhibition Poland demands return of bell
    from exhibition Rogasch, who has made numerous visits to museums
    in Poland in recent years for talks with fellow curators, insists
    that Germany has since the 1939-45 conflict worked painstakingly at
    documenting the "outrageous criminal aspects of Germany's history."

    "Now," he says, "this country has every right to focus on groups
    whose German members were also victims 60 years ago. Now they are
    in their 70s or 80s. Then, they were children. So they would neither
    have voted for Hitler or known anything about the concentration camps."

    "We cannot deny such groups their personal right to remember that
    they were victims - victims of Nazi dictatorship and also of Stalinist
    expansionism."
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