Everything about World War Ii Evacuation And Expulsion totally explained
World War II evacuation and expulsion refers to forced deportation, mass evacuation and displacement of peoples spurred on by the hostilities between Axis and Allied powers, and the border changes enacted in the post-war settlement.
The crisis in former Axis-occupied territories after liberation provided the context for much of the new international refugee and human rights architecture that survives today.
Europe
Deportation of Jews
After the
invasion of Poland Western pre-
WWII Polish territories were incorporated in the
German Reich. The area was subdivided into three Regierungsbezirke ("administrative districts") –
Poznań,
Inowrocław, and
Łódź. On
September 1,
1939, it had 390,000 Jews (including 4,500 in
Poznań, 54,090 in
Inowrocław, and 326,000 in the
Łódź district – 233,000 in the city of Łódź). Like all Polish areas incorporated into the Reich,
Wartheland was from the beginning designated to become
judenrein (
Reinhard Heydrich's "Schnellbrief" of
September 21,
1939). In a secret order to the
RSHA (Reichssicherheitshauptamt – Reich Security Main Office) and the high
SS and police officials, issued on
October 30,
1939,
Heinrich Himmler fixed the period of November
1939–February
1940 for clearing the incorporated areas of their entire Jewish population and the majority of their Polish population as well. A similar decree was issued on
November 4,
1939, by
Wartheland's Gauleiter
Arthur Greiser.
Arrangements were made for the transfer of 100,000 Jews from Polish territory during this period. In fact, more than 50 Jewish communities were deported wholly or in part to the
Lublin district between the Fall of
1939 and May
1940; the larger communities among those deported were
Poznań,
Kalisz,
Ciechocinek,
Gniezno,
Inowrocław,
Nieszawa, and
Konin.
In some towns the deportation was carried out in stages, with a small number of Jews remaining, engaged in work for the Nazi authorities. In some instances, the regime of terror drove the Jews to desperation, so that they chose "voluntary" exile. This happened in
Lipno and in
Kalisz, where many Jews, unable to withstand the persecution, fled from the city in October and November
1939. In
Łódź, over ten thousand Jews, including most of the Jewish intelligentsia, were deported in December 1939. For weeks the deportees were kept at assembly points, and had to supply their own means of subsistence, though they'd been deprived of all their valuables. Large assembly points were located at
Kalisz,
Sieradz, and
Łódź. There, the "Selektion" ("selection") took place in which able-bodied men, aged 14 and over, were sent to labor camps which had been established in the meantime, while women, children, and old men were deported in sealed freight cars to the
Lublin and
Kielce areas. This occurred in the severe winter of
1939-
1940, and upon arrival at their destination, some of the deportees were dead, others nearly frozen, or otherwise seriously ill. The survivors were bereft of clothing, food, and money. A few found refuge with relatives or friends, but most of them had to find places in the crowded synagogues and poorhouses. For the Jewish communities of the
Lublin and
Radom districts, the influx of deportees was a very heavy burden. Most of the deportees perished before mass deportation began.
Deportation of Poles
» :
Note: treatment of Poles of Jewish descent is covered in a separate section
The
Germanization of the annexed lands also included an ambitious program to resettle Germans from the Baltic and other regions on farms and other homes formerly occupied by Poles and Jews. The action started in the summer of
1939 with mass arrest and confiscation of property of Polish minority in Germany. Following the
Polish Defensive War and the occupation of Poland by Germany and the
Soviet Union, mass expulsions started in various parts of the country.
Since October of 1939, the
Wehrmacht,
SS and other Nazi organisations began to expel Poles and Jews from the
Wartheland,
Pomerania and other parts of Poland directly incorporated into
Nazi Germany. The modus operandi was similar for all areas: the German officials used to surround a village or a town and announce that in certain amount of time (usually between 15 minutes and 1 hour) all the non-German inhabitants are to pack their personal belongings (usually no more than 15 kilograms per person), clean the house and leave it with the doors open and all the keys on the table. Then the civilians were rounded up and transported to transfer camps, from where they were usually deported to various final train stations within the so-called
General Government. By the end of 1940, the German authorities had expelled approximately 325,000 people without warning. Their property was either confiscated by the authorities and sent to Germany or given to German settlers.
Many elderly people and children died en route or in makeshift transit camps such as those in the towns of
Potulice,
Smukała, and
Toruń. In
1941, the Germans expelled 45,000 more people, but they scaled back the program after the invasion of the
Soviet Union in late June
1941. Trains used for resettlement were more urgently needed to transport soldiers and supplies to the front. However, the resettlement of Poles of all denominations continued, mostly in
Silesia and the area of
Żywiec, from where 19,000 people were deported in October of
1940.
At the same time Nazi Germany faced the problem of Germans forcibly resettled from parts of
Romania annexed by the
Soviet Union. As most of the
gauleiters of the Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany refused to accept large number of refugees, on
July 15,
1942 Odilo Globocnik announced that the area of
Zamość was planned as a place of settlement of
Transylvanian Germans. The city of Zamość itself was to be renamed
Himmlerstadt and become a part of the Reich. Although the name shift didn't succeed, the expulsions of Poles and other nationalities proceeded as planned. Until
1943 more than 116,000 people were expelled from their homes.
Altogether, during the German occupation of Poland, it's estimated that between 1.6 and 2 million people were expelled from their homes during the
1939-
1944 period. This number doesn't include millions of slave workers or people arrested by the Germans and sent to
Nazi concentration camps. According to
Czesław Łuczak, the number could be broken down as follows:
In addition, several hundred thousands of people were expelled by the local administration, outside of the official expulsions or were caught in
łapankas and sent to Germany as
slave workers. Poles were also expelled to make room for German quarters or
ghettos.
After the war several millions of Poles were deported from the
Kresy to
Regained Territories. See
Repatriation of Poles (1944-1946) and
Repatriation of Poles (1955-1959).
Deportation of Germans and Others
In May 1945, it was estimated that there were over 40 million displaced people in Europe in Germany itself. This number excludes some 13 million ethnic Germans who were evacuated and/or expelled from the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, pre-war German territory and other European countries (see
Flight and expulsion of Germans during and after WWII). In addition, there were nearly 11.5 million foreign labour forces and displaced persons in the territory of the former German Reich. Many of these were Polish, French, Danish, Ukrainian and Russian people who went voluntarly or had been taken by force to Germany to work in agriculture and industry.
Jewish Resettlement in Palestine
The Holocaust and its aftermath left millions of refugees, including many Jews who had lost most or all of their family members and possessions, and often faced persistent anti-Semitism in their home countries. The need to find a homeland for the Jewish refugees led to many of them fervently joining the Zionist movement. Many Zionists, pointing to the fact that Jewish refugees from Germany and Nazi-occupied lands had been turned away by other countries, argued that if a Jewish state had existed at the time, the Holocaust couldn't have occurred on the scale it did. The sudden rapid growth of Zionism and the post-Holocaust displacement resulted in the emigration of a great many Jews to
Palestine, about 25% of which became the modern State of
Israel soon after.
Asia
The Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931 sparked a lasting refugee crisis, which in many respects persisted until the final resolution of the Chinese Civil War.
Manchuria, under Soviet occupation following
World War II and soon to become a battlefield between the
Chinese communist forces and the
Nationalist forces was home to hundreds of thousands of Japanese citizens.
Korea and
Taiwan, now free from Japanese rule, and
Sakhalin, under Soviet military occupation, were Japanese territories before World War II and had millions of Japanese residents. All these were now to be expelled. The broadening of the conflict beyond the Chinese theatre did however spark a wider refugee problem in the post war period.
Establishment of refugee organisations
The
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration was set up in
1943, to provide humanitarian relief to the vast numbers of potential and existing refugees in areas facing Allied liberation. UNRRA provided billions of US dollars of rehabilitation aid, and helped about 8 million refugees. It ceased operations in Europe in 1947, and in Asia in 1949, upon which it ceased to exist. It was replaced in 1947 by the
International Refugee Organization (IRO), which in turn evolved into
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in 1950.
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