Walter Kuhn
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Walter Kuhn (27 September 1903 – 5 August 1983), was an
Austrian Austrian may refer to: * Austrians, someone from Austria or of Austrian descent ** Someone who is considered an Austrian citizen, see Austrian nationality law * Austrian German dialect * Something associated with the country Austria, for example: ...
-born German folklorist (german: Volkskundler, italics=yes), historian and Ostforscher. Prior to World War II, Kuhn belonged to the German minority in Poland. His academic work specialized in German minorities outside Germany, particularly in the area of Ukraine, especially Volhynia. He focused his research on German language islands. In 1936, Kuhn moved to Germany to take a professorship at the University of Breslau. In 1940, he joined the Nazi Party. During the war, he advised various Nazi plans of
ethnic cleansing Ethnic cleansing is the systematic forced removal of ethnic, racial, and religious groups from a given area, with the intent of making a region ethnically homogeneous. Along with direct removal, extermination, deportation or population transfer ...
aimed at Jews, Poles and their replacement by German settlers from further east. Kuhn continued his academic work post-war in West Germany, becoming a professor at the University of Hamburg and an expert in the German
Ostsiedlung (, literally "East-settling") is the term for the Early Medieval and High Medieval migration-period when ethnic Germans moved into the territories in the eastern part of Francia, East Francia, and the Holy Roman Empire (that Germans had al ...
. He retired in 1968, moving to Salzburg, where he died in 1983. Kuhn's post-war work was internationally recognized, but received some criticism from Polish scholars in particular. Although they were largely ignored or denied in the post-war period, Kuhn's close connections to
National Socialism Nazism ( ; german: Nazismus), the common name in English for National Socialism (german: Nationalsozialismus, ), is the far-right politics, far-right Totalitarianism, totalitarian political ideology and practices associated with Adolf Hit ...
before and during World War II have come under increased scholarly scrutiny since the publication of Michael Burleigh's ''Germany Turns Eastward'' (1988). Kuhn's pre-war work has been linked to
anti-Semitism Antisemitism (also spelled anti-semitism or anti-Semitism) is hostility to, prejudice towards, or discrimination against Jews. A person who holds such positions is called an antisemite. Antisemitism is considered to be a form of racism. Antis ...
, anti-Slavism, and promoting a belief in German superiority.


Biography


Early life and studies

Kuhn was born in 1903 in the town of Bielitz ( Bielsko) in Austrian Silesia, in a German-speaking enclave surrounded by Polish speakers. Kuhn's parents belonged to the
Away from Rome! ''Away from Rome!'' (german: Los-von-Rom-Bewegung) was a religious movement founded in Austria by the Pan-German politician Georg Ritter von Schönerer aimed at conversion of all the Roman Catholic German-speaking population of Austria to Lutheran ...
-movement and were both supporters of the unification of Austria with Germany. As a boy, Kuhn distributed flowers to soldiers guarding against Polish youths who were celebrating the
Assassination of Franz Ferdinand Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and his wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, were assassinated on 28 June 1914 by Bosnian Serb student Gavrilo Princip. They were shot at close range while ...
, which Michael Burleigh argues shows an early consciousness for national issues. After the First World War, this territory was annexed to Poland, confronting Kuhn with the issue of German enclaves in Slavic territory while still young, and Kuhn was, therefore, a Polish citizen in the interwar period. Kuhn met several later scholarly collaborators on matters of German minorities in Eastern Europe after joining the Wandervogel movement in Bielitz in 1919. While he initially studied electrical engineering in
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till 1927, he later attended universities in Vienna and Tübingen. Kuhn began to study German settlement in Eastern Europe while he was a student, including undertaking several trips to Poland and Ukraine and making several publications. In 1926 Kuhn went to Ukraine ( Volhynia) with several other members from the Wandervogel movement funded by various German agencies where he studied German communities and praised "the strength and beauty of German
Volkstum The ''Volkstum'' (lit. ''folkdom'' or ''folklore'', though the meaning is wider than the common usage of folklore) is the entire utterances of a ''Volk'' or ethnic minority over its lifetime, expressing a "''Volkscharakter''" this unit had in commo ...
". While the official purpose of the visit was to study German communities, Michael Burleigh writes that it served mostly to reinforce the participants' notions of German superiority towards Polish people. Kuhn wrote five of the eight essays about the expedition that were subsequently published in the journal . Kuhn argued that more recent German enclaves in Eastern Europe, because they felt themselves to be superior to the surrounding Slavs, were less like to intermarry or become "de-Germanised", as opposed to older enclaves which were more prone to assimilation. Kuhn viewed himself and his colleagues as "bearers of civilization" and his goal as "to transform the instinctive feeling of superiority and pride towards the surrounding peoples (…) into a true national consciousness". Unlike the formerly Prussian members of the expedition, Kuhn argued that the Volhynian Germans were true Germans and should be allowed to develop on their own under the guidance of more mature language islands, which Winson Chu takes to mean Kuhn's own hometown of Bielitz/Bliesko. Kuhn also secretly worked for the organization to verify the population numbers on the German minority in Poland given by the Polish government. Kuhn, writing under the pseudonym Andreas Mückler, claimed in a publication of the Viennese that the
Polish census of 1921 The Polish census of 1921 or First General Census in Poland ( pl, Pierwszy Powszechny Spis Ludności) was the first census in the Second Polish Republic, performed on September 30, 1921 by the Main Bureau of Statistics (Główny Urząd Statystyczny ...
had omitted half of Poland's German population. Even before he had begun his doctoral studies, Kuhn was known as a scholar of language islands. Kuhn received his doctorate in 1931 from the University of Vienna, writing on German language islands in Poland. Kuhn's first attempt at achieving an academic position was a failure, and he returned to Bielitz, but Kuhn received a job as an assistant to Viktor Kauder at the ''Deutsche Kulturbund'' in
Katowice Katowice ( , , ; szl, Katowicy; german: Kattowitz, yi, קאַטעוויץ, Kattevitz) is the capital city of the Silesian Voivodeship in southern Poland and the central city of the Upper Silesian metropolitan area. It is the 11th most popul ...
(Kattowitz) in 1932. He received this job through the help of Otto Ulitz, leader of the German minority in Upper Silesia, and
Eduard Pant Eduard Pant (29 January 1887 in Witkowitz, Austria-Hungary (now Czech Republic) – 20 October 1938 in Katowice (Kattowitz)) was a journalist and politician of the Catholic German minority in the Silesian Voivodeship of Poland in the interwar ...
, a German-Polish politician and member of the Sejm. While living in Poland, Kuhn was a sympathizer of the pro-National Socialist
Jungdeutsche Partei ''Jungdeutsche Partei in Polen'' (JDP), or the Young German Party in Poland ( pl, Partia Młodoniemiecka w Polsce), was a Nazi German extreme right-wing political party founded in 1931 by members of the ethnic German minority residing in the Seco ...
.


Career under the Nazis

Alexander Pinwinkler writes that Kuhn's career benefited greatly from the Nazi's taking of power in 1933. Kuhn engaged in many activities in nationalist-conservative and Nazi organizations and participated in numerous Nazi organized conferences. Beginning in 1934, Kuhn's work was supported monetarily by (NOFG), a Nazi research organisation. Kuhn served as a liaison between the leaders of the in Poland, who secretly supported German revisionist politics towards Poland, and scholars in Germany, performed various ethnographic work and promoting the interests of the German minority to the . Kuhn became a professor for "folklore and East-German folk-ways" at the University of Breslau in 1936. His naming to this post was somewhat controversial, as Kuhn was not seen as a representative folklorist and had not written a
habilitation Habilitation is the highest university degree, or the procedure by which it is achieved, in many European countries. The candidate fulfills a university's set criteria of excellence in research, teaching and further education, usually including a ...
; according to Alexander Pinwinkler and Ingo Haar, Kuhn achieving the professorship was mostly the work of nationally influential pro-Nazi historians Albert Brackmann and Hermann Aubin rather than the faculty in Breslau itself. In a report likely from the summer of 1936, Nazi Heinrich Harmjanz described Kuhn as a "good comrade-in-arms" () who was "fixed and secure in the world view of the Third Reich" (). Throughout the thirties and into the war, Kuhn was seen as a "foreign-German National-Socialist". A secret protocol created for the Sicherheitsdienst by SS-Untersturmbahnführer Ernst Birke in 1937 noted that Kuhn's work supported the ideals of the
German Youth Movement The German Youth Movement (german: Die deutsche Jugendbewegung) is a collective term for a cultural and educational movement that started in 1896. It consists of numerous associations of young people that focus on outdoor activities. The movement ...
and ethnic politics, but that Kuhn was not interested in politics and would "see 'any closer connection to a certain political direction' as a disturbance of his work". Birke hoped that Kuhn's reticence about politics could be loosened by his connections to the group around historian Hermann Aubin. In 1937, Kuhn took over duties as director of the ''Atlas der Deutschen Volkskunde''. In 1939, Kuhn became director of the Silesian Society for Folk Studies and a representative of the NOFG at the Upper Education Office of the Nazi Party. He was also honored with the "Nikolaus-Kopernikus Prize" of the Johann-Wolfgang von Goethe-Stiftung, a prize for Volksdeutsche, for his academic publications. By the start of World War II, Kuhn was a famous scholar. Kuhn was part of an irredentist training group set up on 23 February 1939 in Poznań under leadership of Richard Bloch that was housed in local German Consulate, the goal of the group was to organize evening lectures on techniques of intelligence-gathering work. Kuhn was in constant contact with Deutsches Auslands-Institut which worked on behalf of German Sicherheitsdienst, the German intelligence agency of the SS and the Nazi Party.


Second World War

Following the annexation by Nazi Germany of his hometown of Bielitz (Bielsko), Kuhn applied to join the Nazi party on December 6, 1939. He was admitted on February 1, 1940. However, in 1941 Kuhn refused to take a position at the Reich University of Posen (a new German university that replaced the older Polish University of Poznań) despite persistent attempts to get him to take the position. Kuhn himself would later explain his refusal as due to the incompatibility of his research interests with the new position. In 1939, Kuhn served as an advisor to the SS for the resettlement of ethnic Germans. He returned to German communities in Ukraine to assist in determining their "racial qualities" connected to Nazi plans of resettlement; the SS considered his reports in determining which ethnic Germans would be repatriated to Germany. Kuhn advised the resettlement of German villages as groups to areas of Poland that had similar climatic and soil characteristics to the areas they were taken from, but advised that villages that showed signs of in-breeding, sectarianism, or "spiritual sickness" should be broken up. In practice, the resettlement did not tend to follow Kuhn's suggestions, and regional and social differences between various groups of Polish Germans were ignored. On September 29, 1939, Kuhn authored a position paper titled "German settlement areas beyond the old Reich Borders" for the German-Soviet Border Commission in which he argued that Germany should annex various areas of Poland that had not belonged to the
German Empire The German Empire (),Herbert Tuttle wrote in September 1881 that the term "Reich" does not literally connote an empire as has been commonly assumed by English-speaking people. The term literally denotes an empire – particularly a hereditary ...
based on their ethnic makeup. On October 11, 1939, the
Prussian Privy State Archives The Secret State Archives Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation (german: Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz or ''GStA PK'') is an agency of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation headquartered in Berlin, Germany. A Federal statutor ...
published a memorandum titled "Germanization of Poznań and West Prussia" (german: Eindeutschung Posens und Westpreußens, italics=yes), authored by several German historians including Kuhn. The memorandum called for the immediate "resettlement" of 2.9 million Poles and Jews and their replacement with German settlers. The memorandum also called for the "removal of Jewry" and of elites, and the "reduction" () of the total population, in order that the territory could be settled as Lebensraum by the state. In the winter of 1940, Kuhn served as an advisor to the Immigration Headquarters of the Sicherheitsdienst in Litzmannstadt ( Lodz) for German settlers being resettled out of the Soviet-occupied parts of Poland and the
General Government The General Government (german: Generalgouvernement, pl, Generalne Gubernatorstwo, uk, Генеральна губернія), also referred to as the General Governorate for the Occupied Polish Region (german: Generalgouvernement für die be ...
. Prior to the resettlement of Germans in these villages and homes, Poles had been deported to the General Government. Kuhn also advised on the "Germanization" of Slavic groups in Silesia: Kuhn argued that many German-speakers in Silesia were in fact Polish immigrants to the territory who had adopted German and replaced Germans who had moved to the West. In 1943 he was conscripted into the Wehrmacht and was captured by the British in 1944. He remained a prisoner until 1947; according to Kuhn, this was because as the British sent him to a re-education camp.


Postwar career

Kuhn was released from British captivity in 1947. Kuhn's wife had fled from Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland) to Magdeburg, but had not brought any of Kuhn's manuscripts, notes, or books with her. Kuhn briefly considered emigrating to Chicago in the United States due to financial troubles before Hermann Aubin arranged for him to take a temporary teaching position at the University of Hamburg that same year. Although before World War II Kuhn had belonged to a network of German folklorists from Bielitz (Bielsko), he was the only one of them to be able to continue his academic career after the war. The German language islands that Kuhn had studied before the war had been destroyed by the resettlement policy of the Nazis and the
expulsion of Germans Expulsion or expelled may refer to: General * Deportation * Ejection (sports) * Eviction * Exile * Expeller pressing * Expulsion (education) * Expulsion from the United States Congress * Extradition * Forced migration * Ostracism * Person ...
from Eastern Europe after World War II, so Kuhn changed his focus to the history of German settlement in the region (
Ostsiedlung (, literally "East-settling") is the term for the Early Medieval and High Medieval migration-period when ethnic Germans moved into the territories in the eastern part of Francia, East Francia, and the Holy Roman Empire (that Germans had al ...
). Kuhn's pre-war work came under critical fire, especially from the folklorist
Ingeborg Weber-Kellermann Ingeborg Weber-Kellermann (26 June 1918 – 12 June 1993) was a German folklorist, anthropologist and ethnologist. She was an academic teacher, from 1946 at the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin in East Berlin and from 1961 at the University of ...
, who accused him of ethnocentrism and of deliberately polarizing the differences between Germans and Poles. Kuhn's activities advising the SS during the war were not brought up, however. Kuhn himself never acknowledged any wrongdoing, instead bemoaning the loss of his wartime work and framing himself as a victim. In 1955, Kuhn became professor for the history of German settlement and folklore at the University of Hamburg, a position that was specifically created for him by Hermann Aubin. While Kuhn initially focused on German settlement in the modern period, following publications in the mid 1950s, he came to focus more on medieval German settlement, particularly in Silesia and Poland. Kuhn went on to advise many dissertations, including after his retirement in 1968, and frequently functioned as a reviewer of Polish-language scholarly works. He was also involved in various scholarly organisations and received various honors. He was the head of the from 1952 until 1964. Kuhn retired to Salzburg, where he continued to publish numerous scholarly works.
Norbert Angermann Norbert Angermann (born 2 November 1936 in Forst (Lausitz)) is a German historian. Angermann studied Baltic states, Baltic history in Middle Ages, especially the history of Livland, and Russo-German relationships during the same period. His teache ...
identifies him as "the most significant historian of the German Ostsieldung" () in the period before his death in 1983. Kuhn's connections to National Socialism before and during World War II would not become a topic of discussion until 1988, when Michael Burleigh published ''Germany Turns Eastward'' (1988).


Scholarly appraisals and reception


Pre-war work

Writing in 2010, the Polish scholar Dariusz Chrobak characterizes Kuhn as a "pioneer" who founded the study of German language islands.
Norbert Angermann Norbert Angermann (born 2 November 1936 in Forst (Lausitz)) is a German historian. Angermann studied Baltic states, Baltic history in Middle Ages, especially the history of Livland, and Russo-German relationships during the same period. His teache ...
argues that Kuhn's pre-war work was not influenced by the racial theories of the Nazis. However, other assessments are less favorable. Wilhelm Fielitz argues that Kuhn's pre-war work shows Social Darwinist, ethnocentric tendencies, although he also used modern field-work techniques. Alexander Pinwinkler writes that Kuhn's work approached the Nazi concept of a utopian "racially pure" state. Matthias Weber, Hans Hennig Hahn, and Kurt Dröge write that Kuhn's work on language islands as particularly apt to support concepts of imperialistic aggression. Christian Lübke noted a strong similarity the vocabulary of Nazi propaganda and the vocabulary of Kuhn and other contemporary German scholars engaged in studying Eastern Europe: as a specific example, Lübke notes that Kuhn published an article in 1939 in which he wrote about the "vital force inherent in German culture in the East" at a moment in which according to him Germans were engaged in "ethnic struggle". Kuhn's focus on language islands had mostly been replaced by inter-ethnic studies by 1970, largely through the work of folklorist
Ingeborg Weber-Kellermann Ingeborg Weber-Kellermann (26 June 1918 – 12 June 1993) was a German folklorist, anthropologist and ethnologist. She was an academic teacher, from 1946 at the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin in East Berlin and from 1961 at the University of ...
and historian Walter Schlesinger. , a former of student of Kuhn from Hamburg, writes that Kuhn's pre-war work remains useful in its collection of facts, but less so in their systematic comprehension of the situation of language islands. Although works such as Kuhn's continue to provide the fullest accounts of German minority populations in areas such as Volhynia, Heinke Kalinke writes that their use today "requires especially careful source criticism and contextualization in academic history" ("").


Post-war work

Kuhn's post-war work was mostly positively reviewed in his lifetime, but received some criticism, particularly from scholars in Poland. Writing retrospectively, Norbert Angermann writes that Kuhn always strove to be objective in his work, despite his emotional attachment to the subject. , Kuhn's former student at Hamburg, writes that Kuhn's work on the ''Ostsiedlung'' is "of lasting value" (), and he notes the positive reception of Kuhn's work in countries besides Germany, including, "with certain, to some extent justified qualifications" () in Poland. Weczerka nevertheless criticizes Kuhn's fixation on ("German national traditions") to the exclusion of the people surrounding German settlers and enclaves and notes that not everyone could agree to some of Kuhn's conclusions. As a specific example, Weczerka notes that one of Kuhn's maps in the (1958, edited by Wilfried Krallert) depicted the Masurians, Kashubians, Sorbs, and Upper Silesians as "groups that according to language and feeling of belonging have become German" (). Holocaust scholars Debórah Dwork and
Robert Jan van Pelt Robert Jan van Pelt (born 15 August 1955) is a Dutch author, architectural historian, professor at the University of Waterloo and a Holocaust scholar. One of the world's leading experts on Auschwitz, he regularly speaks on Holocaust related topics ...
refer to Kuhn as representative of "first-rate German historians". They state that Kuhn is the writer of "excellent histories of the medieval development of Upper Silesia in general and of
Auschwitz Auschwitz concentration camp ( (); also or ) was a complex of over 40 concentration and extermination camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland (in a portion annexed into Germany in 1939) during World War II and the Holocaust. It con ...
in particular", yet that he nevertheless mentions
Auschwitz concentration camp Auschwitz concentration camp ( (); also or ) was a complex of over 40 concentration and extermination camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland (in a portion annexed into Germany in 1939) during World War II and the Holocaust. It con ...
only twice in his entire oeuvre. Polish historian Michal Lis writes that Kuhn and other
Ostforschung ''Ostforschung'' (; "research on the east") is a German term dating from the 18th century for the study of the areas to the east of the core German-speaking region. At its core, Ostforschung postulated that Germans and Germany were superior to Pol ...
scholars in post-war West Germany continued to propagate historical and sociological myths aimed at undermining and questioning the Polish identity of the population of Upper Silesia. Andrew Demshuk writes: "As professor for ''Siedlungsgeschichte'' (history of settlement) at the University of Hamburg, uhndedicated his work 'Geschichte der deutschen Ostsiedlung''to all who remained "faithful" (now to ''Heimat'' rather than Hitler) and wrote tales of German suffering through the ages under Slavic oppression." Stefan Guth writes that study of post-war works about Ostsiedlung by Kuhn leave no doubt that he remained loyal to his concentration on Germanness () in his post-war works just as in the '30s. Dariusz Przybytek names the ''Atlas zur Geschichte der deutschen Ostsiedlung'' by Kuhn and Willifried Krallert about German Ostsiedlung as having a "propagandic character" Kartografia historyczna Ślaka XVIII-XX wieku page 102 Dariusz Przybytek Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, 2002


Selected publications by Kuhn


Scholarly monographs

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As editor

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Scholarly articles

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Autobiographical writing

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Works cited

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See also

*
Ostforschung ''Ostforschung'' (; "research on the east") is a German term dating from the 18th century for the study of the areas to the east of the core German-speaking region. At its core, Ostforschung postulated that Germans and Germany were superior to Pol ...
* Drang nach Osten


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kuhn, Walter Nazi Party members 1903 births 1983 deaths People from Bielsko People from the Province of Silesia 20th-century German historians German male non-fiction writers Silesian-German people