Hitler's Girls: Doves Amongst Eagles by
Tim HeathMy rating:
3 of 5 starsUnfortunately, this book turned out to be exactly what I expected after reading the introduction: amateur English historian of the Luftwaffe meets some nice elderly German ladies, gets them talking about their childhoods, and thinks, Hey, I should write a book! The book is mostly the women's stories about their childhoods, about the Jungmadel and the Bund Deutscher Madel, about their war experiences., with some pretty amateur history thrown around them. (I still almost can't believe Heath had never heard of Sophie Scholl before one of his interview subjects mentioned her.)
So as a source of primary information about what it was like to grow up in Hitler's Germany, this is okay. Where it really falls apart is where Heath makes a mistake that a lot of professional historians have also made, which is that he goes in for comparative atrocities. I understand his impulse. He's grown very fond of his interview subjects and they have told him some truly horrible things about the Russian invasion of Berlin. It's human nature to want to defend them. But nothing you can put forward makes the Russian invasion of Berlin worse than the Holocaust---or even the German invasion of Russia. My point is not that the German people somehow "deserved" what happened, any more than the Russian people "deserved" what happened. My point is that you can't do some kind of moral calculus and decide that what happened to the Germans was
less deserved than what happened to the Russians (or the Poles or the Slavs or...) Heath's interview subjects are not, by virtue of being nice elderly German ladies, more innocent than the Russian people he doesn't go interview. What happened to German girls and women (and boys and men) in the Russian invasion of Germany was horrible. Full stop. It was not more horrible or less horrible than what happened to Russian girls and women and boys and men in the German invasion of Russia. You can say (as he does) that more German women were raped than Russian women: "It is certainly true that the Russians, civilians in particular, did suffer terrible cruelty at the hands of certain units of the German army during its victorious early successful campaigns on the eastern front, especially the SS, who were responsible for the murder of thousands. However, there was nowhere near the number of sexual violations carried out against very young girls and women, as there were by the Red Army in Berlin and surrounding Soviet-occupied territories clawed back from the Germans in the Second World war [sic]" (203)* But, even assuming that's true---and he doesn't offer any source for his information---how does mass rape stack up against mass slaughter? (And it's not thousands, Mr. Heath. It's
millions.) How does it stack up against a deliberate policy of starvation? Rape is an atrocity. Murder is an atrocity. There isn't a point-system that lets you grade them and compare, and the attempt to do so merely shows a naivete that I (obviously) find both annoying and morally suspect.
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*Also, he's wrong about the details. The Einsatzgruppen (which is what he means by "certain units of the German army") were NOT part of the Wehrmacht. They were part of the SS, which was a paramilitary organization answering to Himmler.
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