Fear and Terror: The Expulsion of Polish Jews from Saxony/Germany in October 1938
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Author/Creator
Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2017-12-05
Type of Work
Department
German
Program
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF MODERN LANGUAGES, LITERATURES, & CULTURES
Citation of Original Publication
Uta Larkey (2017) Fear and Terror: The Expulsion of Polish Jews from Saxony/Germany in October 1938, Dapim: Studies on the Holocaust, 31:3, 243-260, DOI: 10.1080/23256249.2017.1385844
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Abstract
This article is a regional study that focuses on the expulsion of Jews
with Polish citizenship from Saxony, mostly long-term legal
residents of Germany, in the context of the so-called ‘Polenaktion’
(27–29 October 1938). The article gives a brief overview of the
expulsion of Polish Jews from Germany and highlights the special
circumstances in Saxony, specifically in Leipzig. The article
examines the role of the local police forces in carrying out the
arrests and transports to the German–Polish border. It further
draws attention to the tumultuous situation near Beuthen (Bytom)
where the distressed expellees were chased across the border into
Polish territory. The article also traces the steps of individuals and
families after their disorienting arrival in Poland. Finally it
addresses the question of the ‘returnees’ – a limited number of
expellees who were allowed to return to their hometowns in
Germany for a short period in order to take care of their
businesses, financial affairs and apartments. Highlighting Saxony
as one example, this article shows that the brutal mass expulsion
of Polish Jews from Germany was not only an unprecedented act
of mass violence and viciousness against Jews in Germany, but
also became a precursor, a ‘test case,’ for subsequent mass
deportations. The Security Service of the Reichsführer-SS and the
Main Office of the Security Police most likely did not have fully
developed plans for mass deportations ready in October 1938.
However, the Nazi authorities could draw on their experiences
during the Polenaktion with regard to logistics, coordination of
administrative steps and offices, panic control, intimidation, and
brutality. These measures set the stage for the arrests and mass
transports during the November Pogrom not even two weeks
after the Polenaktion and for the mass deportations during World
War II.