By MIKE DOHERTY
A German
soldier holds a Romani child in a picture taken by a comrade during World War
Two. Picture © from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights
reserved. www.robertdawson.co.uk
THE old
photograph shows a soldier in a dusty uniform holding a child with dark skin
and dark eyes. The soldier is smiling as the child stares at the camera. The
picture has been taken by one of the soldier’s comrades as they rest during an
advance into enemy territory. You could be forgiven for imagining that the
child will be given some chocolate and then left behind with her family as the
advance continues onto the next enemy held village. That may even be what
actually happened. Yet the outcome may have been more sinister and the battered
fading photograph exudes a certain menace to even the casual observer with no
knowledge of military history. To those with more knowledge, the clues are
there in the uniform the soldier is wearing. The uniform is a German uniform,
the picture is from 1942 and it was taken as the German Wehrmacht swept into
the Balkans on its quest to conquer Eastern Europe and impose Hitler's
genocidal policies of Aryan racial purity. The child that the photographer’s
'Kameraden' is holding is a Roma child. What may have happened to that child
can only be pieced together by examining the historical record. “The Nazis considered
the 'Zigeuner', or 'Gypsies', to be a social nuisance that would spoil the pure
blood of the Aryan Master-race,” says Ruth Barnett, a Jewish Holocaust survivor
rescued from Germany by the British organised 'kindertransport'. She was
rescued and brought to England as a child in 1939 and fostered on a Sussex farm
and now uses her experience to teach school children about difference and
prejudice. Ruth says that the mass murder of between a quarter and a half a
million Roma and Sinti by the National Socialist regime during World War Two
has been “airbrushed” from many classic accounts of the Holocaust.
The newly
unearthed pictures were taken by soldiers as they advanced eastward across
Europe. Picture © from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights
reserved. www.robertdawson.co.uk
“The Nazi
attempt to wipe out all the Jews and Roma in Europe is called 'The Shoah' or
'the burden' by Jews, and 'O Porrajmos', or 'the devouring', by Roma,” says
Ruth. “When the Nazis were defeated in 1945 and the camps liberated, the world
was horrified to learn how the Jews had been rounded up, brutally treated,
exploited as slave labour and murdered in gas chambers. There was hardly a
mention of the Sinti and Roma Gypsies who went through the same awful
experiences.” Shauna Levin, Director of René Cassin, a Jewish human rights
organisation that campaigns on Roma rights and recognition, links this apparent
historical amnesia to the present: “Although there are varying estimates about
the exact death toll experienced by the Roma community, there is no question
that Roma suffering during this time has not received enough attention,” she
says. “Germany only officially recognised the Porrajmos in 1982. This is
symbolic of the general reluctance to condemn anti-Roma biases that still
exists today.” The photograph of the German soldier and the Roma child come
from a previously unpublished collection of what Professor Rainer Schulze, an
expert on the Nazi 'final solution' and the Roma, describes as “an extremely
rare historical record of encounters between German soldiers and Roma
populations as the German Army invaded the Caucus and Balkan regions of Eastern
Europe.” The collection, never before seen in public, was extracted “for a
considerable sum” from the “murky” and “secretive” world of private Holocaust
memorabilia collectors by Roma and Gypsy heritage collector Bob Dawson. Unlike
the Holocaust memorabilia collectors who keep their collections of objects and
photographs under wraps, Bob Dawson has made his collection available to
scholars and campaigners. The majority of Bob Dawson's collections are now kept
by Reading University and the photographs of the German soldiers with Roma are
his most recent acquisition.
The children
depicted include these musicians, shown with a violin and cymbalum.
Picture © from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights
reserved. www.robertdawson.co.uk
“You have to
understand that photographs of Gypsies in World War Two are very scarce,” says
Bob Dawson. “Jews might be photographed to show them 'getting what they
deserved' are so much commoner. Nazi racial theory met a stumbling block with
the Roma and Sinti as, because of their ethnic origins in Northern India, they
were more 'Aryan' than the Germans and yet the Nazis realised that they were
not Aryan in the same way as the Nordic ideal.” Bob Dawson explains that Nazi
racial theorists, such as Hans Günther, had to find an explanation to explain
“alleged racial flaws” and that the solution was to label Roma and Sinti as
'asocial' and distinct from Germanic Ayrans because of their mingling with
“inferior races”. “Gypsyness one generation further back than Jews was fatal
under Nazi racial laws,” he says. “Therefore they could be even less fit for
photographing than Jews, and of course, there were not as many of them either.
If you have a look at some of the collections that are for sale, many have no
Gypsy photographs at all, or only occasional ones. Therefore an accumulation
like this is very rare indeed.”
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
Professor
Schulze agrees that the photographs are a unique discovery and that up till now
there were “only very few” publicly available pictures taken of such normal
looking encounters between German soldiers and Roma and Sinti during the rise
and fall of Hitler’s Third Reich. Most surviving photos of Roma and Sinti are
“official” photographs, explains Professor Schulze, mainly taken during Dr
Joseph Mengele's infamous medical experiments on Jewish and Gypsy children at
the Auschwitz concentration and extermination camp. “Obviously there would have
been more 'unofficial' photographs taken by German soldiers,” he says. “But
these have either been lost to the ravages of time or remain in private
collections.” Professor Schulze adds that, although the pictures are almost
certainly encounters between German soldiers and Roma populations in Southern
Eastern Europe, it is impossible to pinpoint exactly when and where they were
taken.
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
“Some of the
captioning mentions Croatia,” says Professor Schulze, “some pictures show
cattle trucks and some may be work details, deportations or even preludes to
massacres, but without clear information from whoever took them, their exact
provenance will remain unclear.” Bob Dawson agrees that certainties about the
photographs are elusive. He has gleaned what clues he can from the captioning
and cataloguing of the photographs and doubts whether the original seller, whom
he describes “more as an accumulator than a collector”, would have any more
information to give. “Some of the photographs had writing on the back,
obviously written by the soldier concerned,” he says. “Others had been taken
from albums and the seller had put labels on the back with any information
present when they were in the soldier’s album. When there was original
information on the back it could be very difficult to decipher and old forms of
German were sometimes used.”
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
The Nazi
conquest of the Balkans and southern Eastern Europe began when Hitler ordered
the invasion of Yugoslavia, a former ally, in the spring of 1941 after they
refused to allow German troops to cross its borders to attack Greece, the last
remaining allied power in Western Europe. With Czechoslovakia already
conquered, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Slovakia joining the Axis powers and
the annexation of Yugoslavia, the Nazis were free to implement their genocidal
racial policies in southern Eastern Europe – towards both Jewish and Roma
populations. State persecution of the German Sinti and European Roma living in Germany
had been growing since Hitler took power in 1933. Named as a racial enemy in
the 'Protection of Blood and Honour' Nuremberg laws of 1935, German 'Gypsies'
were stripped of citizenship and lost their right to vote. Compulsory
sterilisation of 'asocial' Gypsies had begun in 1934. In 1938, the first
'Operation Work-shy' took place with many Gypsies being rounded up and forced
into municipal labour camps. In 1942, Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, issued
the Auschwitz-Erlass declaration and ordered the deportation of “Zigeuner
halfbreeds, Rom Zigeuner and members of Zigeuner tribes of Balkan origins with
non-German blood” to Auschwitz. 'Pure blood' German Sinti and Gypsies with
German blood who has served in the German army where exempt, but these distinctions
were often ignored by municipal authorities and police during the round-ups.
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
How these
policies were translated on the ground in the newly established Fascist
dominions in southern Eastern Europe depended on the region concerned. In
Slovakia, a Nazi puppet state, Roma populations survived in greater numbers
than in the German occupied Czechoslovakia. Both Jews and Roma were protected
from extermination and deportation by the pro-Fascist government until the
country was invaded by the Germans in early 1944 after support for the Nazi
regime wavered when it became obvious that the Germans were losing the war
against Soviet Russia. After occupation and the installation of a Nazi puppet
regime, both Jews and Roma were persecuted and exterminated, with many being
deported to Auschwitz. In Romania, a pro-Nazi state, nomadic and sedentary Roma
were driven eastwards and left to fend for themselves in open camps in
Transnistria (Ukraine) with many dying of starvation and disease. Roma
populations in Serbia were at first used as forced labour before the survivors
were deported to camps in Germany and Poland as the tide of the war turned. In
pro-fascist Croatia, formed after the German invasion and dismemberment of
Yugoslavia, mass killings started immediately, with Croatian police and soldiers
virtually annihilating the Roma population of around 40-50,000, with those not
executed, dying of overwork, starvation and disease in the notorious Jasenovac
labour camps. In 1943, 7,000 Jewish and Roma inmates of the Jasenovac system
were deported to Auschwitz with the collusion of the German authorities.
In addition
to these documented incidents of genocide and persecution there where many
'ad-hoc' massacres and killings as the German army and its allies established
control over the Balkan region. Massacres were undertaken by both front line
troops and the 'special details', or ‘Einsatzgruppen’, that followed in their
wake, whose task it was to ‘purify’ newly conquered territories by killing all
perceived as enemies of the new National Socialist order. Many nomadic Roma
groups were murdered under the pretext of being spies and Roma populations were
also killed in retaliation for partisan acts of sabotage and resistance. It is
not known how many Sinti, Roma and Western European Gypsies and Travellers were
murdered by the Nazi regime or died from illness and starvation in the camps
and the true figure will never be known, but the estimates vary from 200,000 to
½ million.
So the fate
of the young girl in the photograph and of the other Roma pictured with German
soldiers remains unclear, but the picture is important because of what it
symbolises and the emotions it raises when we look at it. This is why
Ruth Barnet and Rene Cassin think that images such as Mr Dawson’s photographs
are useful for their campaigning work. “We all know that history repeats
itself,” says Shauna Leven. “We remember events such as the Holocaust in an
effort to try to learn from them.” She explains that today's human rights
protections, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the European
Convention on Human Rights are ultimately products of the world's horror at the
events of WWII, and that many Jews, including the French Jew Rene Cassin, were
involved in their creation. “In many ways, these events contributed to the
development of modern human rights concepts and the laws and institutions that
exist to protect them. Minority groups, such as Jewish people and the
Roma in Europe and Romany Gypsies and Travellers in the UK may still benefit
from these protections.”
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
A young Roma
child today faces an uncertain future with bleak prospects for a life free from
discrimination, hatred and bigotry which is rife in both Eastern and Western
Europe. Roma remain ghettoised in many European countries, to the extent that
they are being walled in to keep them away from the rest of the population in
Slovakia, there have been anti Roma race riots and marches in Eastern Europe
and in the West, politicians have voiced anti-Roma sentiments as governments
have presided over policies aimed at clearing Roma camps and deporting the
inhabitants. An industrial pig farm still operates on the former site of the
Lety Roma concentration camp in the Czech Republic despite campaigns by Roma
groups to have the farm relocated and the site sanctified for remembrance. The
Berlin ‘Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Murdered und the National Socialist
Regime’ was only finally opened in 2012 after 20 years of campaigning by Roma
groups. Europe-wide, Roma, Gypsies and other former nomadic people are still
seen as 'asocial' and their very existence is all too often seen as a problem
that needs a ‘solution’.
Picture ©
from the Romany Collection of Robert Dawson. All rights reserved.
www.robertdawson.co.uk
Yet, for
many Roma campaigners, remembrance of the Porrajmos is vital to the fight for
rights and recognition. On 2nd August 2013, a ceremony of remembrance took
place at Krakow, Auschwitz and at the Holocaust Memorial stone in Hyde Park,
London. Both events were attended by Roma activists and campaigners. The events
were held to mark the night of 2/3 August, the night that the
Zigeunerfamilienlager, or 'gypsy family camp', in the Auschwitz concentration and
death camp was liquidated and the remaining 2,900 inmates were taken to the gas
chambers and their deaths. Professor Schulze was invited to speak at the Hyde
Park event. He explained that the Roma and Sinti were unique in that the
families were kept together in a single camp: “The fact that it was a family
camp is an indicator of Roma self assertion in the hardest of times,” he said.
“The Nazis fully well knew that they would have a lot of trouble on their hands
if they split the Roma families. So the men were not separated from the women
and the children, they were kept in one camp. This, at least for a period of
time, left families intact, solidarity intact and a modicum of dignity could be
kept by those Sinti and Roma incarcerated in Auschwitz”. Ladislav Balaz, a Roma
activist from Roma-Europe, also speaking in Hyde Park, linked the past to
events happening today: “We are here to recall the Porrajmos, which must never
be forgotten,” he said.
All pictures
included in this article are © from the Romany Collection of Robert
Dawson. All rights reserved. www.robertdawson.co.uk
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