Lithuanian collaboration with Nazi Germany took place during World War II, primarily on the territory of Lithuania during its occupation by German forces from 1941 to 1944.
Collaboration and cooperation with Nazi Germany among Lithuanians had various causes. The main reason was the experience of the brutal Soviet occupation, which automatically directed the hopes and aspirations of Lithuanians toward Nazi Germany. In general, Lithuanians saw in cooperation with the Germans an opportunity to realize their own national goals; although few deluded themselves that the Germans would restore full independence to the Lithuanians, the hope of receiving some form of autonomy was widespread, as well as support in conflicts with other ethnic groups under German occupation, such as Poles and Belarusians. Lithuanian collaboration covered a wide spectrum of postures from the politically motivated conditional cooperation to complete identification with the goals of the occupier, genuine collaboration. [1]
The German army was welcomed by the Lithuanian population in June 1941 with joy and as liberators. At that time, the level of collaboration and cooperation with the Germans was at its highest and usually undertaken completely voluntarily. Enthusiasm subsided, however, as early as the fall of 1941 when hopes for the creation of any Lithuanian autonomy proved illusory. The next turning point was the defeat at Stalingrad suffered by Germany in early 1943, from which point Germany's defeat in the war seemed inevitable. [2] From then on, the resentment of the Lithuanian population against the increasingly oppressive occupiers grew. Attempts to draw new groups into collaboration generally failed, emblematic of which was the failed attempt to form a Lithuanian Waffen-SS legion. Only the looming Soviet threat, which for many Lithuanians still seemed more lethal than the German occupation, became a field for new collaboration. The recruitment success of the Lithuanian Territorial Defense Force was precisely the fruit of cooperation on this front. It ended, however, with the brutal disbanding of the unit after it refused to defend Germany itself. [3]
Despite the changing sentiment, Lithuanian police formations and Lithuanian administrative personnel continued to collaborate throughout the entire war. Among the former, the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police and special units such as the Lithuanian TDA Battalion, which took an active part in Holocaust crimes and mass murder of civilians, were particularly notorious.
At the beginning of World War II, which began with the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, Lithuania remained a neutral country. However, after Poland's defeat, pressure intensified on Lithuania, which was forced to sign he mutual assistance pact of October 10, 1939, with the Soviet Union, making it a de facto Soviet protectorate. [4] Under this agreement, however, Lithuania received part of the Vilnius region, which had previously been part of Poland. On June 15, 1940, all of Lithuania was occupied and absorbed into the Soviet Union. [4]
The period of Soviet occupation led to a strengthening of negative feelings toward national minorities in Lithuania, especially Jews. During the Soviet occupation, tensions between Lithuanian Jews and ethnic Lithuanians increased significantly, as the former often welcomed the incoming Soviet power, and their situation improved under it. [5] Ethnic Lithuanians, on the other hand, were proportionately more often victims of Soviet repression, as a result of which many of them began to see Germany as an ally and liberator. [6] This led to a significant increase in anti-Semitic sentiment. This was reinforced by the belief, not based on facts, that there was significant Jewish involvement in the Soviet administration and terror apparatus. [7] There was a widespread view that the collapse of independent Lithuania was caused by "Jewish treason," while the deportations were organized by the "Jewish-Soviet NKVD". [8] Also strained relations prevailed between Lithuanians and Poles, who often viewed the Lithuanians as third occupiers of their country. [9]
The Soviet occupation triggered a strong anti-Soviet resistance movement that resulted in an armed uprising in June 1941, at the time of the German invasion of the USSR. Most of the later pro-Nazi collaborators had previously been members of the anti-Soviet resistance movement. [9] However, anti-Sovietism was not the only factor that attracted people to the Nazis; fascination with corporatism, social discipline, economic and racial anti-Semitism, and the vision of building a Axis Europe were also important. [9]
On November 17, 1940, a group of émigrés formed the Lithuanian Activist Front (LAF) in Berlin, headed by former Lithuanian envoy in Berlin Colonel Kazys Škirpa. [10] Formally founded as an alliance of all anti-communist parties, it quickly assumed militant nationalist positions. [10] In opposition to it remained exiled in USA former president Antanas Smetona and many Lithuanian diplomats of the older generation, associated with the Smetona regime and generally opposed to Nazi ideology. [10]
The LAF drew its ideological roots in the pre-war Lithuanian Activist Movement (LAS), whose leader philosopher Antanas Maceina was the LAF's ideological guide. [10] LAS advocated cooperation with the axis and preached fascist-like and anti-Semitic views. [11] Another more radical LAF ideologue was intellectual Bronys Raila, an activist in the nationalist movement before the war, wrote a draft program for the LAF in which he advocated the overthrow of "democratism," the unification of Lithuanians and Latvians to create a "united Aestian ideal" and an alliance with Germany. He also demanded that Lithuania be cleansed of "Jews, parasites and traitors," that Jews be deprived of their property and expelled. [12] In their resolutions LAF denied the Lithuanian Jews a place in the future Lithuanian state, and also annulled medieval settlement privileges, thus excluding the Jews from Lithuanian statehood. [13]
Although the LAF was headquartered in Berlin it also tried to operate in the occupied country, but contacts with LAF activists in Lithuania were limited, maintained through a handful of couriers. It is difficult to assess how much the center in Berlin influenced the sentiment in the country and vice versa. It is possible that the LAF's growing anti-Semitic attitude was an effect of the mood in the Soviet-occupied country. [14]
The LAF organized an underground network in Soviet-controlled Lithuania. The intelligence and sabotage operations they provided were helpful to the Germans once the invasion of the Soviet Union began. [15] However, the LAF also had its own goals; the uprising they organized, aimed primarily at capturing Kaunas and Vilnius before the Germans, was designed to present them with a fait accompli and force them to recognize at least Lithuanian autonomy. [15] The uprising proved successful. The Lithuanian population, driven to despair by the last wave of deportations of some 20,000 people on June 14-17, 1941, just a week before the German invasion of the USSR, rose enthusiastically against the Soviets and their supporters. [16]
The LAF formed uniformed paramilitary units in Kaunas and Vilnius. They were to support the formed provisional government headed by Juozas Ambrazevičius and became the basis of the future Lithuanian army. [17] These units were transformed by the Germans into the Aufbaudienst and were subordinated to the German Ordnungspolizei. [18] In addition to these units, there were many less regular partisan forces, operating independently. From the very beginning, they organized or participated in pogroms against the Jewish population and in the plundering of their property. [13] The insurgents also clashed with Red Army units and Communist militias, and nearly a thousand insurgents were killed in such battles. [19]
German forces, primarily Einsatzgruppe A, began the process of exterminating the Jewish population in the first hours of the invasion. [20] They found many auxiliaries among the Lithuanian formations. Among them were partisan divisions, as well as units of the reconstituted Lithuanian police, and elements of the civilian local administration. [21] The Provisional Government or LAF although they claimed sovereignty, their real power was severely limited. They contributed to the spread of anti-Jewish violence with their anti-Semitic rhetoric, although not directly calling for slaughter. [22] The provisional government issued the Statutes on the Situation of the Jews on August 1, 1941, in which they restricted the civil rights of Jews and forced them to wear distinctive badges. [23]
The provisional government was dissolved on 5 August 1941 and LAF was banned by Germans on 26 September 1941. [17]
After the first wave of spontaneous anti-Jewish violence of the early summer of 1941, came a phase of planned extermination of the Jewish population, which happened between August and October 1941. In this German-managed process, most of the personnel were locals, primarily former partisans and police officers. [24] In August 1941, the Lithuanian police, led by Col. Vytautas Reivytis , began collecting data on Jewish communities, and then, on the basis of Secret Circular No. 3, began the process of gathering Jews for "transportation to camps." [24]
The National Labor Service (TDA) battalion, recruited mainly from Lithuanian Red Army deserters, played a crucial role in the process of extermination. Officers were mainly Voldemarists, Nazi-like extreme nationalists, grouped in the Lithuanian Nationalist Party . [24]
Detached from TDA contingent, commanded by Bronius Norkus, as a part of Rollkommando Hamann, was responsible for the deaths of at least half of the 125,000 Jews killed in Lithuania between August 1 and December 1, 1941. [25] Most of them in the countryside. [25] In Ponary, near Vilnius, the killings were carried out by the Special Squad of the German Security Police and SD, known as Ypatingasis būrys. [25] TDA units were active in Kaunas, including the October 28, 1941 massacre of 10,000 Jews at the Ninth Fort in Kaunas. This was the largest single massacre of Jews in Lithuania. [25] In addition, other battalions of the Lithuanian auxiliary police, but also local policemen, and other auxiliaries who which less frequently took part in the murder of Jews, but often played a secondary role, security, guarding, and also took part in hunting Jews. [25]
Lithuanian police battalions were also involved in mass murders in Belarus, Ukraine, and northwest Russia. [25] [26] The 2nd and 252nd auxiliary police battalions were also sent to Poland for guard duty at the Majdanek concentration camp. [27] Probably the largest action of the Lithuanian police against the non-Jewish population was the murder of some 400 Poles in the Święciany massacre in May 1942. [26] During the war, between 13,000 and 15,000 served in the 28 battalions of the Lithuanian auxiliary police. [28]
The Germans, after the frontline fighting had died down, organized their own administration in Lithuania. The General Region (Generalbezirk) of Lithuania was established, headed by Adrian von Renteln. Together with the other Baltic states, it formed the Reich Commission East (Reichskommissariat Ostland), headed by Hinrich Lohse. [29] The Lithuanian division of local administration of June 1940, restored by the Lithuanian insurgents, was preserved, and the positions were also retained by the local Lithuanian activists they elevated to power. [29] The Germans employed 900 people in the civil administration in early 1944, in addition, about 20,000 Lithuanians worked in their own administrative bodies. [30] The administrative apparatus was headed by Gen. Petras Kubiliūnas. Kubiliūnas based the administrative apparatus on former members of the Provisional Government and Voldemarists. [31]
The Lithuanian municipal administration was responsible for contacts with Jewish ghettos, as the Germans avoided direct contact with Jews. [32] They also influenced the territorial layout of the ghettos, and was also responsible for the provisioning and security of the ghettos. [33] In the Vilnius region, the Lithuanians used their influential role in the administration to close Polish schools and cultural institutions, Lithuanianize education, and dismiss Polish employees from the administration. The Lithuanian Security Police also collaborated with the Germans in combatting the Polish underground. [34] [35] Similar measures were aimed at Belarusians. [36]
Enthusiasm for German rule among the Lithuanian population waned in 1942, due to disillusionment with the lack of real political autonomy, as well as the growing burden of the occupation itself. The first underground organizations appeared. However, much of the Lithuanian administrative and police apparatus continued to operate under German authority until the end of the war. [37]
After an unsuccessful attempt to create a Lithuanian Waffen-SS unit, the Germans attempted to create a military unit of a different kind, in which Lithuanians were to have a little more autonomy, and the unit itself was to be used only within Lithuania to fight Soviet and Polish partisans. [38] The Germans called this unit Lithuanian Special Organizations ( Litauische Sonderverbände ), while in Lithuanian it was called Local Selection (Vietinė rinktinė). [38] It was headed by pre-war Lithuanian general Povilas Plechavičius. [38] Recruitment for the unit, announced on February 16, 1944, was voluntary and was a complete success and gathered about 20,000 men. [28] The formation of the unit was also supported by the Lithuanian underground. [39] The unit was mostly broken up by the Polish Home Army and then brutally disbanded by the Germans for refusing to defend Germany itself. [39] [3]
A significant number of Local Selection members escaped into the forests, but some were conscripted by the Germans into the army, mainly to serve in Luftwaffe auxiliary units. At the beginning of 1945, 37,000 Lithuanians were serving in the ranks of various branches of the German police and army. [40]
The June Uprising was a brief period of the history of Lithuania in late June 1941 between the first Soviet and the Nazi occupations.
The Lithuanian Activist Front or LAF was a Lithuanian underground resistance organization established in 1940 after the Soviets occupied Lithuania. Its goal was to free Lithuania and regain its independence. The LAF planned and executed the June uprising and established the short-lived Provisional Government of Lithuania, which disbanded after a few weeks. The Nazi authorities banned the LAF in September 1941. Its role in the three World War II invasions of Lithuania and the massacre of 95% of Lithuania's Jewish population remains ambiguous and the topic of conflicting information and opinion.
The Schutzmannschaft, or Auxiliary Police was the collaborationist auxiliary police of native policemen serving in those areas of the Soviet Union and the Baltic states occupied by Nazi Germany during World War II. Heinrich Himmler, head of the Schutzstaffel (SS), established the Schutzmannschaft on 25 July 1941, and subordinated it to the Order Police. By the end of 1941, some 45,000 men served in Schutzmannschaft units, about half of them in the battalions. During 1942, Schutzmannschaften expanded to an estimated 300,000 men, with battalions accounting for about a third, or less than one half of the local force. Everywhere, local police far outnumbered the equivalent German personnel several times; in most places, the ratio of Germans to natives was about 1-to-10.
In World War II, many governments, organizations and individuals collaborated with the Axis powers, "out of conviction, desperation, or under coercion." Nationalists sometimes welcomed German or Italian troops they believed would liberate their countries from colonization. The Danish, Belgian and Vichy French governments attempted to appease and bargain with the invaders in hopes of mitigating harm to their citizens and economies.
The Lithuanian Territorial Defense Force[a] was a short-lived Lithuanian volunteer military unit created with German support during the occupation of Lithuania during World War II with the stated intention of combatting the quickly approaching Red Army and Soviet and Polish insurgents, and thus ensure security in General District of Lithuania within Reichskommissariat Ostland. The Nazi occupation authorities actually planned to use the force mainly for Eastern Front battles, only minimally fighting Soviet partisans. The anti-Nazi Lithuanian resistance supported the creation of the force, hoping to use it against Soviet forces after the defeat of Nazi Germany.
The Lithuanian Security Police (LSP), also known as Saugumas, was a local police force that operated in German-occupied Lithuania from 1941 to 1944, in collaboration with the occupational authorities. Collaborating with the Nazi Sipo and SD, the unit was directly subordinate to the German Kripo. The LSP took part in perpetrating the Holocaust in Lithuania, persecuting the Polish resistance and communist underground.
Ypatingasis būrys or Special Squad of the German Security Police and SD was a killing squad operating in the Vilnius Region in 1941–1944. The unit, primarily composed of Lithuanian volunteers, was formed by the German occupation government and was subordinate to Einsatzkommando 9 and later to Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and Sicherheitspolizei (Sipo).p.15 The unit was subordinated to German police, and had no official autonomy. In Polish they were colloquially called strzelcy ponarscy.
The Provisional Government of Lithuania was an attempted provisional government to form an independent Lithuanian state in the last days of the first Soviet occupation and the first weeks of the German occupation of Lithuania during World War II in 1941.
During World War II, Lithuania was occupied twice by the Soviet Union and once by Nazi Germany (1941–1944). Resistance took many forms.
Juozas Ambrazevičius or Juozas Brazaitis, was a Nazi collaborator and Lithuanian literary historian who became prime minister when the Nazis routed the Soviets from Lithuania. His own ideology and views are disputed.
The issue of Polish and Lithuanian relations during the World War II is a controversial one, and some modern Lithuanian and Polish historians still differ in their interpretations of the related events, many of which are related to the Lithuanian collaboration with Nazi Germany and the operations of Polish resistance organization of Armia Krajowa on territories inhabited by Lithuanians and Poles. Several common academic conferences started bridging the gap between Lithuanian and Polish interpretations, but significant differences remain.
The Lithuanian TDABattalion or simply TDA, was a paramilitary battalion organized in June–August 1941 by the Provisional Government of Lithuania at the onset of Operation Barbarossa. Members of the TDA were known by many names such as Lithuanian auxiliaries, policemen, white-armbands, nationalists, rebels, partisans, resistance fighters or Schutzmannschaften. TDA was intended to be the basis for a future independent Lithuanian Army, but it was taken over by Nazis and reorganized into the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police Battalions. The original TDA eventually became the 12th and the 13th Police Battalions. These two units took an active role in mass killings of the Jews in Lithuania and Belarus. According to the Jäger Report, the TDA battalion's members killed about 26,000 Jews between July and December 1941.
The Kaunas pogrom was a massacre of Jews living in Kaunas, Lithuania, that took place on 25–29 June 1941; the first days of Operation Barbarossa and the Nazi occupation of Lithuania. The most infamous incident occurred at the garage of NKVD Kaunas section, a nationalized garage of Lietūkis, an event known as the Lietūkis Garage Massacre. There several dozen Jewish men, allegedly associates of NKVD, were publicly tortured and executed on 27 June in front of a crowd of Lithuanian men, women and children. The incident was documented by a German soldier who photographed the event as a man, nicknamed the "Death Dealer", beat each man to death with a metal bar. After June, systematic executions took place at various forts of the Kaunas Fortress, especially the Seventh and Ninth Fort.
The Holocaust in Lithuania resulted in the near total eradication of Lithuanian (Litvaks) and Polish Jews[a] in Generalbezirk Litauen of the Reichskommissariat Ostland in the Nazi-controlled Lithuania. Of approximately 208,000–210,000 Jews at the time of the Nazi invasion, an estimated 190,000 to 195,000 were killed before the end of World War II, most of them between June and December 1941. More than 95% of Lithuania's Jewish population was murdered over the three-year German occupation, a more complete destruction than befell any other country in the Holocaust. Historians attribute this to the massive collaboration in the genocide by the non-Jewish local paramilitaries, though the reasons for this collaboration are still debated. The Holocaust resulted in the largest loss of life in so short a period of time in the history of Lithuania.
Lithuanian partisans is a generic term used during World War II by Nazi officials and quoted in books by modern historians to describe Lithuanian anti-communist fighters, thus collaborators with the Nazis during the first months of the German occupation of Lithuania during World War II. A part of the Lithuanian partisans who fought against the Red Army during the June Uprising, were later organized into various auxiliary units by German Nazis. A minority of the units assisted and actively participated in mass executions of the Lithuanian Jews mostly in June–August 1941.
The military occupation of Lithuania by Nazi Germany lasted from the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, to the end of the Battle of Memel on January 28, 1945. At first the Germans were welcomed as liberators from the repressive Soviet regime which had occupied Lithuania. In hopes of re-establishing independence or regaining some autonomy, Lithuanians organized a Provisional Government that lasted six weeks.
RollkommandoHamann was a small mobile unit that committed mass murders of Lithuanian Jews in the countryside in July–October 1941, with an estimated death toll of at least 60,000 Jews. The unit was also responsible for many murders in Latvia from July through August 1941. At the end of 1941 the destruction of Lithuanian Jewry was effectively accomplished by Hamann's unit in the countryside, by the Ypatingasis būrys in the Ponary massacre, and by the Tautinio Darbo Apsaugos Batalionas (TDA) in the Ninth Fort in Kaunas. In about six months an estimated 80% of all Lithuanian Jews were killed. The remaining few were spared for use as a labor force and concentrated in urban ghettos, mainly the Vilna and Kaunas Ghettos.
The Lithuanian Auxiliary Police was a Schutzmannschaft formation formed during the German occupation of Lithuania between 1941 and 1944, with the first battalions originating from the most reliable freedom fighters, disbanded following the 1941 anti-Soviet Lithuanian June Uprising in 1941. Lithuanian activists hoped that these units would be the basis of a reestablished Lithuanian Army commanded by the Lithuanian Provisional Government. Instead, they were put under the orders of the SS- und Polizeiführer in Lithuania.
Wartime collaboration occurred in every country occupied by Nazi Germany during the Second World War, including the Baltic states. The three Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, were occupied by the Soviet Union in the summer of 1940, and were later occupied by Germany in the summer of 1941 and then incorporated, together with parts of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic of the Soviet Union, into the Reichskommissariat Ostland. Collaborators with Germany participated in the Eastern Front against the Soviet Union, as well as in the Holocaust, both in and outside of the Baltic states. This collaboration was done through formal Waffen-SS divisions and police battalions, as well as through spontaneous acts during the opening of the war.
The Lithuanian Front was an underground anti-Nazi and anti-Soviet Lithuanian resistance organisation active from September 1941, led by Juozas Ambrazevičius. It was one of the main anti-Nazi resistance movements in Lithuania, alongside the Lithuanian Freedom Fighters' Union (LLKS). Ambrazevičius was the most important and influential leader of the national Lithuanian resistance to Nazi German occupation.
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