Germany's colonial expansion in the late nineteenth century encompassed not only Africa and the South Pacific, but Eastern Europe. 1, 2, 3 German settlements were created in Prussia in the late 1880s; Germany joined forces with those involved in trying to create an "independent Ukraine" in 1918; and in 1939 Germany established the Reichsgau Wartheland in areas that roughly corresponded to Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and the Ukraine. (At various times historically parts of the Ukraine had been part of Poland, part of Lithuania, part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, etc. Thus, there was already a precedent for the creation of a 'new' colony in these locations.)
In 1886, Otto von Bismarck established the ''Koniglich Preussische Ansiedlungskommission'' Royal Prussian Colonization Commission in the Prussian partition of Poland. In this decade thousands of Poles were evicted into Russia. 4 It also led to the colonization campaign in the East. The Commission was financed by 100 million marks, used to purchase large Polish land estates from members of the Polish szlachta (gentry), which were then broken down into many small parcels of farm land. These parcels were intended to subsidize German peasants in the Polish East. 5, 6, 7
The "Verein Forderung des Deutschthums in den Ostmarken" (the "German Eastern Marches Society") was establised in 1894, renamed the "Ostmarkenverein" (the "Eastern Marches Society") or the "HKT" or "Haktisten" after 1899. The "HKT" abbreviated "Hansemann, Hermann; Kennemann; and Tiedmann, Heinrich von. This was a propaganda effort to settle German peasants in Poland. 8 The basis of the propaganda was a focus on the healthy German volk (peasants) as opposed to the Polish peasants, who were referred to derrogatorily as the degenerate "Polacks". (The idea of "degeneracy" here is that the "Polacks" (and Jews) were viewed as filthy, backward, criminal or lazy subhumans who lived in Eastern Europe.) The German "type" of peasant who was intended to populate this new colony was envisaged to be a hard worker, likely to be found in a frontier setting. Appeals were made to the kind of frontiersman found in the U.S. 9 By 1914, the Eastern Marches Society demanded forced population movements and relocation of large groups of people, these proposals are pointed out as part of prehistory of genocidal measures employed by Nazism; similar population policies were envisioned in German Southwest Africa. 10
The image of the "degenerates" living in Poland were often of Polish women referred to as examples of "Slavic blackness". References were made to "black Kascha" or "black Bronislaw". "Blackness" referred to black eye color, black clothes, Gypsy-like appearance, dark skin, loose hair style (feminine seductiveness) vs the German "whiteness": blue eye color, blond or flaxen hair color, light skin, braided (contained) hair wrapped into a bun. This image of "seductiveness" was used because it was feared that the German population would be sexually diluted by miscegenation with the Polish natives. (This was the same problem that led to legislation banning intermarriage between Germans and indigenous people in the German colonies.) 11, 12, 13
The fear extended beyond possible dilution of German racial purity, into dilution of German political power: mixed-raced children of Germans and Poles would inherit citizenship from their German parent, as opposed to the Poles being expelled from this idealic German colony. (This, too, later occurred in reality in the German South West African colony circa 1908.) 14, 15
The image of German frontiersman purity were based on a German environment that prized purity, cleanliness and organization, and well-managed farmsteads; as opposed to the "Polack" farmsteads that were viewed as being filthy, with dirty children in dirty, torn clothing, beset by pestilence, drunkeness, backwardness, laziness and criminality. Rural farmsteads were targeted, not the cities (which were viewed as places for degenerates such as Jews). This view of the "Polack" was referred to as "Polnische Wirtschaft" or the environment of a Polish Tavern. Popular literature ("Ostmarkenroman") based on this discription was well-known to Germans at this time. 16
Before World War I, Paul Rohrbach was the Settlements Commissioner in German South West Africa. Concerned with miscegenation, he is quoted as follows:
Independently of what was happening in German South West Africa, in 1918 the Germans had invaded the Ukraine while people like Symon Petliura and Anton Denikin (infamous anti-Semites) were also trying to establish an independent Ukraine. Rohrbach worked with Field Marshal Hermann von Eichhorn, commander of the German forces in the Ukraine, to install General Pavel Petrovitch Skoropadski as "Hetmann" of the Ukraine. 18
During the Third Reich, German colonists from German East Africa and other former German African colonies were moved into Polish land "annexed" in 1939. 19 This new settlement area was called the Reichsgau Wartheland. Paul Rohrbach focused his worked upon this, then others put his ideas into action. (Generalplan Ost and expulsion of Poles, Gestapo-NKVD Conferences.)
The practices of forced labour and exploitive population policies of the German Empire were used in more extreme forms by Nazis. In 1942/1943 Nazi economists established the Togo Ost Society in the Ukraine, 20 bringing along agricultural models from Africa to Eastern Europe. Additionally German Africans were brought from eastern Africa to Warthegau. 21 As model pioneers they were to inspire European Germans to settle in Poland. 22
The movement of German colonists displaced Poles (the indigenous population), Jews and Gypsies, who were considered inferior.
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Friedrich Ratzel developed the idea (expressed in his two-volume work, Anthropogeographie) of lebensraum. "Lebensraum" was interpreted as the racial basis for nationalist views of geographic expansion. Ratzel's views were combined with Social Darwinism. Nationalism, geographic expansion, and Social Darwinism laid the foundation for the destruction of "inferior races" by "superior races" such as the Aryans, and provided a basis whereby this destruction could be viewed as the moral expression of Nature. This view was promptly employed by Germany in its colonies, justifying genocide (for example, in Deutsche Südwestafrika and Deutsche Ostafrika during the Second Reich).
Ratzel's ideas were elaborated during the Third Reich to support the creation of lebensraum in Wartheland. This elaboration was based on the experience of military personnel such as Paul Rohrbach, who had served in the African colonies. Adolf Hitler was highly influenced by these views, and had no problem viewing the people of Poland, Ukraine (Lithuania, Latvia, Ruthenia) and Russia as effectively being "negroes" who could be exterminated and replaced by Germans.24, 25, 26
"Given these percentages, it would have been impossible for any of these nations to survive as cultures or nations in any meaningful sense, so that these plans explicitly accept that all four of these nations would for all intents and purposes cease to exist. These plans in effect, therefore, called for nothing less than serial genocide."27, 28, 29
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