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Hmmm, it is always easy to judge afterwards, especially now, 70 years later. Back at the time in the '30ies things were not so clear and the nazi's offered great advantages to most people in Germany and other countries. What would you have done at that time, in Germany, not knowing what we know now? Maybe we should not judge that fast.
And like in Germany it was in other countries as well. The difference is that they didn't get as much power in other countries. Here in the Netherlands we had Dutch SS'ers, the NSB as well as Dutch resistance. I'm pretty sure things were the same in Poland, France and other occupied countries as well. I'm pretty sure many warcrimes in the name of the nazi's were committed by Polish people, just like most warcrimes in the Netherlands were performed by Dutch SD agents. And I could have taken any nationality with that last statement.
But after the war, everybody was in the resistance, were they not?
Unlike in most European countries occupied by Nazi Germany—where the Germans sought and found true collaborators among the locals—in occupied Poland there was no official collaboration either at the political or at the economic level.[66][67] Poland also never officially surrendered to the Germans.[68] Under German occupation, the Polish army continued to fight underground, as Armia Krajowa and forest partisans – Leśni. The Polish resistance movement in World War II in German-occupied Poland was the largest resistance movement in all of occupied Europe.[69] As a result, Polish citizens were unlikely to be given positions of any significant authority.[66][67] The vast majority of the pre-war citizenry collaborating with the Nazis was the German minority in Poland which was offered one of several possible grades of German citizenship.[70]
There is a general consensus among historians that there was very little collaboration with the Nazis among the Polish nation as a whole, compared to other German-occupied countries.[66][67][71] Depending on a definition of collaboration (and of a Polish citizen, based on ethnicity and minority status), scholars estimate number of "Polish collaborators" at around several thousand in a population of about 35 million (that number is supported by the Israeli War Crimes Commission).[72] The estimate is based primarily on the number of death sentences for treason by the Special Courts of the Polish Underground State. Some estimates are higher, counting in all members of the German minority in Poland and any former Polish citizens declaring their German ethnicity (Volksdeutsche), as well as conscripted members of the Blue Police, low-ranking Polish bureaucrats employed in German occupational administration, and even workers in forced labor camps (ex. Zivilarbeiter and Baudienst). Most of the Blue Police were forcibly drafted into service; nevertheless, a significant number acted as spies for Polish resistance movement Armia Krajowa.[71] John Connelly quoted a Polish historian (Leszek Gondek) calling the phenomenon of Polish collaboration "marginal" and wrote that "only relatively small percentage of Polish population engaged in activities that may be described as collaboration when seen against the backdrop of European and world history".[71]
But after the war, everybody was in the resistance, were they not?
A question may be asked of everyone in this day and age:
What would YOU do under those circumstances? Would you speak out against the government, knowing that there was a strong chance of a black sedan pulling up at your door at 3 a.m.?
Would you make the best of it, trying to keep the status quo? Would you breathe a sigh of relief when you find out you and your family have the proper religion and/or ancestry that lets you "squeek by" even though your family's friends for several generations were being loaded into the back of a guarded truck.
It happened under an alarming number of governments, called by various labels (Nazis, Communists, Socialists, Fascists, etc) and they people allowed it. Some may say that the people were "powerless" to stop it, but this has been proven wrong on several cases, such as Romania overthrowing (eventually) Ceaușescu's regime, or the Italians (eventually) ousting Mussolini, Poland eventually shaking off Soviet rule, and so on.
In the meantime though, what does a person do? Some want to survive and will do what eveer it takes...many collaborators thought there was no way out, that the occupiers were there to stay.
It seems to me that the best policy for current book authors, is to stick with actual records and first-person interviews to keep in contact with the darkness and misery that was to be had in those times, instead of publishing their opinions offered under the disguise as fact.
Except for the young women who were beaten shaved stripped and paraded for consorting with the people their elders had accepted into their country.
The vast majority of the pre-war citizenry collaborating with the Nazis was the German minority in Poland which was offered one of several possible grades of German citizenship. In 1939, before the German invasion of Poland, 800,000 people declared themselves as members of the German minority in Poland mostly in Pomerania and Western Silesia. During the war there were about 3 million former Polish citizens of German origin who signed the official list of Volksdeutsche. People who became Volksdeutsche were treated by Poles with special contempt, and the fact of them having signed the Volksliste constituted high treason according to the Polish underground law
I wasnt thinking about the Netherlands (or any country) in particular. It is easy to judge that a collaborator deserves what they get but the best spies and resistance workers live very close to the enemy.True, one of the most shamefull episodes in the history of my country. But it illustrates what I want to say. Those people who did this usually were mostly not people from the resistance.
Another example. Of my two grandfathers, one was with the Northernlight group, a communist resistance group in Groningen. He barely escaped the war with his life. My other grandfather had a bicycle shop and sold to Germans and repaired their bikes. But guess who was the loudest after the war....
It's actually a very complex situation.I have to say this is an incredibly eye opening discussion, with many points of view that I had not considered. Not at all black and white as I suspected.
... The Horst Wessel Song ...