The Rosenstrasse Demonstration 1943
Background Between
February 27 and March 6, 1943, a group of up to 200 non-Jewish Germans
demonstrated outside the local Jewish community building at Rosenstraße 2-4, in
Berlin. There, German police had incarcerated around 2,000 Jews—mostly Jewish
males married to non-Jewish partners and the male children of these so-called
mixed marriages.
(Portrait of Margot (Miriam) and
Gerhard (Gad) Beck)
Gerhard and Margot's mother came
from a Protestant family. She met her future husband when she went to work in
the telephone exchange at his company. She converted to Judaism in 1920. The
couple married in 1920, and in 1923 had their twins Gerhard and Margot. Both
Gerhard and Margot would become active in Jewish youth movements, and took on
Hebrew names (Gad and Miriam). On
February 17, 1943, Gad was ordered to report to the temporary internment camp
established at a former Jewish community building on the Rosenstrasse. He was
detained there until March 6, when the group was released following a
demonstration. Later, in the spring of 1943 Gad joined the Chug Halutzi, a
clandestine group of Jewish youth in Berlin, most of whom were living in
hiding. Because Gad had contacts among both Christians and homosexuals, he was
able to arrange hiding places for members of his group.
(Deportation of Jews from Berlin,
1941-1943)
The non-Jewish family members of
those incarcerated in the Rosenstraße believed that the Germans would deport
their loved ones to the east. They based their belief on recent experiences of
deportation operations and the fact that in this same period the German police
rounded up and deported approximately 7,000 Jews from Berlin. Their non-violent
demonstration in the freezing cold outside the Rosenstraße community center
aimed to prevent this deportation.
The Rosenstraße protest took
place in the context of two turning points in Nazi Germany's wars: the war
against the Allies and the war against the Jews of Europe. The first turning
point occurred on the military front, with the catastrophic German defeat
at Stalingrad [today: Volgograd, Russian Federation]. Stalingrad raised the
first significant doubts among the German people that Germany could win the
war. The second turning point was the decision of the Nazi leadership,
in the wake of deporting the remainder of the German Jews to killing centers,
to manage the domestic problem of Jews in “mixed marriages” and the children of
such marriages. At the Wannsee Conference in Berlin in January 1942, action
again this small group of “mixed-marriage Jews” had been deferred until after
Germany victory. This decision was made out of concern that the deportation of
Jewish spouses and half-Jewish children would inspire unrest among non-Jewish
relatives and, possibly, among broader sections of the German population.
The Factory Action
[Fabrik-Aktion] and the Rosenstraße protest
Factory Action The
incarceration of Jewish spouses and Mischlinge in the Rosenstraße coincided
with the last major roundup of German Jews for deportation to Auschwitz, an
operation known as the “Factory Action” (Fabrik-Aktion). During this operation
the Gestapo deported some 11,000 Jews to Auschwitz in the first weeks of March
alone. From the outset of the Factory Action, however, the Gestapo
intended to spare the Jewish spouses and Mischlinge and move them into
forced-labor camps around Berlin and other major German cities. There were some
8,800 Jews residing in Berlin who were spouses or children in “mixed
marriages.” These Jews were categorized as “exempted” Jews. The Gestapo did not
intend to deport these “exempted” Jews to Auschwitz or to anywhere else outside
the German Reich. Before dawn on Saturday, February 27, 1943, the
Gestapo initiated their massive action. German police herded Jews, pulled from
their jobs and homes or snatched off the streets, into trucks that transported
them to designated assembly points. The German police incarcerated some 2,000
people in the Jewish community building at Rosenstraße 2-4, and began to check
their papers to determine if they qualified as “exempted” Jews.
Protest Family members
waited in vain for the return of their spouses during the day on February 27,
1943. As word spread that some of the “mixed-marriage” Jews were in the
Rosenstraße, German partners and siblings, mostly women, gathered on the street
outside of the Jewish community center building. They hoped to find out
information about their loved ones and to seek comfort from others in a similar
situation . The building itself had been cordoned off by municipal police
officers. Over the next days, the crowd swelled to between 150 and 200 persons
demanding information on their loved ones.
Hoping to prevent what they
believed to be an impending deportation to Auschwitz, the small crowd of
civilians yelled, chanted, or remained silent but standing on the street, even
when threatened with lethal force. Because of the protest's unusual character
in Nazi Germany, news of the demonstration spread throughout the country and
eventually, to the international press. In addition to uncertainty about their
immediate fate, those held inside the Rosenstraße community building had
insufficient food and inadequate sleeping and sanitary facilities. As the
spouses and other family members held their vigil outside the building, Gestapo
officials continued to review papers of each internee, releasing the first
“mixed-marriage” Jews as early as March 1. The review and release process
continued until March 12, 1943, well after the family members had left the
street on March 6.
In all, the Gestapo deported to
Auschwitz 25 persons of the approximately 2,000 incarcerated in the Rosenstraße
concentration center. The Gestapo designated all of them as protective custody (Schutzhäftlinge).
Auschwitz camp authorities processed them into the camp as prisoners without a
selection process.
Fate of the Rosenstraße
Internees After Release Release from the Rosenstraße did not end either
fear or suffering for those interned there. The Gestapo followed through with
its intention to deport the “mixed-marriage” Jews capable of work to
forced-labor camps in Berlin and elsewhere in the Reich. German police
authorities returned to pick up the released men and teenage boys on the day
after their release.
Perceptions of the Rosenstraße
incident The Factory Action occurred less than a month after the surrender
of the German 6th Army at Stalingrad. The timing gave the Rosenstraße incident
a perceived and remembered threat of public unrest and turmoil that German
authorities feared would test the tenuous wartime morale in Germany. Although
on occasion individual “mixed-marriage” Jews were later deported and killed,
the Nazi regime generally maintained its policy, decided upon at Wannsee, to
defer deportation of “exempted” Jews to killing centers until after a German
victory. Neither those incarcerated at the Rosenstraße nor their family
members, who gathered on the street in the bitter late February cold, could be
certain of this, however. Their experience of deportations, including those of
the ongoing Factory Action, taught that those seized were transported on trains
to locations from which they never returned. Nor could the women and children
gathered outside on the street be certain that the German police would be
reluctant to open fire on German civilians for reasons of public relations.
There had never been a demonstration on behalf of Jews in wartime Nazi
Germany—there was no experience to draw upon. Hence, nothing detracts
from the courage of those women who, for the one and only time in Nazi Germany,
stood face-to-face with armed municipal police officers, in the hopes of seeing
their loved ones.
Conclusion The unique
circumstances of the Rosenstraße incident and its timing in relation to the
deportation of Jews not in “mixed marriages” from Berlin have encouraged the
development of a narrative about the protest. In this narrative, the temporary
release of the “mixed-marriage” Jews from the Rosenstraße and the decision of
the Gestapo not to deport them to Auschwitz to be killed are attributed to the
demonstration of the women. Also in this narrative, the number of women
demonstrating ranges up to 6,000. In fact, the Gestapo never intended to deport
“mixed-marriage” Jews and fully intended to incarcerate these Jews in
forced-labor camps in the Reich. Gestapo officials carried out their plans
without reference to the events on the street outside the Rosenstraße Jewish
community building between February 27 and March 6, 1943.
https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-rosenstrasse-demonstration-1943
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.