Feme murders

From Justapedia, unleashing the power of collective wisdom
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Feme ('fā-mə) murders (German: Fememorde) were a series of politically motivated murders in Weimar Germany from 1919 to 1923 committed by elements of the German far right against political opponents they considered treasonous. The practice was exposed in 1925.

Definition

Feme (from Middle Low German veime, meaning punishment), in the usage of right-wing extremist underground movements, referred to an act of vigilante justice – the killing of "traitors" who, as members of their own groups or as outsiders, knew about weapons caches or other internal secrets and had reported them to the authorities or threatened to do so. The statutes, for example, of the Organisation Consul, an ultra-nationalist, anti-Semitic and anticommunist secret society founded in 1920, stated that "Traitors fall to the Feme".[1] In November 1925 the journal Die Weltbühne published an unattributed article by Carl Mertens, a German officer and pacifist, about the Feme murders of more than twenty members of right-wing groups.[2]

The term is sometimes also used to refer to the political assassination of democratic politicians such as former Reich Minister of Finance Matthias Erzberger (1921), Karl Gareis of the Bavarian parliament (1921), and Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau (1922), as well as the failed assassination of Philipp Scheidemann (1922) by members of the Organisation Consul.[3] According to political scientist Hans-Helmuth Knütter, these assassinations, as well as political assassinations from the left, should be distinguished from Feme murders.[4] A Reichstag committee in 1926 similarly distinguished Feme murders from other political murders by limiting the use of the term to murders perpetrated by members of a group against those who betrayed secrets. This included similar acts by far left groups.

Number of victims

Nearly all of the Feme murders occurred during the turbulent early years of the Weimar Republic. A peak was reached in 1923, when inflation (to the point of hyperinflation), Allied occupation of the Ruhr, Adolf Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch, and separatist efforts shook Germany. By 1924 a total of nearly 400 of their political opponents[5][6] had fallen victim to right-wing radical and National Socialist assassinations by the Organisation Consul, the Viking League, the Black Reichswehr, the Sturmabteilung Roßbach, the Bavarian Citizens' Defense and their successor organizations. Within the Black Reichswehr, for example, First Lieutenant Paul Schulz commanded a special Black Reichswehr unit that killed those who were seen guilty of betraying the country by leaking the military's secrets.[7]

Reactions

The first to attempt to study the phenomenon systematically and for all of Germany was the statistician Emil Julius Gumbel, who in 1922 presented the paper Four Years of Political Murder (later updated under the title From Feme Murder to the Reich Chancellery). Gumbel was subjected to serious threats because of the study.

While the Weimar judiciary rigorously prosecuted leftists involved in the German Revolution of 1918–1919 and the political activities of the Bavarian Soviet Republic, police and judicial investigations of the Feme crimes were slow, and the murderers, insofar as they were identified, got off with light sentences or even acquittals. Mid-level military officers such as Paul Schulz of the Black Reichswehr were eventually convicted and imprisoned before an amnesty for the Feme murders was declared in 1930, but Germans who exposed the killings were tried and convicted for insulting the military establishment for their role in doing so, even when their allegations against the military were true.[8]

Franz Pfeffer von Salomon, founder of the “Freikorps von Pfeffer” which was actively involved in Feme murders.

The obvious deficiencies in law enforcement were matters of concern for several parliaments during the Weimar period. In 1920 the state parliament of Bavaria set up its own investigative committee to look into the Feme murder of Reichswehr soldier Hans Dobner. In 1924 the state parliament in Prussia set up a "Political Murders" investigative committee, and two years later instituted a second. In January 1926, at the request of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), an investigative committee of the Reichstag, under the name "Feme Organizations and Feme Murders", was set up to clarify these crimes and their political environment in parties, the Reichswehr and the judiciary.[9] The project was hindered from the beginning by the right-wing majority in the parliament, the Bavarian judicial authorities' refusal to cooperate,[10] and not least by the indecisiveness of the SPD itself.[11]

Selected list of victims

  • July 1920: Willi Schmidt, member of the Freikorps Rossbach; shot by Edmund Heines and other members of the Rossbach group in a forest in the Greifenhagen district of Pomerania after being suspected of trying to betray a weapons cache to the authorities.
  • October 6, 1920: Maria Sandmayer (b. 1901), maid, found strangled in Forstenrieder Park, Munich; murdered after she tried to report a weapons cache of the Bavarian Citizens' Defense.
  • March 4, 1921: Hans Hartung (b. 1897), waiter, shot and his body recovered from the Zusam River near Zusmarshausen; murdered after he tried to get paid for his silence about the activities of the Bavarian Citizens' Defense.[12]
  • June 5, 1921: Josef Nowak, St. Annaberg in Silesia, arrested on June 4, 1921, on suspicion of espionage in favor of the Polish side in the Silesian Uprising. He was driven through his village by eight members of the Upper Silesian Self-Defense Force, beaten with sidearms and rifle butts, and then, along with three others who were also accused of treason, driven to the basalt quarry near St. Annaberg and beaten and shot to death. The bodies were buried under stone rubble and found a few days later by their relatives. Nowak had merely said that he thought that the fighting between Germans and Poles in Upper Silesia was a senseless civil war.[13]
  • 1921: Alfons Hentschel: Lieutenant, platoon leader in the company of Captain von Mauritz, behind whom in reality the Freikorps leader Franz Pfeffer von Salomon was hiding. As an inconvenient accessory, Hentschel was shot in the back during a patrol in a cornfield on the orders of Mauritz (i.e., Pfeffer).
  • 1921: Sigulla, a man from Opole in Upper Silesia. For unexplained reasons a rumor arose that he was a deserter from the Freikorps Roßbach and a Polish informer. A Bavarian Freikorps lieutenant named "Seppl" arrested Sigulla and led him into a nearby forest where he cut his throat. "Seppl" was arrested but released from custody after the withdrawal of the Entente troops from Upper Silesia.[13]
  • February 1923: Karl Baur (1901-1923), student, shot dead in Munich by members of the radical right-wing Blücher League to prevent him from betraying plans for a coup by the League.[12]
  • June 4, 1923: Erich Pannier, a member of the Black Reichswehr in Döberitz in Brandenburg, was killed by Black Reichswehr members after he "deserted" from the Black Reichswehr.
  • July 1923: Walter Wilms, sergeant, deliberately made drunk by officers after he was suspected of spying for the Communists and then shot in a car outside Rathenow in Brandenburg and thrown into the Havel River.[14]

References

  1. ^ Hofmann, Ulrike Claudia (2000). „Verräter verfallen der Feme!“ Fememorde in Bayern in den zwanziger Jahren ["Traitors Fall to the Feme!" Feme murders in Bavaria in the Twenties]. Cologne/Weimar: Böhlau. p. 119.
  2. ^ "Fememorde". Internet Archive, Die Weltbühne (in German). 17 November 1925. pp. 750–756.
  3. ^ Wienecke-Janz, Detlef, ed. (2006). Die Chronik. Geschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts bis heute [The Chonicle. History of the 20th Century to Today]. Gütersloh/Munich: Chronik Verlag, p. 152 f. and 156.
  4. ^ Knütter, Hans-Helmuth (1974). Fememorde. In: Carola Stern, Thilo Vogelsang, Erhard Klöss and Albert Graff (eds.): dtv-Lexikon zur Geschichte und Politik im 20. Jahrhundert Bd. 1 [in dtv-Dictionary of History and Politics in the 20th Century, Vol. 1]. Munich: dtv. p. 252.
  5. ^ Furth, Daniel (27 April 2012). "Statistiker Emil Gumbel – Rechnen gegen den Terror" [Statistician Emil Gumbel – Calculation against terror]. Spiegel Online (in German).
  6. ^ Lahusen, Benjamin (9 February 2012). "Emil Julius Gumbel: Das rechte Auge" [Emil Julius Gumbel: The Right Eye]. Zeit Online (in German).
  7. ^ Brenner, Arthur D. (2002). "Feme Murder: Paramilitary 'Self-Justice' in Weimar Germany," in Bruce D. Campbell and Arthur D. Brenner (eds.), Death Squads in Global Perspective: Murder with Deniability. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 70. ISBN 0-312-21365-4.
  8. ^ Gay, Peter (2001). Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 21. ISBN 0-393-32239-4.
  9. ^ "Reichstagsprotokolle". Verhandlungen des Deutschen Reichstags (in German). 23 January 1926.
  10. ^ "Reichstagsprotocolle". Verhandlungen des Deutschen Reichstags (in German). 11 November 1926.
  11. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (2011). Geschichte des Westens. Die Zeit der Weltkriege 1914–1945. 3. Auflage 2016 [History of the West. Era of the World Wars 1914 - 1945. 3rd Edition 2016]. Munich: C.H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-59236-2.
  12. ^ a b Hofmann, Ulrike Claudia. "Fememorde. Die bayerischen Fälle" [Feme Murders. The Bavarian Cases]. Historischen Lexikon Bayerns (in German).
  13. ^ a b Sauer, Bernhard (2006). ""Verräter waren bei uns in Mengen erschossen worden." Die Fememorde in Oberschlesien 1921" ["Traitors Were Shot en Masse in Our Country." The Fememorde in Upper Silesia 1921.] (PDF). Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft (in German). 7/8.
  14. ^ Schild, Wolfgang (1988). ). Berühmte Berliner Kriminalprozesse der Zwanziger Jahre. In: Friedrich Ebel und Albrecht Randelzhofer (Hrsg.): Rechtsentwicklungen in Berlin. Acht Vorträge, gehalten anläßlich der 750-Jahrfeier Berlins [Famous Berlin Criminal Trials of the Twenties. In: Friedrich Ebel and Albrecht Randelzhofer (eds.): Legal Developments in Berlin. Eight lectures held on the occasion of Berlin's 750th anniversary] (in German). Berlin / New York: De Gruyter. pp. 140 ff. ISBN 978-3-11-090784-1.