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56.
Gerhard Finn,
Die politischen Häftlinge der Sowjetzone:
1945

1959
(Pfaffenhofen, 1960), pp. 26–31; interview with Wolfgang Lehmann, Berlin, September 20, 2006.

57.
Papsdorf is interviewed in
Zeitzeugen
, a documentary directed by D. Jungnickel.

58.
Interviews with Gisela Gneist, Berlin and Sachsenhausen, September 20 and October 4, 2006.

59.
Interviews with Gneist; also Gisela Gneist and Gunther Heydemann,
“Allenfalls kommt man für ein halbes Jahr in ein Umschulungslager”
(Leipzig, 2002).

60.
Bogusław Kopka,
Obozy Pracy w Polsce,
1944

1950
(Warsaw, 2002), pp. 147–48.

61.
Later changed to Special Camp Number One. See the website of Gedenkstätte und Museum Sachsenhausen,
http://www.stiftung-bg.de/gums/en/index.htm
.

62.
From documents in the collection of the Gedenkstätte und Museum Sachsenhausen.

63.
Jan and Renate Lipinsky,
Die Straße die in den Tod führte—Zur Geschichte des Speziallagers Nr.
5
Ketschendorf/Fürstenwalde
(Leverkusen, 1999), p. 177.

64.
Interview with Gneist. She worked as a messenger.

65.
Quoting from Soviet documents, Norman Naimark (Naimark, “To Know Everything and to Report Everything Worth Knowing: Building the East German Police State, 1945–1949,” Cold War International History Project Working Paper no. 10, August 1994, p. 377) gives a figure of 153,953 arrests and 42,022 deaths. Gneist and Heydemann (
“Allenfalls kommt man für ein halbes Jahr,”
p. 12), using Soviet and German sources, give 157,837 arrests and 43,035 deaths.

66.
Interview with Lehmann.

67.
Interview with Gneist.

68.
Bodo Ritscher,
Speziallager Nr.
2
Buchenwald
(Buchenwald, 1993), pp. 86–90.

69.
Ernest Tillich,
Hefte der Kampfgruppe
, brochure published in Berlin, 1945.

70.
Ritscher,
Speziallager Nr.
2
Buchenwald
, pp. 86–90.

71.
From documents in the collection of the Gedenkstätte und Museum Sachsenhausen.

72.
Interview with Lehmann.

73.
Tamás Stark,
Magyar hadifoglyok a
Śzovjetunióban
(Budapest, 2006), p. 36.

74.
HIA, George Bien collection; see also George Z. Bien,
Lost Years
, self-published memoirs.

75.
Stark,
Magyar hadifoglyok a
Śzovjetunióban,
pp. 73–85.

76.
Ibid., p. 97.

77.
László Karsai, “The People’s Courts and Revolutionary Justice in Hungary, 1945–46,” in István Deák, Jan T. Gross, and Tony Judt, eds.,
The Politics of Retribution in Europe
(Princeton, 2000), pp. 233–48.

78.
Margit Földesi,
A megszállók szabadsága
(Budapest, 2002), p. 64.

79.
Many thanks to Anita Lackenberger, who took me to Baden to see the former NKVD headquarters.

80.
Barbara Bank, “Az internálás és kitelepítés dokumentumai a történeti levéltárban,” in György Gyarmati, ed.,
Az átmenet évkönyve,
2003
(Budapest, 2004), pp. 107–30; see also Karsai, “People’s Courts and Revolutionary Justice in Hungary,” p. 233.

81.
István Szent-Miklósy,
With the Hungarian Independence Movement,
1943–1947: An Eyewitness Account
(New York, 1988), p. 136.

82.
Ibid., pp. 138–39.

83.
ÁBTL, V-113398/1, pp. 1–20; also Balogh Margit,
A
KALOT
és a katolikus társadalompolitika
1935–1946
(Budapest, 1998), pp. 184–85.

84.
ÁBTL, V-113398/1, pp. 241–60.

85.
Szabad Nép
, May 4, 1946.

86.
Kis Újság
, May 3 and May 4, 1946.

87.
Sándor M. Kiss, from the preface to Géza Böszörményi
, Recsk
1950

1953
(Budapest, 2005); also interview with Sándor M. Kiss, Budapest, January 27, 2009.

6. ETHNIC CLEANSING

1.
Maria Buczyło, “Akcja ‘Wisła’: Wyp˛edzić, rozproszyć,”
Karta
49 (2006), pp. 32–63.

2.
Archie Brown,
The Rise and Fall of Communism
(London, 2009), p. 113.

3.
The Potsdam agreements can be found at
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/decade17.asp
.

4.
Stefano Bottoni, “Reassessing the Communist Takeover of Romania: Violence, Institutional Continuity, Ethnic Conflict Management,” paper presented to the workshop “United Europe, Divided Memory,” Vienna, November 28–30, 2008, p. 5.

5.
Eagle Glassheim, “National Mythologies and Ethnic Cleansing: The Expulsion of Czechoslovak Germans in 1945,”
Central European History
33/4 (2000), pp. 470–71.

6.
Piotr Semków, “Martyrologia Polaków z Pomorza Gdańskiego w latach II wojny światowej,”
Biuletyn Instytutu Pami˛eci Narodowej
8–9 (2006), pp. 42–49.

7.
Gerhard Gruschka
, Zgoda, miejsce zgrozy: Obóz koncentracyjny w
Świ˛etochłowicach
(Gliwice, 1998).

8.
From “
They rocked my cradle then bundled me out”—Ethnic German Fate in Hungary
1939

1948
, exhibition catalogue, Terror Háza (Budapest, 2007).

9.
Interview with Herta Kuhrig, Berlin, November 21, 2006. Kuhrig and her family were expelled because Czech police found a photograph of her in the uniform of the Jungmädel, the Nazi youth group for very young girls.

10.
Włodzimierz Borodziej and Hans Lemberg, eds.,
Niemcy w Polsce
1945–1950: Wybor Dokumentow
, vol. III (Warsaw, 2001), pp. 25–26.

11.
Marion Gräfin Dönhoff,
Namen, die keiner mehr nennt: Ostpreußen—Menschen und Geschichte
(Munich, 1964), pp. 16–18.

12.
Glassheim, “National Mythologies and Ethnic Cleansing,” p. 470.

13.
Piotr Pykel, “The Expulsion of the Germans from Czechoslovakia,” in Steffen Prauser and Arfon Rees, eds.,
The Expulsion of the “German” Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second World War
, EUI Working Paper HEC no. 2004/1, p. 18.

14.
Borodziej and Lemberg, eds.,
Niemcy w Polsce
, pp. 33–34.

15.
Pykel, “Expulsion of the Germans from Czechoslovakia,” pp. 11–21; and Balász Apor, “The Expulsion of the German-Speaking Population from Hungary,” in Prauser and Rees, eds.,
Expulsion of the “German” Communities from Eastern Europe
, p. 32.

16.
László Karsai, “The People’s Courts and Revolutionary Justice in Hungary, 1945–46,” in István Deák, Jan T. Gross, and Tony Judt, eds.,
The Politics of Retribution in Europe
(Princeton, 2000), pp. 246–47.

17.
Witold Stankowski, “Centralny Obóz Pracy w Potulicach w Latach 1945–1950,” in Alicja Paczoska, ed.,
Obóz w Potulicach—Aspekt Trudnego S˛asiedstwa Polsko-Niemieckiego w Okresie Dwóch Totalitarnyzmów
(Bydgoszcz, 2005), pp. 58–59.

18.
Helga Hirsch,
Zemsta Ofiar
, trans. Maria Przybyłowska (Warsaw, 1999), p. 78; Stankowski, “Centralny Obóz Pracy w Potulicach w Latach 1940–1950,” p. 62.

19.
Waldemar Ptak, “Naczelnicy Centralnego Obozu Pracy w Potulicach w Latach 1945–1950,” in Paczoska, ed.,
Obóz w Potulicach
, pp. 70–78.

20.
See Hirsch,
Zemsta Ofiar
, pp. 14–146; Witold Stankowski,
Obozy i inne miejsca odosobnienia dla niemieckiej ludności cywilnej w Polsce w latach
1945

1950
(Bydgoszcz, 2002), pp. 260–69; and also John Sack,
An Eye for an Eye
(New York, 1993), pp. 86–97. Sack’s book, deservedly controversial, contains a number of mistakes and exaggerations, but his interviews appear to be authentic.

21.
Borodziej and Lemberg, eds.,
Niemcy w Polsce
, pp. 131–47.

22.
Barbara Bank and Sándor Őze,
A “német ügy”
1945–1953. A Volksbundtól Tiszalökig
(Budapest and Munich, 2005), pp. 9–34.

23.
Timothy Snyder,
Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
(New York, 2010), pp. 323–24.

24.
Pykel, “Expulsion of the Germans from Czechoslovakia,” pp. 11–21.

25.
Phillip Ther, “The Integration of Expellees in Germany and Poland After World War II,”
Slavic Review
55, 4 (Winter 1996), pp. 787–88.

26.
Piotr Szubarczyk and Piotr Semków, “Erika z Rumii,”
Biuletyn Instytutu Pami˛eci Narodowej
5 (2004), pp. 49–53.

27.
Norman Naimark,
Fires of Hatred: Ethnic Cleansing in Twentieth-Century Europe
(Cambridge, Mass., and London, 2001), pp. 110–11.

28.
Ibid.

29.
Tibor Zinner,
A magyarországi németek kitelepítése
(Budapest, 2004), pp. 19–28; also Barbara Bank, introduction to Bank and Őze,
A “német ügy”
1945–1953.

30.
Bottoni, “Reassessing the Communist Takeover of Romania,” p. 5.

31.
Mikołaj Stanisław Kunicki, “The Polish Crusader: The Life and Politics of Bolesław Piasecki, 1915–1979,” Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University, June 2004, pp. 196–203.

32.
Bottoni, “Reassessing the Communist Takeover of Romania,” pp. 18–21.

33.
Kálmán Janics,
Czechoslovak Policy and the Hungarian Minority, 1945–1948
(New York, 1982), p. 61.

34.
Ibid., p. 105.

35.
See Andrzej Krawczyk, “Czechy: Komunizm Wiecznie Zywy,”
Gazeta Wyborcza
155 (July 5, 2007), who argues that the expulsions were a crucial part of the legitimacy of the Czechoslovak communist party.

36.
Przesiedlenia Polaków i Ukrai
ń
ców,
1944

1946
, vol. 2, document collection prepared by Archiwum Ministerstwa Wewnetrznych I Administracja RP and Derzahvny Arkhiv Sluzby Bezpeki Ukrainii (Warsaw and Kiev, 2000), p. 41.

37.
The best short account of the ethnic cleansing operation in Volhynia is Timothy Snyder’s “The Causes of Ukrainian–Polish Ethnic Cleansing, 1943,”
Past and Present
179 (May 2003), pp. 197–234.

38.
Barbara Odnous, “Lato 1943,”
Karta
46 (2005), p. 121.

39.
Waldemar Lotnik,
Nine Lives: Ethnic Conflict in the Polish–Ukrainian Borderlands
(London, 1999), p. 65.

40.
Przesiedlenia Polaków i Ukraińców
, p. 253.

41.
Ibid., p. 45.

42.
Ibid., pp. 737–41.

43.
Ibid., pp. 915–17.

44.
Dariusz Stola, “Forced Migrations in Central European History,”
International Migration Review
26, 2 (Summer 1992), pp. 324–41.

45.
Przesiedlenia Polaków i Ukraińców
, pp. 49, 743.

46.
Eugeniusz Misiło,
Akcja Wisła
(Warsaw, 1993), pp. 16–17.

47.
Timothy Snyder,
Sketches from a Secret War
(New Haven and London, 2005), p. 210.

48.
Misiło,
Akcja Wisła
, pp. 66–69, 73.

49.
Ibid., p. 63.

50.
Ibid., p. 25.

51.
Buczyło, “Akcja ‘Wisła,’ ” p. 34.

52.
Snyder,
Bloodlands
, p. 329.

53.
Mark Kramer, “Stalin, Soviet Policy, and the Consolidation of a Communist Bloc in Eastern Europe, 1944–1953,” p. 21, paper delivered at the Freeman Spogli International Institute, April 30, 2010.

54.
Dagmar Kusa, “Historical Trauma in Ethnic Identity,” in Eleonore Breuning, Jill Lewis, and Gareth Pritchard, eds.,
Power and the People: A Social History of Central European Politics,
1945

1956
(Manchester, 2005), pp. 130–52.

55.
Janics,
Czechoslovak Policy and the Hungarian Minority
, p. 219.

56.
Bennet Kovrig, “Partitioned Nation: Hungarian Minorities in Central Europe” in Michael Mandelbaum, ed.,
The New European Diasporas
(New York, 2000), pp. 19–81; Stola, “Forced Migrations in Central European History,” pp. 336–37.

57.
Available at
http://www.ipn.gov.pl/portal/en/2/71/​Response_by_the_State_of_Israel_to_the_​application_for_the_extradition_of_Salomo.html
. In 1998, Polish authorities also tried to extradite Helena Brus, a former Stalinist prosecutor who had signed the arrest warrant for General Emil Fieldorf, one of the most heroic of the Home Army leaders, after which he was subjected to a farcical trial and then executed. Brus had moved to Oxford in 1971. She refused to return to Poland, however, on the grounds that she “could not receive a fair trial” in “the country of Auschwitz and Birkenau.” The British government did not agree to the extradition. See Anne Applebaum, “The Three Lives of Helena Brus,”
Sunday Telegraph
, December 6, 1998.

58.
Dariusz Stola,
Kraj Bez Wyjścia? Migracje z Polski 1949–1989
(Warsaw, 2010), pp. 49–53. See also Dariusz Stola, Natlia Aleksiun, and Barbara Polak, “Wszyscy krawcy wyjechali. O ˙Zydach w PRL,”
Biuletyn Instytutu Pami˛eci Narodowej
11 (2005), pp. 4–25.

59.
András Kovács, ed.,
Jews and Jewry in Contemporary Hungary: Results of a Sociological Survey
(Institute for Jewish Policy Research, 2004), pp. 49–53.

60.
Jeffrey Herf,
Divided Memory: The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys
(Cambridge, Mass., 1997), p. 70. Some 21,000 Jews remained in all of Germany, out of the 600,000 who had lived there before the war.

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