How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (2024)

When Chancellor Angela Merkel thanked the Allies for the D-Day invasion and the “liberation” of Germany in World War II, she might have raised some eyebrows internationally. To those at home, the statement was unremarkable.

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (1)

There’s no denying that the machine guns and howitzers firing at the Allied forces landing in Normandy 75 years ago were manned by German soldiers. But over the decades, Germans’ attitudes toward the war have evolved from a sense of defeat to something far more complex.

While the leaders of France, Britain, the United States and Canada went to England to commemorate the troops’ sacrifice and duty on Wednesday, Merkel listened quietly. After the ceremony was over, she told reporters that she considered her invitation “a gift of history.”

WATCH: U.K. honours D-Day veterans

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (2)

D-Day75: Veterans of ‘Operation Overlord’ honoured at ceremony in U.K.

When those other leaders went to Normandy for ceremonies on D-Day itself on Thursday, Merkel was back in Berlin, holding a regular meeting with governors and discussing bilateral relations with the prime minister of Kosovo.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

As the generation that elected Adolf Hitler and fought his genocidal war dies away, most Germans today see World War II through the prism of guilt, responsibility and atonement. And almost all agree that the defeat of the Nazis was a good thing.

That hasn’t always been the case.

More on World

  • Charging elephant kills 79-year-old American tourist on Zambian safari
  • Don Hankey: Meet the billionaire whose firm bailed out Donald Trump with US$175M
  • World’s oldest man, 114, dies shortly before birthday
  • Taiwan earthquake: Number of injured tops 1,000, hotel workers remain missing

Many Germans who survived World War II had supported Hitler and the Nazi race ideology that led to the murder of 6 million Jews in Europe — and they were devastated by the downfall of the Third Reich.

“After 1945, Germans first referred to the end of World War II as ‘collapse,’” said Johannes Tuchel, director of the German Resistance Memorial Center.

Their children, however, were faced with rebuilding the country from the ground up from the total defeat of the Nazis, and they saw potential rather than defeat.

“In the 1950s, it became ‘hour zero’” — a new beginning, Tuchel said.

The email you need for the day's top news stories from Canada and around the world.

After the country was back on its economic feet, younger Germans started to question their elders, culminating in the “1968 movement” in which students confronted their parents with the atrocities committed during the Third Reich.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

Out of that era has grown today’s complex attitude.

“It has been a process to the point today where it is seen as Germany’s liberation from the Nazis by the Allied forces,” Tuchel said.

German leaders have largely followed the changing attitudes — and in some cases led them.

In 1985, then-West German President Richard von Weizsaecker called the Nazi defeat Germany’s “day of liberation” in a speech marking the 40th anniversary of the war’s end. His words were supported by most Germans, and to this day it is often cited by politicians and taught in schools.

Merkel praised his speech when he died in 2015, calling it “a necessary, clear statement that was significant for our German self-image.”

Another key moment came in 2004, when then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder marked the 60th anniversary of Col. Claus von Stauffenberg’s failed attempt to kill Hitler with a briefcase bomb. Schroeder called von Stauffenberg a hero — erasing the Nazis’ “traitor” label that had lingered after the war.

Merkel, who at 64 is the first chancellor born after World War II, has taken the new German self-image even further.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

WATCH: How Canadians shaped the greatest invasion in history

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (3)

D-Day explained: How Canadians shaped the greatest invasion in military history

On Tuesday in Portsmouth, the embarkation point for the Allied force that invaded Nazi-occupied France in 1944, Merkel called D-Day a “unique, unprecedented military operation that eventually brought us in Germany the liberation from National Socialism,” the Nazi political movement.

She noted that the war’s end brought Germany’s rebirth as a leading European democracy, saying it was D-Day that set in motion the “reconciliation and unification of Europe, but also the entire postwar order that has brought us more than 70 years of peace.”

Unlike the many grand monuments to the Soviet and western Allied troops who fought against the Nazis, German tributes to its troops are typically understated.

Trending Now

  • Health Canada recalls multiple medical devices including one that may cause death
  • Vancouver is in a ‘full-blown crisis’ for housing affordability: Report

Fallen soldiers are commemorated in humble memorials on village squares across the country listing the names of the dead — often grouping the casualties of World Wars I and II.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

In schools, the military history of World War II is rarely a focus of instruction, with lessons instead concentrating on Holocaust education and the Nazi dictatorship.

WATCH: Preserving memories of the Holocaust

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (6)

Preserving testimonies and memories of the Holocaust

When there are tributes, they tend to be more for members of the German resistance who were executed by the Nazis — the students who distributed anti-Nazi flyers at Munich University; the Red Orchestra network bent on sabotaging the Nazis’ war machine; or those like von Stauffenberg who tried to assassinate Hitler.

And next year, Berlin has declared a holiday for May 8, marking the 75th anniversary of Nazi Germany’s unconditional surrender.

Of course, not all in Germany see the Nazi era the same way. Alexander Gauland, leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany, recently played down the Nazi period as a “speck of bird poop” in Germany’s history. Bjoern Hoecke, another party leader, suggested it’s time for the country to stop atoning for its Nazi past.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

WATCH: Holocaust survivors share their stories

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (7)

Holocaust survivor shares his story with Saskatoon students

  • Holocaust survivor shares his story with Saskatoon students
  • Holocaust survivor educates youth on hate crimes
  • Holocaust survivor born in concentration camp marks anniversary of Auschwitz liberation

But a vast majority — even among those who were born decades after the war — believe it’s essential for Germany to keep alive the memory of the country’s inglorious past.

“In school and at home I learned that the Allies — especially the Americans — liberated us,” said Laetitia Zinecker, an 18-year-old business student at Berlin’s Free University. “Our history shapes who we are still today. It’s important that schools continue to teach about the past so that it will not be forgotten.”

On Thursday, some German newspapers ran photographs of the ceremonies in Portsmouth, or black-and-white images from 1944 of U.S. soldiers reaching the shores of France.

Story continues below advertisem*nt

The top-selling Bild published a front-page picture of U.S. President Donald Trump, Queen Elizabeth II, Merkel and others looking upward, with an inset picture of a D-Day veteran recreating his Normandy parachute jump with an American flag in tow.

Its headline? “The world celebrates its liberators.”

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca (2024)

FAQs

How modern Germany feels about D-Day and Hitler’s defeat - National | Globalnews.ca? ›

WATCH: U.K. honours D-Day veterans

How did the Germans feel about D-Day? ›

In the event, German reaction to the landings on 6 June was slow and confused. The spell of bad weather which had made the decision to go so fraught for Eisenhower also meant the Germans were caught off guard. Rommel was visiting his wife in Germany and many senior commanders were not at their posts.

What do modern Germans think of WWII? ›

Few Germans feel guilt for the war, and most feel it's unfair to hold them responsible. That so many Germans think the country has atoned is perhaps unsurprising when you consider that 78% feel no personal guilt for the actions of the Nazis. Just 16% feel any guilt whatsoever, and only 6% feel “rather” or “very” guilty ...

Is Germany still paying reparations for WWII? ›

The United States and the other Allies were allowed to take reparations from their respective zones of occupation in Germany. Reparations were paid in the form of money and in material goods. Germany has yet to pay off its WWII reparations.

When did Germany realize WWII was lost? ›

This was in the second half of November 1942, when Hitler was receiving news that German-Axis forces in Stalingrad were being surrounded and squeezed by the Soviet Army; while his offensive in the Caucasus had by then failed, and Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's panzers in North Africa were facing impossible odds.

Who did the German army soldiers fear the most? ›

By 1944, they feared US artillery barrages, Partisans, the Soviet Katyusha's rocket launchers, Allied airpower, US Destroyers equipped with sonar, Halifax and B-24 Liberator Submarine Hunters, the Soviet T-34, and the Red Army which was out for massive, horrible, bloody revenge.

Is WWII taught in Germany? ›

Learning about the Holocaust is mandatory in all German schools. However, since each one of Germany's 16 federal states is autonomous regarding the educational curriculum, how and to what extent schools teach about the Holocaust varies nationwide.

How do Germans feel about losing WWII? ›

“After 1945, Germans first referred to the end of World War II as 'collapse,'” said Johannes Tuchel, director of the German Resistance Memorial Center. Their children, however, were faced with rebuilding the country from the ground up from the total defeat of the Nazis, and they saw potential rather than defeat.

Does Germany still suffer from WWII? ›

Even though modern day Germany shows no resemblance to the "Third Reich,” Hitler's Nazi Germany, and has developed into a firm, liberal democracy, the historic burden still effects the lives of young and old.

What did the Germans think of American soldiers? ›

The German soldiers thought that the Americans were too close together during battle and they wildly fired their weapons at their direction. Plus they used poor camouflage and concealment and were exposed during their troop advancements and were targets.

Does Germany still owe the US money? ›

Total Debt Held: $91.3 Billion

As of January, the amount owed by Germany to the US is $91.3 billion.

Did the US pay Japan after WWII? ›

The only Allied country who won but paid compensation was the USA, to Japan. In 1988, under the Civil Liberties Act, U.S. President, Ronald Reagan, apologized to the Japanese-Americans interned in camps during World War II and agreed to pay $20,000 to each surviving former detainee.

How much does Germany owe Poland? ›

Germany has rejected a Polish parliamentary report claiming it owes its eastern neighbour €1.3tn for damages caused during the second world war, saying the question of wartime reparations is “closed”. “The federal government's position is unchanged,” a spokesperson for the German foreign ministry said on Friday.

What was Germany's biggest mistake in WWII? ›

Was the invasion of the Soviet Union Hitler's biggest mistake? It was. Had he maintained the new status quo after the defeat of France and steadily built up his armies using the resources of the countries he had already occupied, he would have been in a very strong position.

What do Germans think about WWII? ›

Speaking at the Neue Wache earlier this year, German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the end of WW2 marked "the end of National Socialist tyranny, the end of night bombings and death marches, the end of unprecedented German crimes and the Holocaust's breach of civilisation".

Did any Americans fight for Germany in WWII? ›

During World War II, there were indeed a small number of Americans who fought for the Nazis. While it may seem surprising, their motivations varied and were influenced by a combination of factors.

What went wrong for the Germans on D-Day? ›

The German High Command was very slow to react to the invasion; the Allies had been successful in fooling them into thinking the real attack would be far to the north. The German divisions held in reserve could have deployed in the first hours to devastating effect. But they weren't released until 3pm.

What did the Germans face after D-Day? ›

Casualties - especially among the infantry - were heavy. But the Germans were constrained by Hitler's refusal to let his commanders make tactical withdrawals when required, which meant that the bulk of their forces were eventually trapped and destroyed by the Allied breakout.

Who attacked the Germans on D-Day? ›

Soldiers from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and other Allied nations faced Hitler's formidable Atlantic Wall as they landed on the beaches of Normandy. Top Photo: "Into the Jaws of Death" — US troops wade through water and Nazi gunfire, June 6, 1944.

What was Hitler's reaction to Pearl Harbor? ›

Adolf Hitler applauded the attack and declared war on the United States even though the United States had only declared war against Japan. Before Pearl Harbor, many Americans maintained an isolationist stance and were reluctant to become involved in the war in Europe.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jonah Leffler

Last Updated:

Views: 5689

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (45 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jonah Leffler

Birthday: 1997-10-27

Address: 8987 Kieth Ports, Luettgenland, CT 54657-9808

Phone: +2611128251586

Job: Mining Supervisor

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Electronics, Amateur radio, Skiing, Cycling, Jogging, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Jonah Leffler, I am a determined, faithful, outstanding, inexpensive, cheerful, determined, smiling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.