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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Apr 30, 2019 at 10:35 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Poland]: Jasiński on Finder and Prusin, 'Justice
behind the Iron Curtain: Nazis on Trial in Communist Poland'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Gabriel N. Finder, Alexander V. Prusin.  Justice behind the Iron
Curtain: Nazis on Trial in Communist Poland.  German and European
Studies Series. Toronto  University of Toronto Press, 2018.  400 pp.
$90.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-4426-3745-0; $34.95 (paper), ISBN
978-1-4875-2268-1.

Reviewed by Łukasz Jasiński (Muzeum Miasta Gdyni, Poland)
Published on H-Poland (April, 2019)
Commissioned by Anna Muller

The question of postwar trials of war criminals and collaborators has
been a subject of interest of many scholars from different countries.
Numerous books and articles have been published on such topics as the
Nuremberg trials, the trials in the Far East, and legal purges of war
criminals and collaborators. Among these publications, however, we
can barely find any works devoted to trials that took place in
postwar Poland.

Poland, which suffered almost six years of brutal German occupation
as well as Soviet occupation of its eastern territories, became after
1945 a site of various legal proceedings aimed at punishing
perpetrators and collaborators. These proceedings were conducted
simultaneously with political trials of opponents of communist power.
Existing literature on Polish retribution has offered only
superficial analysis in the form of articles or works from the 1960s
and 1970s often published by the Main Commission for the
Investigation of German (since 1949 Hitlerite) War Crimes in Poland.
The reviewed monograph by Gabriel N. Finder and Alexander V. Prusin
is an attempt at filling this gap.

Finder and Prusin base their work on extensive research conducted in
various Polish, German, Austrian, American, and Israeli archives.
They complement this archival research with research in the Polish
press from the late 1940s and 1950s, as well as private collections.
A broad bibliography contains many publications in various languages,
although as in the case of any book, there are some missing sources.
The chronological frame of the book is marked by the years 1944-59,
starting with such legal acts as the August Decree and initial trial
proceedings and ending with the trials of General Paul Otto Geibel
and Erich Koch. Such a chronological approach enables an analysis of
various phases of postwar retribution in connection to a broad
background of political changes during the fifteen years from
consolidation of communist power through Stalinism and
destalinization.

The authors divide their book into six chapters and an epilogue.
Chapters are devoted to the main aspects of postwar retribution in
Poland. The first four chapters cover the early trials and social
demands for justice, the presence of a Polish delegation at the
Nuremberg trials, the establishment of the Supreme National Tribunal,
and trials of perpetrators in the district courts. The final two
chapters focus on the role of the Jewish community in postwar Poland,
especially historians and lawyers, but also witnesses, who
contributed in a vivid way to prosecuting perpetrators of war crimes,
and examine trials of the 1950s. Finder and Prusin combine these
diverse plots neatly and rationally. Thanks to this clear chapter
division, the reader can easily find information about various
aspects of postwar retribution in Poland.

The authors lay out the general goals of the book in their
introduction. Although the trials of political opponents of
communists and native collaborators are beyond the scope of this
publication, Finder and Prusin rightly decided to include a short
description of the tangled political situation in postwar Poland.
This historical introduction will be especially beneficial for
readers who may be unaware of the specific Polish experience of war,
double German-Soviet occupation, and gradual sovietization of Poland
after 1945. What I found to be particularly important in this
discussion is the inclusion of examples of members of the Polish
anti-Nazi resistance, who became victims of communist repression and
show trials, such as General Emil Fieldorf "Nil," sentenced to death
and executed in 1953, and Kazimierz Moczarski, a high-ranking officer
of the Home Army, who was tortured in prison and spent many months in
a cell with SS general Jürgen Stroop. Without mentioning political
misuse of the judiciary system in Poland after 1945 by the
communists, the panorama of Polish retribution would be incomplete.

The first chapter enumerates legal acts and measures imposed by the
Polish government in exile and Polish communists, who after 1944 and
the creation of the Polish Committee of National Liberation, under
the aegis of Joseph Stalin, took power in Poland. Finder and Prusin
meticulously portray subsequent legal acts that were foundations for
planned retribution. The Declaration of St. James' Palace from June
12, 1941, for example, expressed the necessity of retribution for the
first time. The authors correctly notice here the significant
contribution of the Polish government in exile in creating this
document. The main part of the first chapter focuses on the creation
of legal structures devoted to prosecuting war criminals. The first,
and probably most important, step was the "Decree on punishment for
Nazi criminals guilty of murdering and maltreating civil population,
prisoners-of-war and for traitors of Polish Nation," also known as
the August Decree. Finder and Prusin also examine the Main Commission
for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland, created in spring
1945 to conduct investigations and documentary work in places of
martyrdom. The role of the commission was closely connected with
research on German atrocities committed during the occupation. It was
thus, to some extent, a predecessor of today's Institute for National
Remembrance in Poland.

Perhaps the most important legal structure created to conduct
retribution was the Special Penalty Courts (SPCs), a new type of
court that was to judge war criminals based on the August Decree. The
SPCs consisted of professional judges acting together with laymen,
"people judges." Finder and Prusin paint a wide panorama of the SPCs
and its functioning until its liquidation in 1947. Unfortunately, the
description of the SPCs lacks a broad, comparative perspective. The
construct of the "people judges" was at the time often used by the
justice administration in countries that suffered German occupation.
Taking this into account and comparing the SPCs with, for example,
the case of Czechoslovakia would have enabled readers to gain a more
complex perspective on this matter. It is a pity that the authors did
not make such an effort.

A big advantage of this chapter is, however, a detailed description
of two significant trials of war criminals that serve as case studies
of legal proceedings before the SPCs: the Majdanek trial from
November and December 1944 and the April 1947 trial of Hans Biebow,
chief of the German Nazi administration in the Łódź Ghetto. Finder
and Prusin not only point out the later historical value of these
trials in documenting German war atrocities but also reconstruct the
legal aspects of these cases. The Majdanek trial, which took place
before the Nuremberg trials, was demanding for Polish prosecutors as
they were forced to create its legal framework without any broad
international legal sources and precedents.

In chapter 1, the authors do not limit themselves only to legal
aspects of war crime trials in Poland. Thanks to their broad research
in the Polish press, they also recreate social attitudes toward
retribution as a whole. This chapter points out that no matter how
big the political differences between communist authorities and the
rest of the political parties and social groups were, the demand for
a strict purge of war criminals and collaborators was at that time
absolutely prevalent. After almost six years of a traumatic, brutal
occupation the name "German" became a symbol of war criminal and
murderer. This explains also the name of the Main Commission for the
Investigation of German Crimes in Poland. In postwar Poland,
traumatized by horrors of war and occupation, there was no room for
creating any nuanced division between war criminals and ordinary
Germans.

The second chapter turns to the Nuremberg trials and the Polish
delegation of the International Military Tribunal. It deals mostly
with a special document prepared by this delegation, the so-called
Polish Indictment, and hearings of witnesses conducted by Polish
prosecutors in Nuremberg, like, for example, the hearings of Hans
Frank and General Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski. The role of the Polish
Indictment is hard to overestimate. It was presumably the first
document that provided a picture of the brutality of the German
occupation and emphasized that Poland was the first victim of German
aggression. This document highlighted the sufferings of Poles and
Jews under German occupation. This played an important role in the
Nuremberg trials. The fact that Jewish suffering was detailed in this
document was significant, especially taking into account the fact
that the Holocaust itself was not regarded as a separate phenomenon
by the International Military Tribunal. This chapter has some
setbacks. Finder and Prusin do not mention how this document was
prepared or why some examples of German atrocities were included and
others were not. Supposedly this absence is due to a lacuna in
available archival sources, although the authors do not express this
clearly. We can also find a similar sense of insufficient information
in the context of Polish lawyers in Nuremberg. The intellectual
background of the Polish delegation that consisted of prewar
attorneys and prosecutors deserves in my opinion more attention.

The third chapter is devoted mainly to trials conducted by the
Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw. This special tribunal was meant
to be "the Polish Nuremberg." Based on a separate decree, it aimed to
put on trial high-ranking Nazi officials and main perpetrators
extradited to Poland from occupational zones in Germany. The big
asset of this chapter is its detailed analysis of legal provisions
that were decisive to the shape and functioning of the Supreme
National Tribunal combined with a riveting description of consecutive
trials. Especially the description of the trial of Amon Göth, the
commandant of the KL Płaszów concentration camp, offers a picture
of the prosecution of one of the most sadistic war criminals.

Another asset in chapter 3 is the authors extensive use of Polish
newspapers. This enables readers to become familiar with the scale of
social emotions at that time, such as trauma caused by war and
occupation as well as strong anti-German resentments. In postwar
Poland, the justice administration that dealt with trials of
perpetrators had to cope not only with complicated investigations and
legal matters but also with the social pressure of imposing only the
most severe punishments possible or a will to conduct lynchings of
war criminals. This chapter includes descriptions of other trials,
such as the trial of former KL Auschwitz-Birkenau commandant Rudolf
Höss and the trial of Auschwitz personnel. The authors provide a
short but in-depth description of judges and prosecutors of this
tribunal. This part of the book shows a paradox: despite the ongoing
sovietization of state structures, new authorities in Warsaw decided
to choose prewar attorneys and prosecutors, sometimes even members of
the prewar establishment.

It is unfortunate that Finder and Prusin do not include such
descriptions in the previous chapter, concerning the Polish
delegation of the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg. In
chapter 3, there is also a visible lack of any information about the
situation in other countries. Such tribunals as the Supreme National
Tribunal were also created in other countries of postwar Europe, for
example, in France and Czechoslovakia. A brief comparison would have
been useful in this chapter.

The following chapter focuses mainly on the trials of perpetrators
who committed severe crimes but who were not at the top of
occupational structures. For example, Finder and Prusin discuss the
trials of SS general Stroop, "the henchman of the Warsaw Ghetto," and
SS officer Waldemar Macholl, former chief of the Gestapo in the
Białystok District. These two proceedings took place before the
district courts in Warsaw and Białystok respectively. This chapter
also includes an overview of the German occupation of Poland and
mentions the Soviet occupation, which gives readers insight into the
tangled history of Poland during the Second World War. Unfortunately
this description is extremely short, only about one page. This
broader historical context should have been developed more
extensively, to at least double the size. Such a solution would not
have damaged the structure of this chapter but would have offered a
deeper analysis of the German and Soviet occupations of Poland.

The detailed analysis and description of Stroop's trial in chapter 4
gives some background of the Warsaw Ghetto and the history of postwar
Poland. The short description of the history of the Warsaw Ghetto
includes some information about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in the
spring of 1943. Finder and Prusin also point out the history of
Moczarski, high-ranking officer of the Home Army, who spent many
months in a cell with Stroop. Moczarski memorized his conversations
with Stroop and published them years later in the form of a book,
_Conversations with the Executioner_ (1981). The case of Moczarski
not only serves as a description of important testimony about
crushing the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising but also emphasizes prosecutions
of former Home Army officials by the communists after 1945.

Another element of chapter 4 that deserves praise is its emphasis on
the role of testimonies of Jewish witnesses from different social
environments, like intellectuals Bernard Mark and Ludwik Hirszfeld
and former insurgent Marek Edelman. Moreover the authors rightly
mention that Stroop's trial included not only the crushing of the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising but also atrocities committed during the first
weeks and months of war in Poland by the paramilitary Selbstschutz
formation. This chapter has some minor mistakes and drawbacks. On
page 151, the Werwolf organization is misspelled. The only mentioned
example of the Polish resistance helping Warsaw Ghetto insurgents is
the communist People's Army. The authors do not mention attempts of
military aid for the uprising by the Home Army, which was the biggest
underground army in Poland. I understand that during the Stroop trial
in the wake of Stalinism in Poland only the merits of the People's
Army could be highlighted in the testimonies of witnesses; however,
the Home Army's involvement should also have been included in the
text.

The fifth chapter turns to Polish-Jewish relations after 1945. This
topic serves here however more like a pretext to conducting an
analysis of input of Jewish experts and witnesses in sentencing war
criminals. Finder and Prusin collect and reconstruct meticulous work
undertaken by the Central Jewish Historical Commission and Jewish
Historical Institute in Warsaw. They, for example, discuss Filip
Friedmann and Józef Kermisz, who played a crucial role in the
investigation of the former death camp Treblinka. They also provide
an interesting description of the above-mentioned trial of Göth and
include a detailed description of Mietek Pemper's testimonies and
role in sentencing the former KL Płaszów commandant to the death
penalty. Finder and Prusin unveil a psychological aspect of these
trials by describing the fear that witnesses still felt while looking
at Göth. This is also an asset of this chapter.

Perhaps even more complicated was the role of Jewish academic
experts, who served as expert witnesses during the trials, including
first and foremost Nathan Blumenthal, who served this role in the
trials of Rudolf Höss and Josef Bühler, and Arthur Eisenbach, who
served in the trials of Hans Biebow and Jürgen Stroop. Their
expertise played an important role in sentencing these criminals.
These academics served in a complicated psychological situation.
Being victims of the Nazi regime themselves and having lost their
families and friends in the Holocaust, they had to remain objective
scientists and support the courts with their knowledge. This chapter
also illustrates the complexity of Polish-Jewish relations after
1945. It highlights antisemitism and pogroms, especially the June
1946 pogrom in Kielce. Among the Polish Jews who survived the
Holocaust were witnesses and academics who undertook a mission of
collecting evidence and documenting war criminals. This part of the
fifth chapter, however, is somewhat superficial. It lacks deep
analysis concerning the roots of postwar antisemitism, like, for
example, the stereotypes of Jews as ardent supporters of communists.
To some degree, this can be understandable, as this book is devoted
primarily to a description of Polish retribution and not to the
history of Polish-Jewish relations. Moreover, the role of the Main
Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland is
likewise treated superficially. Finder and Prusin neglect the role of
the District Commissions, that is, the local branches of the Main
Commission, which conducted a great deal of postwar investigations.
The District Commission in Kraków, for example, served as a main
research and documentary background and support for the Main
Commission, and partly for the Supreme National Tribunal.

The final chapter examines trials from 1954 to 1959. Finder and
Prusin focus on finding an answer to the question: to what extent
were war crime trials political trials or an objective mechanism of
imposing justice after the end of the Second World War? They mention
two cases: the 1954 trial of General Paul Otto Geibel and the 1958-59
trial of Erich Koch. This chapter is not a mere description of these
trials, but it contains analysis of the roles and influence of these
trials on official collective remembrance of war and occupation. The
case of Koch especially serves as a good example of the
politicization of justice in terms of propaganda. The Koch trial was
almost parallel to the Eichmann trial and was to some extent treated
by authorities as a response to this trial. It also was regarded as a
good pretext for propaganda criticizing West Germany and its
officials for omitting a radical purge of former Nazis and war
criminals from state structures. The authors rightly use as an
example Heinz Reinefahrt, the "executioner of Warsaw," who was never
held liable for the atrocities he committed during the suppression of
the Warsaw Uprising. Press propaganda campaigns reconstructed by the
authors show the phenomenon of political use of the trials in the
late 1950s as a tool for criticizing West Germany. This is the most
valuable asset of this chapter.

In the epilogue Finder and Prusin conclude that despite Poland's
subjugation to sovietization, German war criminals were prosecuted in
fair trials. Moreover, taking into account Eichmann's trial in
Jerusalem, the authors stress that trials in late 1940s Poland, such
as the trials of Göth and Stroop, were in a sense prefigurative to
later Holocaust trials, like the abovementioned trial of Eichmann or
the Frankfurt Auschwitz trial.

Finder and Prusin took up a serious and difficult challenge:
documenting and analyzing the intricacies of postwar justice in
Poland and prosecuting war criminals in the context of Polish
Stalinism, with mentioning the difficult Polish-Jewish relations
after 1945. Apart from a few minor drawbacks, errors, and missed
opportunities for deeper analysis, in general this book enables
readers not only to get accustomed with a description of postwar
retribution in Poland but also to grasp various political, social,
and psychological factors that influenced the internal situation in
Poland after 1945. All in all, Finder and Prusin have prepared a
solid, well-documented, and objective book that deserves recognition
and praise.

Citation: Łukasz Jasiński. Review of Finder, Gabriel N.; Prusin,
Alexander V., _Justice behind the Iron Curtain: Nazis on Trial in
Communist Poland_. H-Poland, H-Net Reviews. April, 2019.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=53400

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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