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Rassenhygiene, Nationalsozialismus, Euthanasie,
210 and 437; Nowak,
‘Euthanasie’ und Sterilisierung im ‘Dritten Reich’,
138–48, 152–7, 164 and 171.
52
   Mertens,
Himmlers Klostersturm,
21 and 388; Süß,
Der Volkskörper im Krieg,
127–51; Griech-Polelle,
Bishop von Galen,
78–9; Stephenson,
Hitler’s Home Front,
236 and 257; Kershaw,
Popular Opinion and Political Dissent,
332–3.
53
   Zahn,
German Catholics and Hitler’s Wars,
83–7; Nowak,
‘Euthanasie’ und Sterilisierung im ‘Dritten Reich’,
173.
54
   Kershaw,
Popular Opinion and Political Dissent,
341–55.
55
   Ibid., 349–57.
56
   Brodie, ‘For Christ and Germany’, 108–17, citing LNRW.AW
Politische Polizei im III. Reich, 408,
SD report, 20 Aug. 1941; Hosenfeld,
‘Ich versuche jeden zu retten’,
530–1: 17–19 Sept. 1941; MfK–FA, 3.2002.0211, Hans Albring to Eugen Altrogge, 14 Sept. 1941.
57
   Kuropka (ed.),
Meldungen aus Münster,
545; Brodie, ‘For Christ and Germany’, 114–21, citing LNRW.AW, ‘NSDAP Kreis- und Ortsgruppenleitungen, 125’, 15 Aug. and 14 Nov. 1941; LNRW.AW, ‘Gauleitung Westfalen-Nord, Hauptleitung’, 11 Nov. 1941; Winter,
‘Verlegt nach Hadamar’,
159; Redemann (ed.),
Zwischen Front und Heimat,
295.
58
   Kershaw,
Hitler,
2, 428; Nowak,
‘Euthanasie’ und Sterilisierung im ‘Dritten Reich’,
173–4; Süß,
Volkskörper im Krieg,
311–14.
59
   Faulstich, ‘Die Zahl der “Euthanasie”-Opfer’; Burleigh,
Death and Deliverance,
242; Sandner,
Verwaltung des Krankenmordes,
607–25; Winter,
‘Verlegt nach Hadamar’,
118–54; Roer and Henkel (eds),
Psychiatrie im Faschismus,
58–120.
60
   Sick,
‘Euthanasie’ im Nationalsozialismus,
73; Schmidt,
Selektion in der Heilanstalt;
118–19; Sandner,
Verwaltung des Krankenmordes,
457, 488–505, 595–6 and 642–3.
61
   Schmidt von Blittersdorf et al., ‘Die Geschichte der Anstalt Hadamar’, in Roer and Henkel (eds),
Psychiatrie im Faschismus,
58–120, here 112.
62
   Lutz, ‘Eine “reichlich einsichtslose Tochter”’; in George et al. (eds),
Hadamar,
293–304; case of Maria M., LWV-Archiv, Kassel, K12/2581.
63
   Lutz, ‘Eine “reichlich einsichtslose Tochter”’; for other cases of children, see Stargardt,
Witnesses of War,
chapter 3.
6
German Crusade
1
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.7209, Helmut Paulus to parents, 27 June 1942; and diary, 24 June 1941.
2
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.7209, Helmut Paulus, diary, 24 June 1941;
DRZW,
4 (1983), 470–6; Graser,
Zwischen Kattegat und Kaukasus;
on comradeship and ‘primary groups’, see Shils and Janowitz, ‘Cohesion and disintegration’, 12/2, 280–315; Kühne,
Kameradschaft.
3
   Overy,
The Bombing War,
70, 110–11; Domarus (ed.),
Hitler,
1726–32; Kershaw,
Hitler,
2, 386–7; Wette, ‘Die propagandistische Begleitmusik’, in Ueberschär and Wette (eds),
Der deutsche Überfall auf die Sowjetunion,
111–29.
4
   Klemperer,
I Shall Bear Witness,
1, 475–6: 22 June 1941.
5
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.7209, Erna and Irmgard to Helmut Paulus, 21 and 29 June, 30 July and 9 Aug. 1941.
6
MadR,
2426–8: 23 June 1941; Wantzen,
Das Leben im Krieg,
407: 22–23 June 1941.
7
   Wantzen,
Das Leben im Krieg,
400–5: 20–21 June 1941; Goebbels,
Tgb,
I/9, 336–7 and 387: 12 and 19 June 1941; Kershaw,
Hitler,
2, 386.
8
   For a survey, see Ueberschär and Bezymenskij (eds),
Der deutsche Angriff auf die Sowjetunion 1941.
9
   Wilhelm Düwell,
Vorwärts,
28 Aug. 1914; cited in Goltz,
Hindenburg,
16; Stargardt,
The German Idea of Militarism.
10
   Brodie, ‘For Christ and Germany’, 113 and 123–4; Kershaw,
Popular Opinion and Political Dissent,
356; although the SD was deeply involved in the conflict, see also its assessments:
MadR,
2517–19, and 2822–4: 14 July and 29 Sept. 1941; Löffler (ed.),
Galen: Akten, Briefe und Predigten,
2, 850–1, 863, 883 and 901–2: 13 and 20 July, 3 Aug. and 14 Sept. 1941.
11
MadR,
2472–4, 2507 and 2704: 3, 7 and 14 July 1941. ‘Wilden’, ‘Untermenschen’, ‘Zuchthäusler’.
12
   Krausnick et al. (eds),
Anatomy of the SS State,
512–13; Schuhmacher, ‘Nazi Germany and the morality of war’, citing BA–MA, RW 2/148, 335–81.
13
   MfK–FA, 3.2008.2195, Manfred von Plotho to wife: 30 June 1941.
14
   Schuhmacher, ‘Nazi Germany and the morality of war’;
VB,
5 and 8 July 1941;
DAZ,
5 July 1941;
Westdeutscher Beobachter,
7 and 14 July 1941.
15
   Raschhofer,
Der Fall Oberländer,
66;
Deutsche Wochenschau
no. 567 (16 July 1941);
MadR,
7, 2564: 24 July 1941.
16
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.0211, Albring to Altrogge, 8 July 1941.
17
   Ibid., Albring to Altrogge, 5, 8, 12 July and 4 Aug. 1941; Bistumsarchiv Münster, Abt. 101 Sekretariat des Generalvikars, A 101–1, 92–3, diocesan pastoral letter, 15 Oct. 1941.
18
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.0211, Albring to Altrogge, 30–31 Aug. 1941.
19
   BA–MA, MSg 2/13904: Friedrich Farnbacher, ‘Persönliches Kriegstagebuch des Hauptmanns der Reserve Friedrich Farnbacher, Panzer-Artillerie-Regiment 103 (seit 12. Jan. 1945 Kommandeur II./Pz. Art. Rgt. 103), für die Zeit vom 22. Juni 1941 bis 8. Mai 1945’: 20 July 1941, 470.
20
   Römer,
Der Kommissarbefehl;
Farnbacher, ‘Persönliches Kriegstagebuch’, 20 July 1941, 471–6.
21
   Ibid.; BA–MA, MSg 2/13904, Farnbacher, ‘Persönliches Kriegstagebuch’, 20 July 1941, 471–6.
22
   BA–MA, MSg 2/13904, Farnbacher, ‘Persönliches Kriegstagebuch’, 2 July and 13 Aug. 1941, 349–50 and 681; Hartmann,
Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg,
259.
23
   MfK–FA, 3.2002.0211, Albring to Altrogge, 28 Oct. 1941.
24
   On shortage of military chaplains to provide spiritual guidance, Bergen (ed.),
The Sword of the Lord;
Böll,
Brief an einen jungen Katholiken;
MfK–FA, 3.2002.0211, Albring to Altrogge, 1 Jan. and 21 Mar. 1942.
25
   Ebert (ed.),
Im Funkwagen der Wehrmacht,
20–22, 136.
26
   Eiber (ed.), ‘“. . . Ein bisschen die Wahrheit”: Briefe eines Bremer Kaufmanns’: Nr 9 HG to Hannah, 7 Sept. 1941, 4–5 July and 7 Aug. 1941; Schneider,
‘Auswärts eingesetzt’.
27
   Eiber (ed.), ‘“. . . Ein bisschen die Wahrheit”’, 79–81: 8 Oct. 1941.
28
   Ibid., 76, 7 Sept. 1941, Nr 9;
Deutsche Wochenschau,
No. 567 (16 July 1941);
MadR,
7, 2564: 24 July 1941.
29
   Eiber (ed.), ‘“. . . Ein bisschen die Wahrheit”’, 74, 81–3: 22 Aug. 1941, 25 Oct. and 18 Nov. 1941.
30
   The most famous collection of letters used to show that German soldiers approved of the murder of the Jews is Manoschek (ed.),
‘Es gibt nur eines für das Judentum: Vernichtung’,
which contains 103 anti-Semitic letters, about 20 per cent of which mention the murder of the Jews; cited widely in Friedländer,
The Years of Extermination.
They were taken from the Sterz Collection at the Bibliothek für Zeitgeschichte in Stuttgart, which contained 50,000 soldiers’ letters at that time. One of the major problems of working on this collection, however, is that the letters are not organised by correspondent but by date, and are onesided: hence, the development of the relationships at the centre of any correspondence cannot be evaluated: Humburg, ‘Feldpostbriefe aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg’; Latzel,
Deutsche Soldaten,
201–4; also Müller,
Deutsche Soldaten und ihre Feinde,
194–229; MfK–FA, 3.2002.7209, Paulus to parents, 4 Sept. 1942 and 28 June 1941.
31
   Latzel, ‘Tourismus und Gewalt’, in Heer and Neumann (eds),
Vernichtungskrieg,
447–59; Haydn,
Meter, immer nur Meter!,
123–5: 19 Dec. 1942; Hilberg,
Sonderzüge nach Auschwitz,
188; Diewerge (ed.),
Feldpostbriefe aus dem Osten,
38, cited in Weinberg,
A World at Arms,
473.
32
   Hürter,
Ein deutscher General,
62: letter, 21 June 1941.
33
   Hartmann,
Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg,
271–8.
34
   Jefim Gechtman, ‘Riga’, in Grossman and Ehrenburg (eds),
Das Schwarzbuch,
684; Mühlhäuser,
Eroberungen,
74–86.
35
   Longerich,
Holocaust,
179–205; Wildt,
Generation des Unbedingten,
578–91; Dieckman, ‘The war and the killing of the Lithuanian Jews’, in Herbert,
National Socialist Extermination Policies,
242–6; Klee et al. (eds),
‘The Good Old Days’,
27–37 and 46–58.
36
   Longerich,
Holocaust,
206–39; Klee et al. (eds),
‘The Good Old Days’,
54–7.
37
   Chiari,
Alltag hinter der Front;
Dean,
Collaboration in the Holocaust,
2000; on the First World War precedent, see Kramer and Horne,
German Atrocities, 1914;
Hartmann,
Halder,
160–72.
38
   Klee et al. (eds),
‘The Good Old Days’,
138–54.
39
   Noakes and Pridham (eds),
Nazism,
3, 495.
40
   Hürter,
Hitlers Heerführer,
579, and Pohl,
Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht,
261; Ueberschär and Wette,
Unternehmen Barbarossa,
339 ff.; Guderian issued the order to the 2nd Panzer Army on 6 Nov. 1941, and it took a further five to seven days to reach its divisions: Hartmann,
Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg,
10 and 316.
41
   Glantz,
Barbarossa Derailed;
Glantz,
When Titans Clashed,
293.
42
   Reinhardt,
Moscow,
41–2.
43
   Bock,
Zwischen Pflicht und Verweigerung,
255: 22 Aug. 1941; Hartmann,
Halder,
281–4; Hartmann,
Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg,
285; Hürter,
Hitlers Heerführer,
302–10; Wallach,
The Dogma of the Battle of Annihilation,
1986, 265–81.
44
   Hammer and Nieden (eds),
‘Sehr selten habe ich geweint,’
242–4: Robert R., diary, 21 Aug. 1941.
45
   Hammer and Nieden (eds),
‘Sehr selten habe ich geweint’,
242–4: Robert R., diary, 21 Aug. 1941.
46
   Ibid., 246–7: Robert R., diary, 28 Aug. 1941.
47
   Ibid., 244–5: Robert R. to Maria, 23 Aug. 1941.
48
   Ebert (ed.),
Im Funkwagen der Wehrmacht,
159–60: Wilhelm to Erika Moldenhauer, 14 Sept. 1941.
49
   Ibid., 161–2: Wilhelm to Erika Moldenhauer, 17 Sept. 1941.
BOOK: The German War
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