Translation from English

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Non Violence in World War II- Norway Teachers

 
 
         
     
NONVIOLENCE IN WORLD WAR TWO
WHAT HAPPENED IN NORWAY
 
 
 STUDY AND TEACHING
 RESOURCES
   
       
   
Non violence was of course not an effective tool against Nazi occupiers-- Danes and Norwegians got away with SOME but only because Hitler wanted to add them to his gene pool for the Third Reich...he figured that after Germany had won the war, they would all capitulate (and mostly would have,-- )

My only link to all this is that one of my Christening sponsors was the man I was named after, Lawrence Glesnes, who was of Norwegian ancestry ( my other sponsor was Natalie Levy, a Jewish friend of my parents. This all took place under the auspices of one Pastor Olsen at the Nebo Lutheran Church in Chicago, IL)

I got a copy of my baptismal certificate when I was in my 40's just out of curiosity-- they had to look high and low for it at Nebo, because my baptism did not take place until a year after I was born.
When I sent them a donation in gratitude, they sent me back a note saying thank you but all services like that were free at the church ( I am sure they found some way to spend the money, though).
 
Indoctrination

The Germans believed that the most effective way of promoting Nazi ideals would be through the schools. In the autumn of 1941 the Nazi minister of education issued a series of orders. Portraits of Vidkun Quisling, as Norway's Nazi party leader, were to be hung on school walls, and anyone who removed them would be punished. Textbooks were to be revised to conform with Nazi views. No English texts could be used, and German, not English, was now the second language which every child must learn. Teachers must also educate their pupils thoroughly in Nazism.

The teachers were appalled. Their underground group met repeatedly to discuss what they should do. Meanwhile they were in no hurry to obey the education minister's commands.

Membership of the Norwegian Nazi party had been growing, from around 4,000 before the invasion to 40,000 in January 1942. Quisling's recruiting success was noticed in Berlin. He was brought back out of the cold and unexpectedly offered the post of 'Minister President' (prime minister). Almost his first act was to establish a new Nazi-oriented Teachers' Association with membership compulsory for all teachers. He quickly followed this up with a Nazi Youth Movement (based on the Hitler Youth movement in Germany), compulsory for all children aged between 10 and 18. Some of these 400,000 young people, Quisling said, would be selected for training as Nazi party members.

Courage and endurance

The teachers were now faced with the choice of submitting or losing their jobs and pensions. Their underground association came up with the answer: mass action. The teachers were to write to the education department, rejecting membership of the new association. Their letters were to be written with exactly the same wording and posted on the same day: February 20, 1942. Two days later a manifesto against Nazi control of Norway's education system was read aloud by clergy in churches throughout the country. There were 14,000 teachers in Norway, and 12,000 of them rejected Quisling's demand. As one teacher said: 'It was a matter of conscience. We couldn't have looked our families and friends in the face if we hadn't taken this stand.' By the beginning of May Quisling had to acknowledge his failure. 'You have destroyed everything for me,' Quisling told a teachers' meeting angrily.

There was a price to pay. From March 15 (the deadline for accepting membership in the new association) over 1,300 teachers were arrested - which meant that schools had to be closed. Most of these teachers were interned in a concentration camp outside Oslo. 700 were selected to face special punishment: forced labour in the Arctic alongside Russian prisoners of war. They were first packed into railway cattle trucks and taken to a transitional camp, where they endured punishing physical and mental hardships: little food, forced 'gymnastics' in the snow, kicks and blows, hard labour, untreated illness. They were told that they were being made fit for hard physical work; the intention was to break their spirit. Some did give in, agreed to join Quisling's new association, and were released - reassured by understanding colleagues that they should feel no guilt.

499 teachers now faced another cattle-car journey. This was followed by a sea voyage, in conditions that horrified even the Nazi doctor who went on board to make a report for Quisling. The ship had room for only 250 passengers, but all 499 were crammed in. Many could not even lie down, though they were now ill with 'pneumonia, gastric ulcers. asthma, bronchitis. haemorrhage and mental derangement'. 'The water supplies are totally inadequate, and there are only two lavatories,' the doctor added. Quisling replied, 'The measures taken against Norway's teachers are a direct consequence of their treasonable activities': they had had their chance to recant.

Once they were in the Arctic things eased a little: slightly better conditions, poor but regular food. The work was still hard: unloading supply ships. It was also dangerous for people untrained for it - there were a number of injuries and one death. On the whole they were better treated than the Russian prisoners they worked with, some of whom were shot. Each day the teachers were marched down the long road to the docks, and each day the local people turned up to watch them in respectful silence. They were now famous throughout the country. When, in early November, they were finally released, they returned home to be welcomed as heroes.

The schools had been reopened in early April. Teachers who were not deported were told that they were considered to have joined the new association, and would have subscriptions to it docked from their salaries. Some refused, and carried on their teaching privately; others went in to work only after signing a declaration that they had refused membership. The deported teachers were later told the same thing. But in fact Quisling's controversial Teachers' Association never materialised, and no deductions from salaries were ever made.
continue...
 
 
 
 

 
       

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