Uncovering the Black German Holocaust

Review by

Delroy Constantine-Simms

University of Essex

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Review of:

"Hitler's Forgotten Victims" by David Okuefuna and Moise Shewa

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1. At a time when the fight for justice for Jewish Holocaust victims
continues to make front-page news, the horrific experiences of Black
people in Nazi Germany are virtually ignored. These experiences are
brought to light in a documentary film entitled Hitler's Forgotten
Victims, directed by David Okuefuna and produced by Moise Shewa
(Afro-Wisdom Productions). The film uses interviews with survivors and
their families as well as archival material to document the Black German
Holocaust experience; it also explores the history of German racism,
suggests links between German colonialism and Nazi policy, and examines
the treatment of Black prisoners-of-war. 

2. Hitler's Forgotten Victims reveals that sterilisation programmes for
Blacks had been instigated by Germany's most senior Nazi geneticist,
Doctor Eugen Fischer, who developed his racial theories in German
South-West Africa (now Namibia) long before the First World War. It was in
this colonial context that Fischer identified what he considered genetic
dangers arising from race-mixing between German colonists and African
women. The documentary also provides disturbing photographic evidence of
German genocidal tendencies in Africa, which began with the Heroro
massacre. In 1904, the Heroro tribe of German South-West Africa revolted
against their colonial masters in a quest to keep their land; the
rebellion lasted four years, leading to the death of 60,000 Heroro
tribespeople (80% of their population). The survivors were imprisoned in
concentration camps or used as human guinea pigs for medical experiments,
a policy that was a foretaste of things to come for German Blacks and the
Jewish community. 

3. This film shows that Nazi obsession with racial purity and eugenics was
provoked and intensified in 1918, following Germany's defeat in the First
World War. Under the terms of the peace treaty signed at Versailles,
Germany was stripped of its African colonies and forced to submit to the
occupation of the Rhineland. Hitler's Forgotten Victims emphasizes that
the deliberate deployment of African troops from the French colonies to
police the territory incensed many Germans, who saw it as a final
humiliation. Germans complained bitterly in the Rostrum newspapers, and
these complaints were reflected in propaganda films regarding soldiers
from the French colonial army having relationships with German women.
Indeed, the documentary suggests that the intense German anger on this
score contributed to 92% of the German electorate casting its vote in
support of the Nazi Party. 

4. Hitler's Forgotten Victims shows that as soon as Hitler re-occupied the
Rhineland in 1936, he retaliated against the African soldiers' occupation
by targeting all Black people living in the Rhineland first. In
particular, and in a departure from previous accounts of the Holocaust,
this film claims that Germany's 24,000-member Black community was the
number one focus for Hitler's sterilisation programme. At least 400
mixed-race children were forcibly sterilised in the Rhineland area alone
by the end of 1937, while 400 others just disappeared into Hitler's
concentration camps. 

5. Hans Hauck, a Black Holocaust survivor and a victim of Hitler's
sterilisation programme, reveals on the film that "We were lucky that we
weren't victims of euthanasia--we were only sterilised. We had no
anesthetic. Once I got my vasectomy certificate, we had to sign an
agreement that we were not allowed to have sexual relations whatsoever
with Germans." 

6. While many Blacks may have considered themselves lucky to escape Nazi
persecution, even via forced sterilisation, Hitler's Forgotten Victims
recalls that early on, Hitler had announced plans for more complete
eradication of unwanted populations. In a speech in Bresau in 1932, for
instance, he had ordered all Africans, Jews, and other non-Aryans to leave
Germany or go into concentration camps. According to this documentary,
however, the majority of Blacks in Germany could not heed Hitler's warning
as they were German citizens with German passports and had no where else
to go. A fair number escaped to France, but many attempted to return to
the former German colonies that had been taken over by the League of
Nations in 1920. The British colonial authorities then administering the
newly named South-West Africa, however, would not allow Black Germans
refugee status on the grounds that they had fought for Germany in the
First World War. 

7. My only criticism of Hitler's Forgotten Victims is that it does not
give enough insight into the lives of Black Germans who resisted Nazi
Germany, such as Black activist Lari Gilges, who founded the Northwest
Rann--an organisation of entertainers that fought the Nazis in his home
town of Dusseldorf--and who was murdered by the SS in 1933, the year
Hitler came to power. The film does, however, attend to the way various
parts of the entertainment industry, such as film studios and touring
ethnic shows like the Hillerkus Afrikaschau circuses, provided at least
temporary refuges from Nazi persecution. 

8. Interestingly, by 1940 these operations were taken over by the SS, who
considered them racially unacceptable and converted them to serve their
own racist propaganda purposes. For instance, Propaganda minister Josef
Goebbels realized that in order to spread the Nazi Gospel of white Aryan
supremacy, he needed to exploit the most popular entertainment medium of
the time--German feature films. Propaganda pictures such as Kongo Express,
Quax in Africa, and Auntie Wanda from Uganda were made to present Germany
as an enlightened, benevolent colonial power. Thus, even under Nazi
control, the film industry provided a certain amount of protection for
Black Germans. As Black actor Werner Egoimue explains, "We had an agent
then, who had all the addresses of Black people in Berlin. The Reich's
Chamber of Commerce was in touch with him, and when they were casting a
film, it was fun--inside the studio. Outside the door you could be
arrested. But inside you were as safe as in a bank." 

9. Hitler's Forgotten Victims also presents the experience of Black POWs.
The Nazis segregated Black prisoners from the rest of the camp population
for extra special treatment of the fatal kind. Often, in what was a breach
of the Geneva Convention, Black prisoners were denied food and assigned
highly dangerous jobs. Footage never aired before shows Black soldiers and
civilians scavenging for scraps of food in garbage heaps at the Hemer POW
camp near Dortmund in Northwest Germany. No one knows how many Black
people died in the camps at the hands of the SS guards, producer Moise
Shewa says, because Jews were demarcated as Jews, but Black people were
demarcated by nationality. 

10. Although there does not seem to be a huge amount of documented
evidence concerning the Black experience in German concentration camps,
the film does provide compelling glimpses of how the Nazis treated their
Black victims. It presents visual testimony, such as the art of Black
American painter Joseph Nassy, who was working as a sound engineer in
Brussels before his arrest by the Gestapo, which portrays the harsh
realities of concentration camp life. It also presents oral testimony,
such as that from Johnny William. Born to an African mother and a white
French father, William was arrested by the Gestapo and deported to the
Neugengamme concentration camp near Hamburg. "There were 5 or 6 of us," he
explains. "As soon as we arrived at Neugengamme, we were immediately
separated from the white deportees by the SS. They considered us to be
sub-human beings like animals, chimpanzees." 

11. Hitler's Forgotten Victims also recalls the impact made by Black
inmates on other inmates. A case in point is Johnny Voste, the Belgian
Resistance fighter who was arrested in 1942 for sabotage in the tow of
Malignes, near Antwerp, and was deported to Dachau. The film's interview
with Wily Sel reveals that "Johnny got the possibility to organise boxes
of vitamins . . . and gave them to all his friends and buddies he had
there. The survivors will say he saved our lives at that moment because it
is true. The main technique to survive in the concentration camps was to
like to live, not to die, to say 'No, you can't have my life: I will fight
for it.'" 

12. Without doubt, Hitler's Forgotten Victims is a documentary that should
not be forgotten. It makes clear that the 'special treatment' of Blacks
should be acknowledged as an important part of the Holocaust. Sadly, the
Nazi victimization of Blacks has remained unacknowledged by every German
government since 1939. One simple reason for this convenient amnesia is
that--compared to the massive amounts of film and record-keeping
testifying to Nazi treatment of the Jews--there is relatively little
shocking celluloid evidence showing specifically how Blacks were dealt
with. The film corrects this historical gap by relying mainly on survivor
and family narratives. 

13. The 'lack' of evidence heretofore may explain why German authorities
have consistently refused to meet compensation claims launched by Black
survivors, their relatives, and victim's famalies. Further, most German
Black people were stripped of their nationality to the Nazis, making it
extremely difficult for them to claim reparations as citizens of the
German state. As German MP Bernd Reuter stated, "After the war it was
difficult to come up with proof that one was stateless but had been
German." One hopes this film will help force the German Government to
acknowledge the Black experience at the hands of the Nazis and to
compensate Black Germans. One also hopes that the distribution and viewing
of this film will make people everywhere realize the hydra-headed nature
of the Nazi racist imaginary and its atrocious practices. 

UK Title: Hitler's Forgotten Victims. Screened on England's Channel Four,
October 2, 1997. 

USA Title: Black Survivors of the Holocaust. To be screened on the Family
Channel, date pending. 

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Copyright (c) 1997 by Delroy Constantine-Simms, all rights reserved. This
text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of
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terms, in any medium, requires the notification of the journal and consent
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