From the DW:
“The children the Nazis stole in
Poland: Forgotten victims”
During World War II, the Nazis
kidnapped tens of thousands of children and forcibly "Germanized"
them. Afterward, they were left to grapple with their trauma alone. Now, a book
and a documentary reveal their cruel fates. Alodia Witaszek's biological
parents were still alive when she was kidnapped as a girl. In autumn of 1943,
both she and her little sister were sent to a youth custody camp in
Litzmannstadt, which is today Lodz, to become "Germanized." The
sisters were no longer allowed to speak Polish in the camp.
Organized identity falsification: Countless Polish children experienced the
same fate: The organized child robbery was part of the Nazi racial policy to
turn "racially valuable" children from the annexed parts of western
Poland into Germans. The youth welfare offices reported the children whose
appearance they considered "Aryan." Representatives of the health
authorities conducted medical examinations of them, filtered out the children
with "good blood," who were then sent to a children's home where they
were forced to learn German and their names were Germanized. Afterwards, the SS-initiated association
Lebensborn took responsibility of them, handing over younger children to SS
families for adoption, and sending older ones to "German home
schools." Over time, the children became increasingly robbed of their
memories and their identity as they became Germanized. The child abduction
program was part of the Nazi reorganization plans (often called "New
Order") for occupied Europe. In June 1941, SS Reichsführer Heinrich
Himmler declared that it was necessary to capture "particularly well-bred
small children of Polish families." But it was not only in occupied Poland
that children were violently torn from their families. Children were also
abducted in the occupied territories of the Soviet Union. The children of
forced laborers were taken away from their mothers, some were passed on to
German families, others were tortured in homes. In the Reich School for
Volksdeutsche in Achern and in the Lebensborn Home in Steinhöring, children
were severely punished for speaking their native language rather than German:
Starvation and confinement in a cellar were among the types of punishment. Estimates
vary as to the actual number of children stolen by the Nazis, but according to
the German paper Handelsblatt in 2018, "it is usually stated that up to
400,000 'Aryan'-looking children were taken from their families in Eastern
Europe and Nazi-occupied Norway. Half of all the abductions took place in
Poland."
Difficulty in emotionally
processing experiences: Seventy-five
years after the Second World War, the Nazi kidnapping of children has hardly
been addressed in Germany. This is a
"white spot in historiography," believes lawyer Artur Wroblewski, who
writes for the Polish website "interia." He and six other journalists
and historians working for the website are aiming to change that. Their book
about the Nazi kidnapping of children in Poland was published in Krakow in
2018. This past February, it was published in German by the Freiburg-based
publisher Herder Verlag. The authors traced the fates of people like Alodia,
who had to experience first-hand how the Nazis' racist megalomania destroyed
their childhood and often their whole lives. Almost all of those who reveal
their fates in the book Als wäre ich allein auf der Welt (As If I Were Alone in
the World) say that the repeated searches for their biological families have
been futile. They describe the often painful return to Poland after the war —
and the further traumatization caused by their non-recognition as victims.
Tracing history: The journalist Monika Sieradzka, who works
for Deutsche Welle and Polish media, and her colleague Elisabeth Lehmann, who
works for German public broadcaster MDR, took a step further in their search
for information. During years of research, they were able to track down victims
who were willing to talk about their fragmented lives in front of the camera,
resulting in the film Kinderraub der Nazis: Die vergessenen Opfer (Children
Stolen by the Nazis: Forgotten Victims). Hermann Lüdeking is one of the film's
protagonists who, in his persevering search, never managed to find his roots
again. As a six-year-old boy, he was put into a home and later joined the SS
family Lüdeking as "valuable material from a racial point of view."
The only thing he managed to unearth through his persistent combing through
archives and documents was his original Polish name: Roman Roszatowski, but he
was called "Romek." Lüdeking, who grew up in southern Germany and
continues to live there, has long since forgotten the Polish language.
Doubly traumatized: An association called "Stolen Children
- Forgotten victims" helped him in his search for his roots. The documents
of the SS association Lebensborn were destroyed after the war, when the
association was classified as a charitable organization in the Nuremberg
post-war trials. The local youth welfare offices also had no interest in
revealing the identity of the stolen children. Hermann Lüdeking is the only one
who is also fighting for moral recognition as a victim, but the struggle has
been in vain until now. "The Germans don't want to be made aware of this
because it would cost money," the now 84-year-old bitterly says. Monika
Sieradzka adds: "To this day, Hermann alias Romek feels like a foreigner
in 'his' country."
^ This continues to remain a secret
75 years later and more needs to be done by Germany to open up the files and
help the remaining victims finally learn the truth. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/the-children-the-nazis-stole-in-poland-forgotten-victims/a-52739589
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