MANY Russians Supported Hitler And Hated
The Jewish Run Stalin Regime That Recently Orchestrated The Murder Of Over
100,000,000 One Hundred Millions Of Christians
By Øystein Rygg Haanæs: To put it briefly:
Ethnic Russians were much less loyal to the Jewish run Soviet regime in their encounters with
the German occupiers than historians have lead us to believe up to now. This is the story
told by UiO researcher Johannes Due Enstad, who has recently published a book
about the German occupation of Northwest Russia during World War 2.
That the Germans opened the Christian churches closed by the savage Jewish Bolshevik was well received by a religious peasantry with wholesome Greco-Roman Christian ethics. Source: The Russian state archive for film and photo documentation, 3/261/5.
That the Germans opened the Christian churches closed by the savage Jewish Bolshevik was well received by a religious peasantry with wholesome Greco-Roman Christian ethics. Source: The Russian state archive for film and photo documentation, 3/261/5.
After World War II the Jews running the Soviet Union created
a grandiose history of how all the inhabitants of the Soviet Union were loyal
to the regime and formed a common front against the Germans workers in the “Great
Patriotic War”. ...It has been common knowledge for a long
time that this is an untrue story,
because many Baltic and Ukrainian people
despised the Bolshevik regime. At the same time, western historians have
largely agreed that the ethnic Russians were loyal to the Stalin
regime when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union in 1941.
Johannes Due Enstad kills the myth about
Russian unanimity under Stalin in the “Great Patriotic War”. Enstad’s doctoral
thesis has been reworked in a book published by the respected Cambridge
University Press. Copyright: Cambridge University Press
According to Enstad, who is a post-doc at
the Department of Literature, Area Studies and European Languages at the
University of Oslo, it is time to crack this myth apart. In a book recently
published by the academic publishers Cambridge University Press, he addresses
which side the people of Northwest Russia chose during the German occupation.
“This area can, in both historical and
geographical terms, be seen as a Russian core area and has been part of the
Soviet state since the revolution. Nevertheless people - especially the
peasants in the countryside, who accounted for 90% of the population - were
much less loyal to the regime and the Soviet state than has been thought,”
explains Enstad.
Gave Christmas gifts to the occupiers
Something that happened in December 1941,
six months after the start of the German occupation, illustrates the positive
reaction quite well. During that time people from some of the small villages
collected several thousand woollen socks, mittens and felt boots as Christmas
gifts for the German soldiers.
Photograph of a handwritten letter of
thanks from the Anisimov family, addressed to Adolf Hitler, dated 27 December
1941. Source: Politisches Archiv des Auswärtigen Amts, R 60721.
Inside one of the socks there was a
note signed by a Russian by the name of Mikhail Nikiforov:
“I am sending these socks as a gift to the
invincible German army and pray that you defeat the Bolsheviks so that they are
eradicated forever, and also for a quick victory and a safe journey home”.
“This is just one of a number of similar
sources expressing a hope that the Germans would defeat the Soviet regime and
contribute to a better life for the Russians,” Enstad explains and adds:
“At the same time we can note that the
Germans were wished a safe journey home. No-one wanted them to stay and take
over the country. This shows there was some patriotism here, but this was
primarily linked to the Russian fatherland and not the Soviet regime.”
"Adolf Hitler the liberator"
But why did so many Russians show such a
benevolent attitude towards the occupation force?
“Stalin had failed to generate a strong
bond of faith between the Russian peasants and the regime. On the contrary, he
was much hated by many peasants who had seen their lives go from bad to worse
because of the collective farming the regime had implemented with great
brutality,” Enstad explains.
A source from the book puts it like this:
“My forefathers were prosperous farmers;
the Bolsheviks made them into slaves and beggars”.
From 1929 onwards, the farmers were forced
into collective farms - kolkhozes - often under slave-like conditions. Kulaks –
affluent farmers – should be eliminated as a social class, according to
Stalinist ideology .
This policy also hit hard in Northwest
Russia. During the period 1930-1933, there were more than 125,000 farmers in
the area who lost their citizenship rights, were deported to Siberia or were
simply shot. The policy also led to a disaster for the harvests; there were
famines in 1936-1937 and during the winter of 1940.
I 1937-1938 the “Great Terror” arrived,
where Stalin, in an unbelievably brutal fashion, acted to get rid of all who
might be thought of or imagined as opponents of the regime.
Given such a backdrop, it is possible to
understand why so many Russians put their trust in the Germans. One good
example is a letter written to “Der Führer” by the inhabitants of three small
villages in the autumn of 1941:
“We give our most sincere thanks for
liberating us from Stalin’s lackeys and collective farms. On the 10th of July
the German Armed Forces - your Wehrmacht - freed us from the yoke of the dammed
communists, the political leaders and the Stalinist government. […] We will
fight against the communists together with your troops. We give thanks to the
German Army for our liberty [...] and ask that this message is delivered to our
liberator Adolf Hitler.”
Dissolved the collective farms
A Russian peasant farmer reading Za rodinu
(a German-controlled Russian language news paper). Novyj Put, 1. April 1943
When the Red Army and the party apparatus
fled from Northwest Russia, the farmers claimed their rights and dissolved the
collective farms. Further south, in the fertile black earth region, the Germans
maintained the collectives, so as to stay in control of the rich crops. In the
North West region, where the earth was less fertile, they accepted the dissolution
and introduced a “semi private” agriculture.
According to Enstad, this German
agricultural policy was the main reason why the positive attitude to the
occupants lasted as long as it did.
During the winter of 1941-1942, there was
famine in a number of areas close to the front line and the population of
Leningrad suffered greatly. However, behind the front line - and especially in
the countryside - it is believed that a large part of the population had better
access to food than was the case prior to the German invasion.
“This was due to the private farms being
more efficient and the fact that it was difficult for the Germans to control
the agricultural production in detail. It was easier for the farmers to hide
part of the crops than it had been earlier”, says Enstad.
A Russian journalist, who travelled in the
occupied areas, expressed it like this:
"Compared to the ‘government for the
workers and the farmers’, the Germans were simply dilettantes when it came to
the art of plundering the countryside”.
“Many sources interviewed after the war
tell us that, in a material sense too, they were better off during the German
occupation than during the years after the Germans were chased into retreat,”
says Enstad.
Russian orthodox renaissance
Another reason for the relative popularity
of the occupiers was their policy on religion. They re-opened the churches the
Soviet regime had closed, something which caused something close to a religious
renaissance for the Russian orthodox church and a real revival movement in
parts of the occupied areas.
“This shows that the Stalinist oppression
of the church in no way managed to break the religiousness in the peasant
populations. The Russian orthodox faith was still a completely central part of
their identity,” Enstad explains.
He says that many priests openly supported
the occupants and prayed for a German victory in their sermons.
“At the same time this acted as a
double-edged sword for the Germans. Opening the churches led to increasing
Russian nationalism and a growing feeling that the Russians should not live
under the rule of strangers,” he says.
Rich source material
Enstad’s sources are in the main
first-hand sources collected from German and Russian state archives.
In this excerpt from a military
intelligence report from December 1941, the following is stated: “The
peasants, as well as most of the townspeople have welcomed the downfall of
Bolshevism”. Source: Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv, RH 26-281/25a).
“These were reports by the German military
units responsible for the occupied areas and intelligence from Russian
partisans operating behind the German lines,” explains the researcher.
German and Russian reports gave a totally
opposite picture of the mood of the population, however in Enstad’s opinion
there are good reasons to believe that the German sources were closer to the
truth.
“The Germans reported in a Prussian, matter
of fact style, being open about both progress and setbacks. The partisans,
however, reported using an idealised image of what was desired, exaggerated the
number of Germans killed and generally expressed what they knew Moscow wanted
to hear - that all Soviet citizens were loyal to the state.
Enstad also used diaries, memoirs and
interviews, conducted after the war, with people who experienced the German
occupation of Northwest Russia. These sources also show that the Germans were
given a much warmer welcome than both Soviet propaganda and western historians
have claimed.
Changing mood in autumn 1943
With what we now know about the Nazi view
of the Russians as Slavic “subhumans” and about the plans to use Eastern Europe
as “Lebensraum” - living space - for the German thousand-year Reich, the
Russian reactions to the invasion may appear to be naive.
However, Enstad emphasises that they did
not know then what we know today. And even if many got to hear about atrocities
like the murder of Jews, gypsies and the mentally ill, there were also many who
just brushed the stories of German brutality aside as Bolshevik propaganda.
Russians were used to being fed information that they could not trust from the
Soviet state.
For Russians who were living under an
unspoken but constant threat of being deported to Siberia for having done
something that could be interpreted as opposition to the regime, the risk of
being coerced into slavery by the Germans was in reality not anything new.
Orthodox cross procession in
Northwest Russia, 1942.
But little by little, many realised that
Hitler was not much better than Stalin. A particularly deep impression was
provided by the inhuman treatment of Russian prisoners of war: tens of
thousands starved to death in prison camps in Northwest Russia during the first
months of 1942.
“Nevertheless there was no marked change in
the Russians’ view of the occupiers until the autumn of 1943, when it became
more and more clear that a German retreat was coming. There was then a marked
increase in the passive and active opposition to the occupiers”, says Enstad.
He is of the opinion that when people live
in an area where two warring fractions are fighting for mastery, it is natural
to adapt to the one that is in power at any given time - and avoid
confrontation as far as is humanly possible.
“Even so, this ‘calculated pragmatism’
cannot fully explain the positive reception the Germans received from large
parts of the population in occupied Northwest Russia. This was first and
foremost due to the great discontent with the Stalin regime and the peasants
were hoping that the Germans would remove the Bolsheviks from power,” says
Enstad.
Reference
Enstad, Johannes Due (2018): “Soviet
Russians under Nazi Occupation: Fragile Loyalties in World War II”. Published
as part of the series “New Studies in European History” by Cambridge University
Press. The book is a reworked version of Enstad’s doctoral thesis from the
University of Oslo.
Edited by AA
Edited by AA
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