Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland
Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland
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Overview
Author Biography: Christopher R. Browning is professor of history at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He is a contributor to Yad Vashem's official twenty-four-volume history of the Holocaust and the author of two earlier books on the subject.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9798200858262 |
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Publisher: | HarperCollins Publishers |
Publication date: | 03/01/2022 |
Product dimensions: | 5.70(w) x 5.60(h) x 1.10(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Chapter One
One Morning in Jozefow
In the very early hours of July 13, 1942, the men of Reserve Police Battalion 101 were roused from their bunks in the large brick school building that served as their barracks in the Polish town of Bilgoraj.They were middle-aged family men of working- and lower-middle-class background from the city of Hamburg.Considered too old to be of use to the German army, they had been drafted instead into the, Order Police.Most were raw recruits with no previous experience in German occupied territory.They had arrived in Poland less than three weeks earlier.
It was still quite dark as the men climbed into the waiting trucks.Each policeman had been given extra ammunition, and additional boxes had been loaded onto the trucks as well.Theywere headed for their first major action, though the men had not yet been told what to expect.
The convoy of battalion trucks moved out of Bilgoraj in the dark, heading eastward on a jarring washboard gravel road.The pace was slow, and it took an hour and a half to two hours to arrive at the destinationthe village of Jozefowa mere thirty kilometers away. Just as the sky was beginning to lighten, the convoy halted outside Jozefow.It was a typical Polish village of modest white houses with thatched straw roofs.Among its inhabitants were 1,800 Jews.
The village was totally quiet. The men of Reserve Police Battalion 101 climbed down from their trucks and assembled in a half-circle around their commander, Major Wilhelm Trapp, a fifty-three-year-old career policeman affectionately known by his men as "Papa Trapp." The time had come for Trapp toaddress the men and inform them of the assignment the battalion had received.
Pale and nervous, with choking voice and tears in his eyes, Trapp visibly fought to control himself as he spoke.The battalion, he said plaintively, had to perform a frightfully unpleasant task.This assignment was not to his liking, indeed it was highly regrettable, but the orders came from the highest authorities.If it would make their task any easier, the men should remember that in Germany the bombs were falling on women and children.
He then turned to the matter at hand.The Jews had instigated the American boycott that had damaged Germany, one policeman remembered Trapp saying.There were Jews in the village of Jozefow who were involved with the partisans, he explained according to two others.The battalion had now been ordered to round up these Jews.The male Jews of working age were to be separated and taken to a work camp.The remaining Jewsthe women, children, and elderlywere to be shot on the spot by the battalion.Having explained what awaited his men, Trapp then made an extraordinary offer: if any of the older men among them did not feel up to the task that lay before him, he could step out.
Table of Contents
Illustrations xi
Preface xv
1 One Morning in Józefów 1
2 The Order Police 3
3 The Order Police and the Final Solution: Russia 1941 9
4 The Order Police and the Final Solution: Deportation 26
5 Reserve Police Battalion 101 38
6 Arrival in Poland 49
7 Initiation to Mass Murder: The Józefów Massacre 55
8 Reflections on a Massacre 72
9 Lomazy: The Descent of Second Company 78
10 The August Deportations to Treblinka 88
11 Late-September Shootings 97
12 The Deportations Resume 104
13 The Strange Health of Captain Hoffmann 114
14 The "Jew Hunt" 121
15 The Last Massacres: "Harvest Festival" 133
16 Aftermath 143
17 Germans, Poles, and Jews 147
18 Ordinary Men 159
Afterword 191
Twenty-Five Years Later 225
Appendix: Shootings and Deportations by Reserve Police Battalion 101 293
Notes 295
Index 333