Read Crimes and Mercies Online
Authors: James Bacque
Tags: #Prisoners of war, #war crimes, #1948, #1949, #World War II, #Canadian history, #ebook, #1946, #concentration camps, #1944, #1947, #Herbert Hoover, #Germany, #1950, #Allied occupation, #famine relief, #world history, #1945, #book, #Mackenzie King, #History
Clay, Lucius,
109–11
,
151–2
,
203
,
204
COBSRA (Council of British Societies for Relief Abroad),
155
Cold War,
67
,
75
,
78
,
80
,
84
,
117
,
170
,
174
collective guilt,
175–8
Cologne,
167
Combined Food Board,
141
Commission for Relief in Belgium,
6
Committee Against Mass Expulsions, see Land of the Dead, The
communism,
10
,
17
,
18
; anti-Nazi resistance movement,
131
; Hoover and,
8–9
,
10–11
; perceived threat from,
23
,
93
Conway, Granville,
141
Council of Foreign Ministers: 1947 meeting,
120
,
186
,
189
,
190
,
210
CRALOG (Council of Relief Agencies Licensed for Operation in Germany),
151
,
153–4
,
158
CSSA (Central State Special Archive, USSR),
69–72
,
73–5
,
77
,
80–3
,
117
,
205–6
Czechoslovakia,
94
,
113
,
122
,
123
,
176
; expulsions and atrocities,
92–4
,
98–100
Darwin, Charles,
1
Davis, Norman,
136
death rates,
107–25
,
185–9
,
201–3
; in Austria,
118
; in Berlin,
199
; in Brilon,
118
,
198–9
; in British zone,
32–5
,
118–19
,
201–2
; of civilians,
188–9
; and expulsions,
108
,
109
,
112–13
,
122–3
,
123–4
,
189–91
; French statistics,
57–8
; in French zone,
35
,
203
; high estimates,
109
,
112–13
; low estimates,
108
,
109–12
; mid-range estimates,
108–9
,
113–23
; 1945–46,
188–9
; prisoners of war,
20
,
52–6
,
75
,
84
,
92
,
124
,
208–9
; in selected towns (1946–50),
198–201
; in Soviet zone,
110
,
188
; summarised,
123–5
; in US zone,
108
,
109–12
,
118
,
119
,
209–10
; see also starvation
DEF (disarmed enemy force) prisoners,
56–7
De Gaulle, Charles,
77
,
78
,
171
,
172
Degwitz, Herr,
202
Dellmann, Max,
55
democracy,
167–8
,
172
,
178
,
180–1
,
194
Denmark, aid from,
155
Deutsche Caritasverband,
151
Deutsche Rote Kreuz, see under Red Cross
Dewey, John,
190
de Zayas, Alfred,
104
,
107
,
117–8
,
178
,
197
Dittersdorf,
101
Dole, Bob,
171
Donovan, William,
28
Doucet, Nelson,
192
Düsseldorf,
32–3
Dyck, Cornelius,
154
Dyck, Peter and Elfrieda,
161
dysentery,
47
Earle, Ambassador,
72
Early, Steve,
136
Ebensee camp,
59
economy, European,
167
Einsiedel, Heinrich von,
67
Eisenhower, Dwight D.,
59
,
172
,
175
; death penalty order,
40–3
,
44
,
45
,
91
; and destruction of food,
91
; forbids Quaker aid,
155
; and missing prisoners,
56
,
77
,
78
,
110
; and Morgenthau Plan,
25–6
,
28–9
emigration: forbidden to Germans,
107–8
; from Germany (1946–
50
statistics),
116
Enke, Siegfried,
53
European Court of Human Rights,
191
Expulsion of the German Population
from the Territories East of the
Oder–Neisse Line,
81
expulsions,
29
,
92
,
93–106
,
113
,
120
,
122
,
150
,
156
,
168
,
177–79
; atrocities,
98
,
99
,
100–1
; condemned by Adenauer,
181
; death rates,
108
,
109
,
112–14
,
122
,
123–5
,
189–91
; difficulties of feeding children,
156–7
; evidence for fate of expellees,
189–91
; numbers taken to the Gulag,
81
; opponents of,
126
; West’s cover-up of,
181
factories, destruction of,
92
,
149
,
164
,
168
fertilizer production: reduced by Allies,
88
,
92
,
148
,
149
First World War,
3–10
; aftermath,
10–16
,
127–8
food rations,
33
,
90
,
91
,
110–11
,
118–9
,
138
,
143
,
149
,
151
; in Britain,
158
; in Canada,
140
food relief programmes,
135–44
,
150–7
; blocked by Allies,
87–8
,
149
,
157–8
; for children,
150
,
154
,
155
,
155–7
; First World War,
3–6
;
see also Hoover, Herbert
food supplies,
153
; Germans deprived of,
91
,
147–50
; hoarding by farmers,
158
; imports,
93
; myth of world shortage,
30
,
32
,
123–4
,
138–9
,
145
,
146–7
,
159
; problem of getting surpluses to the starving,
140
,
142–3
; production drop in France and UK,
144
; urban shortages in 1947,
158–9
; in wartime Germany,
145
,
148
; world production,
30
,
145
,
146–7
;
see also Morgenthau Plan;
starvation
Foreign Office (UK),
90
,
130
,
147
,
148
France,
152–3
; conditions in camps,
29
,
47–9
,
58–61
; conditions in Vosges area,
49
,
59
; food production,
144
; government statistics,
109
,
112–13
; prisoner death statistics,
57–8
; refugees saved in,
105
,
182
freedom of discussion,
179–81
French zone of Germany: death rates in,
35
,
203
; starvation in,
35
,
90
,
167
Freud, Sigmund,
2
Fürstbischofliche Knabenseminar, Graz,
160
Galbraith, John Kenneth,
139
Garmisch-Partenkirchen camp,
91
Geneva Convention,
29
,
47
,
58
,
60
,
73
,
76
,
144
,
173
,
197
Germany: agrees to food relief in Belgium,
87
; agricultural capacity,
147–8
,
150
,
158
,
203
; anti-American feeling,
168
,
169
; food shortages and starvation,
31–5
,
89–93
,
142–169
; government statistics,
108
,
111
,
116–7
,
117–8
,
119–20
,
198
,
209
; history of anger against,
126–8
; industry,
92–3
,
144
,
148–9
,
158
,
164
,
168–9
; land confiscations,
91
,
94
,
147
,
176
; and Marshall Plan,
162–3
; post-1918 blockade of,
3
,
7
,
11
,
13–15
; post-1945 collapse,
89–90
; prewar food consumption and production,
145
; refugee numbers,
150
; relinquishes land claims (1990),
178–91
; and reparations,
91–2
,
163–7
,
190
; resistance movements,
128–33
; surveys of missing persons,
74–5
,
76–7
,
207–9
; Weimar Republic,
10
,
18
;
see also death rates; food relief
programmes; Morgenthau Plan; starvation
Gilbert, Martin,
30
Gimbel, John,
164
,
165
,
166
,
167
,
168
Glogau,
113
Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah,
175
Gollancz, Victor,
32–3
,
36
,
126
,
175
,
181
Gouzenko, Igor,
170
Graudenz camp,
103
Greece,
88
Greer, Robert,
94–8
Grey, Lord (Edward),
5
Grüber, Probst,
34
Grünwald, Bürgermeister,
49
Guderian, Heinz,
18
,
107
,
109
,
113
Gulag,
23
,
62–71
; economic viability of,
65–7
; and re-education,
67–8
,
130
Gummersbach,
46
Havel, Václav,
176
Heising, Johannes,
60
Henrys, General,
9
Hess, Rudolf,
129
Hilfs-Ausschuß,
155
Hilfswerk der Evangelischen Kirchen in Deutschland,
151
,
153
,
154
Hilldring, J. H.,
34
Hitler, Adolf,
10
,
15
,
17
,
18–20
,
25
,
57
,
70
,
94
,
116
,
127
,
128
,
145
,
175
; Hoover on,
159
; number of books on,
183
; persecution of churches,
161
; resistance to,
129
,
130–1
Holland,
152–3
,
175
; famine in,
87–90
Homma, Masaharu,
29
Hoover, Herbert,
87
,
180
,
182
; ability and character,
11–13
; advises Truman,
36
,
111–2
,
137
; and anti-Semitism,
10–11
; and bolshevism,
8–9
,
10–11
; condemns Allies’ policy,
20
,
90
; and First World War relief programmes,
3–10
,
12
,
13–15
,
138
; on Hitler,
159
; not remembered,
183
; post-1945 food-relief programmes,
37
,
136–9
,
141–4
,
147
,
148
,
150
,
151–2
,
158
,
160–1
; and relief of Dutch famine,
86–7
,
88
; on reparations,
163
; reports on conditions in Germany,
119
; on role of USA,
11–12
Hoover Aid (Hoover-Spende),
156–7
Hoover Famine Emergency Commission,
119
,
164
hospitals: camp units,
52–3
,
55–6
; evacuation,
51–3
,
56
Huber, Max,
29
Hughson, Robert,
50
Hunger Year (Hungerjahr),
117
,
122
ICRC, see International Committee of the Red Cross
Indians, North American,
178
industry, German,
92–3
,
144
,
148–9
,
158
,
168
; factories dismantled,
92
,
149
,
164
,
168