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How
Could 5,000,000 Be Killed and
Forgotten?
By
Terese
Pencak Schwartz
Growing
up in a Polish-American community,
raised by parents who survived the
Holocaust, I heard many stories about
the atrocities of this World War II
horror. I learned how one of my
family's homes in Poland was burned to
the ground by Nazis. I learned that my
uncle was shot in the head by Nazi
soldiers because his family was hiding
a Jewish woman. Painful as it was for
them to speak about it, my parents
[Frank and Ewa Pencak] felt it was
important that I knew the stories of
the Holocaust.
It
was only after I moved to the Los
Angeles area several years ago that I
realized that many people were not
aware that millions of victims of the
Holocaust were NOT Jewish. Outside the
Polish community, I heard very little
mention about the five million
non-Jewish victims -- usually referred
to as "the others".
Whenever
I would say that my parents were
survivors of the Holocaust, people
would look at me oddly and say,
"Oh, I didn't know you were
Jewish?" I realized that most
people were not aware of any other
Holocaust victims except Jews. This
concerned me.
I
am Jewish. I converted in 1978 after
studying at the University of Judaism
one year before marrying a Jewish man.
I belong to a temple where my daughter
attends religious school. I love the
Jewish religion and I admire the
Jewish community. In no way do I want
to diminish the enormous magnitude of
the victimization and murder of the
5,860,000 Jewish people. The Jews were
singled out by the Nazis for total
extermination -- a significant fact
that I do not repudiate, nor want to
diminish in any way. The Jewish people
have done an extraordinary job of
making the younger generation around
the world aware of their persecution
and the immense tragedy of the
Holocaust.
But
what about "the others"?
There were five million of them. Who
were they? Whose children, whose
mothers and fathers were they? How
could five million human beings have
been killed and forgotten?
After
studying carefully-documented books,
and interviewing non-Jewish survivors,
I found more information about the
five million forgotten than I had ever
imagined -- information that most
people are not aware of. Polish
citizens suffered enormously during
the Holocaust -- Jews and non-Jews.
Eleven million precious lives were
lost during the Holocaust of World War
II. Six million of these were Polish
citizens. Half of these Polish
citizens were non-Jews. On August 22,
1939, a few days before the official
start of World War II, Hitler
authorized his commanders, with these
infamous words, to kill "without
pity or mercy, all men, women, and
children of Polish descent or
language. Only in this way can we
obtain the living space [lebensraum]
we need".
Heinrich Himmler echoed Hitler's
decree:
| "All
Poles will disappear from the
world.... It is essential that
the great German people should
consider it as its major task
to destroy all Poles." |
On
September 1, 1939, Hitler invaded
Poland from three directions. Hitler's
invincible troops attacked from the
west, the north and the south. Poland
never had a chance. By October 8,
1939, Polish Jews and non-Jews were
stripped of all rights and, were
subject to special legislation.
Rationing, which allowed for only bare
sustenance of food and medicine was
quickly set up. Young Polish men were
forcibly drafted into the German army.
The Polish language was forbidden.
Only the German language was allowed.
All secondary schools and colleges
were closed. The Polish press was
liquidated. Libraries and bookshops
were burned. Polish Art and culture
were destroyed. Polish churches and
religious buildings were burned. Most
of the priests were arrested and sent
to concentration camps. Street signs
were either destroyed or changed to
new German names. Polish cities and
towns were renamed in German. It was
Hitler's goal to obliterate all traces
of Polish history and culture.
Hundreds of Polish community leaders,
mayors, local officials, priests,
teachers, lawyers, judges, senators,
doctors were executed in public. Much
of the rest of the so-called Intelligentsia,
the Polish leading class, was sent to
concentration camps where they later
died.
The first mass execution of World War
II took place in Wawer, a town near
Warsaw, Poland on December 27, 1939
when 107 Polish non-Jewish men were
taken from their homes in the middle
of the night and shot. This was just
the beginning of the street roundups
and mass executions that continued
throughout the war. The goal of these
executions, deportations, and the
ruthless domination of citizens was to
terrorize all Poles into docile
subservience.
At the same time, on the eastern
border of Poland, the Soviet Union
invaded and quickly conquered. Germany
and the Soviet Union divided Poland in
half. The western half, occupied by
the Nazis, became a new German
territory: "General Gouvernment".
The eastern half was incorporated
within the adjoining Russian border by
Soviet "elections". This new
border "realignment"
conferred Soviet citizenship on its
new Polish inhabitants. And all young
Polish men were subject to being
drafted into the Soviet army.
Just like the Nazis the Soviets also
reigned terror in Poland. The Soviets
took over Polish businesses, Polish
factories and destroyed churches and
religious buildings. The Polish
currency (zloty)
was removed from circulation. All
Polish banks were closed and savings
accounts were blocked.
During the war, Poland lost 45% of her
doctors, 57% of her attorneys, 40% of
her professors, 30% of her
technicians, more than 18% of her
clergy, and most of her journalists.
Poland's educated class was purposely
targeted because the Nazis knew that
this would make it easier to control
the country.
Non-Jews of Polish descent suffered
over 100,000 deaths at Auschwitz. The
Germans forcibly deported
approximately 2,000,000 Polish
Gentiles into slave labor for the
Third Reich. The Russians deported
almost 1,700,000 Polish non-Jews to
Siberia. Men, women and children were
forced from their homes with no
warning. Transferred in cattle cars in
freezing weather, many died on the
way. Polish children who possessed
Aryan-looking characteristics were
wrenched from their mother's arms and
placed in German homes to be raised as
Germans.
The Polish people were classified by
the Nazis according to their racial
characteristics. The ones who appeared
Aryan were deported to Lodz for
further racial examination. Most of
the others were sent to the Reich to
work in slave labor camps. The rest
were sent to Auschwitz to die. Polish
Christians and Catholics were actually
the first victims of the notorious
German death camp. For the first 21
months after it began in 1940,
Auschwitz was inhabited almost
exclusively by Polish non-Jews. The
first ethnic Pole died in June 1940
and the first Jew died in October
1942.
Because of the obliteration of the
Polish press by the Nazis, most of the
world was not aware, including many
parts of Nazi-occupied Poland, of the
atrocities going on. Even to this day,
much documentation of the Holocaust is
not available. The entire records of
Auschwitz were stolen by the Soviets
and not returned. It was Hitler's goal
to rewrite history. The Nazis
destroyed books, monuments, historical
inscriptions. They began a forceful
campaign of propaganda to convince the
world of their invincible superiority
and power and likewise the inferiority
and weakness of the Polish people.
While there is no argument that Hitler
abhorred the Jews and caused almost
six million to be ruthlessly killed,
often non-Jewish victims are
tragically forgotten from Holocaust
remembrances. Eleven million precious
human lives were lost during the
Holocaust. Five million of these were
non-Jewish. Three million were Polish
Christians and Catholics. It would be
very sad to forget even one precious
life extinguished so ruthlessly. It
would be a tragedy to forget five
million. ©
2001
Terese
Pencak Schwartz
- http://www.holocaustforgotten.com/
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