Pete makes some good points. One thing many people don't realise is that antisemitism wasn't invented by Hitler. These feelings towards the Jews were well and truly established in Germany and had been for centuries (and many other countries by the way). All the stuff that Hitler said fell on very fertile ground.Lucky, I 100% agree there would have been some German soldiers who were not agreeance with Nazi policies or doctrines but that is not the point.
You, nor anybody else could possibly draw the line that separates them from Nazi sympathisers/activists from within the German army.
You suggest they be proud of themselves, with the proviso being they were brave and that alone constituting reason enough.
Some of them may well have been brave but I'm afraid the cause they were fighting, completely and utterly negates any room for allowing pride to creep into their mentality or how we should regard them.
As soon as you start accommodating people just because they were 'brave' undermines any integrity when people condemn the Nazi movement and what they set out to do.
It seems ironic to me that the Germans themselves seem to be adopting the correct attitude in getting on with their lives and trying to forget what happened whereas you're endeavouring to excuse some of them on the basis they were brave.
Don't be confused Lucky, it's quite simple mate, we shouldn't ignore their recollections but you aligned that need for historical reference with an associated need for respect.
We cannot allow ourselves to start degrading the horror we should all feel for what the Nazis did and more importantly tried to do.
It's the thin end of a wedge when you begin 'accommodating' .
You are not seriously equating the Nazi policy of Jewish annihilation with modern history's filtering of the Nazi's actions are you?
If so, then it's a completely inappropriate parallel ... insultingly so.
Not to me mate, not to me, thus starts the process of a whitewash ........
Many people consider Rommel and Von Stauffenberg heroes these days, because of their involvement in the conspiracy to kill Hitler, but they wanted to get rid of the man because they knew he would lose the war and Germany would be devastated in the process. None of them were really interested in saving the Jews and other Unerwunschten (unwanteds).
Sure, there have been a number of good Germans, but by and large, the German people were guilty. Not because the participated, but because they allowed things to happen. You often hear arguments like "it was kept a secret, the people didn't know", but that's crap. The camps were in full view, were not hidden and required such an immense amount of manpower to keep the whole system running that it would have been impossible to get everybody to keep their mouths shut.
In fact, many of the people involved were proud of their work and sent pictures of their "handiwork" home. This has all been well documented, but is not often brought out in public, as it makes us feel uncomfortable to know that a civilised people, so close to our own, could be so inherently evil.
To say that the actual killings were done by fervent nazis is just repeating another myth. Yes, most camps were run by the SS (a political paramilitary organisation, not to be confused with the Waffen SS), but let's look at one of the other means used to kill the Jews:
A number of police battalions (part of the army) were deployed to the east, in order to deal with the Jewish question. Well guess what? On a percentage basis there were markedly less members of the NSDAP (nazi party) in these units than what should have been expected based on the national avarage.
There is a good reason for this: The police battalions were on avarage a number of years older than the other troops. This was because most of them had a number of years' experience in the police force and the units were far from designed for frontline duty, so there was no need to have superfit youngsters.
These older men, with a police background and as such with a good sense of right and wrong, were not as easily suckered in by the propaganda as the impressionable youth was. These were men that had life experience and thet were not easy to impress.
Yet when we zoom in on one particular unit, Police Battalion 101, we find out something disturbing:
When ordered to clear out one of the ghettoes in Poland by killing all inside, these men were given the chance to step away from it without any reprisal (so much for the myth of everybody being forced at gunpoint). These were non political soldiers, being ordered to do the unthinkable, killing defenseless men, women and children. They were given the opportunity to say no and instead do administrative jobs during that terrible day...
Not one said no.
During later clearings, some men decided not to participate. The reasons they gave had nothing to do with feeling it was wrong to kill these people. They felt that the job itself was just to gruesome, they just couldn't stand the gore, but had no problems with what was being done and why.
Again, these were older, wiser men. Not the young crowd, whipped into a frenzy by nazi rethorics.
And some of these men send pictures home end to friends. In fact, a few of the officers had their wives come and watch... Keeping things a secret? My ass...
People should think about that before they excuse the avarage German.
In a twisted sort of way, the German obsession with destroying the Jews (which they considered more important than the actual war itself), may well have lost them the war. Or at least helped them lose.
The destruction of the Jews drained gargantuan amounts of manpower from the frontlines. It has been said that if all those people had been sent to the front instead, Germany would have beaten Russia. Personally I find that to be a bit of a bold claim, it's just another what if scenario.