It isn’t every day that I pick up a book from a middle
school library. It’s even less often that when I do I can’t put it down. That
was the case recently with a book that my son brought home. In a rare case for
my son, he had read the book and enjoyed it so much that he wanted to buy a
copy. After looking at the book, I not only bought it for him, I read it myself
and found the story riveting.
The book was “Unlikely
Warrior: A Jewish Soldier in Hitler’s Army” by Georg Rauch. As a
self-proclaimed, history nut, the title grabbed my attention. My first thought
was, “Whoa, I didn’t know that there were any Jews who fought in the German
army.”
The book is an autobiographical tale of an Austrian teenager
who had a Jewish grandparent but was
raised as a gentile. Even though Judaism is a religion rather than a race, the
fact that Rauch was ¼ Jewish made him a “mischling,” essentially a half-breed,
in the eyes of the Nazis. Nevertheless, while Rauch’s mother was hiding Jews in
their home, the Wehrmacht drafted the young man. Initially selected to be an
officer, he used his mischling status to avoid being assigned to a leadership
position.
Rauch’s tale brings humanity to the face of Wehrmacht
soldiers, many of whom were conscripts who had no love for Hitler or the Nazis.
Once Rauch was enlisted and joined a Wehrmacht unit, his Jewish ancestry seems
not to have made a difference. He was accepted as a brother-in-arms by his
fellow soldiers who had bigger concerns than who the grandparents of their
fellow soldiers were. His letters home were reminiscent of letters by American
GIs.
The German soldiers were on the wrong side, but not all of
them were evil. With conscripts on all sides in the war, a great many soldiers on
every side just wanted the war to be over so they could go home.
Rauch’s description of fighting on the Russian front also
tells a story that is largely unknown among American readers. As bloody as the
American and British campaigns against the Germans were, the fighting on the
vast expanses of Russia was much larger in scale. Throughout the war, Germany
had many more
divisions on the Eastern front than in the West. Rauch arrived in Russia
shortly before German lines collapsed in 1943. His story includes a stint as a
prisoner in a Soviet POW camp that bears more than a passing resemblance to a
Nazi concentration camp.
His description of the SS recruiting at his school tells of
young men who were lured into the elite service by promises of girls and
national glory. Many probably had no idea what they were volunteering for at
the time. The promises of the recruiters stand in stark contrast to the later
scene at the prison camp in which Soviet guards singled out SS soldiers for
execution by their blood type tattoos, a perk of SS service.
Rauch’s story was so compelling that I sought out another
book that he mentioned. Bryan Mark Rigg
researched the topic of Jewish German soldiers in his book, “Hitler’s
Jewish Soldiers,” and it turns out that there were thousands of them. While
most were mischlinge like Rauch, some
were full Jews. Some were generals and some even served in the SS.
The Nazi approach to Jewish and mischling soldiers was
paradoxical and confused. Some served out the war. Many were discharged, even
as the Third Reich crumbled, and others were sent to forced labor groups or
concentration camps.
Some Jewish soldiers who had good records, had been decorated for their bravery and looked Aryan were
granted exemptions to serve. A few were granted certificates of German blood
that essentially made them honorary Aryans. The decisions to grant clemency
from the anti-Jewish laws were made personally by Hitler. At times, the Fuhrer
would grant an exemption to one brother
but deny another.
The obvious question is why? Why would Jews enlist to fight
for Hitler?
There are many answers. Some were so assimilated into German
society that they didn’t know about their Jewish ancestry. Some were even Nazi
Party members before they learned the “embarrassing” truth about their lineage.
These Jewish Germans considered themselves nationalists and patriots rather
than Jews.
Many others became soldiers to protect themselves and their
families. Being a soldier or a veteran sometimes – but not always – offered protection
from the SS and the Gestapo. Some Jewish soldiers were able to prevent or delay
the deportation of their relatives to the death camps. Some were able to get
better rations for their families by serving. It is ironic that they felt safer
facing the Americans, British and
Russians than their own government.
Some were professional soldiers who were in the German
military before Hitler’s rise to power. These men simply knew no other career
or way of life.
Some, like Rauch, served because they were drafted and had
no other option. Dodging the draft would result in imprisonment or execution
and might also bring punishment upon their family.
Another factor was that most German Jews were unaware of the
Nazi extermination of Jews in the East. In Germany, persecution of Jews was
widespread and obvious, but mass murders were less apparent in the police state
where information was tightly controlled. People knew about the deportations of
the Jews from Germany but did not know that
they were being transported to death camps.
If the firsthand account of World War II from the German
perspective makes the Wehrmacht seem more human, one has only to watch a
documentary about the Einsatzgruppen (available on Netflix) to again question
the very humanity of German soldiers. What was hidden from those in Germany was
readily apparent to those in the occupied territories of the East. The Germans
and their allies marched Jews into ravines and executed them one by one,
stacking thousands of bodies like cordwood. The Wehrmacht took part in these
massacres and attempts were made by leaders to implicate every soldier by
making them take part.
None of the Jewish German veterans admit to being involved
in the massacres, but Rauch does describe being ordered to execute a Russian
civilian accused of being a partisan. The
passage provided an opportunity to discuss the ethics of warfare with my son,
who is currently a JROTC cadet.
The story of the Jews who fought for Hitler is a
little-known but fascinating part of World War II history. Almost lost amid the
tragedy of the war and the Holocaust is the story of these German Jews who were
caught between love for their country and persecution by their government. As
with many victims of the war, they were left with no good options with which to
play the hand that life dealt them.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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