Norway apologises to mistreated war-time ‘German girls’

Published October 18, 2018
THIS file photo taken in April 1945 shows Norwegian women and their children on their way to Germany from Elverum, Norway.—AFP
THIS file photo taken in April 1945 shows Norwegian women and their children on their way to Germany from Elverum, Norway.—AFP

NORWAY’S government on Wednesday officially apologised to Norwegian women targeted for reprisals by authorities for having intimate relations with German soldiers during the country’s war-time occupation. Between 30,000 to 50,000 Norwegians, labelled “German girls”, had intimate relations with occupying troops during World War II, according to conservative estimates from Norway’s Centre for Holocaust and Minorities Studies. Many of these women were subject to reprisals by officials after the 1945 liberation from Nazi occupation, including illegal arrests and detentions, job dismissals and even being stripped of their nationality.

“Young Norwegian girls and woman who had relations with German soldiers or were suspected of having them, were victims of undignified treatment,” Norway’s Prime Minister Erna Solberg said. “Today, in the name of the government, I want to offer my apologies,” the premier said at an event to mark the 70th anniversary of the UN’s universal declaration of human rights. More than 70 years after the end of WWII, very few of the women remain alive and the official apology is unlikely to open the way for financial reparations for their families.

During the war, more than 300,000 German soldiers occupied Norway, a neutral country the Nazis invaded on April 9, 1940. “We cannot say women who had personal relations with German soldiers were helping the German war effort,” said historian Guri Hjeltnes, the director of the Holocaust and Minorities Studies centre. “Their crime was breaking unwritten rules and moral standards,” Hjeltnes said. “They were punished even more harshly than the war profiteers.”

None of the estimated 28 Norwegian men married to German women during the war were expelled or had their nationality taken away from them, the historian said. In 2000, Olso formally apologised to the 10,000 to 12,000 children born to Norwegian mothers and German soldiers, who also suffered reprisals.

Published in Dawn, October 18th, 2018

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