Invasion of Poland
At 5 o'clock this morning, our telephone rang and it
was the President in Washington to tell me the sad news that Germany had invaded
Poland and that her planes were bombing Polish cities. He told me that Hitler
was about to address the Reichstag, so we turned on the radio and listened until
6 o'clock.
Curiously enough, I had received a letter on my return last evening
from a German friend who roomed with me in school in England. In this letter she
said that when hate was rampant in the world, it was easy to believe harm of any
nation, that she knew all the nations believed things that were not true about
Germany, did not understand her position, and therefore hated her. She begged
that we try to see Germany's point of view and not to judge her
harshly.
As I listened to Hitler's speech, this letter kept
returning to my mind. How can you feel kindly toward a man who tells you that
German minorities have been brutally treated, first in Czechoslovakia and then
in Danzig, but that never can Germany be accused of being unfair to a minority?
I have seen evidence with my own eyes of what this same man has done to people
belonging to a minority group--not only Jews, but Christians, who have long been
German citizens.
Can one help but question his integrity? His knowledge
of history seems somewhat sketchy too, for, after all, Poland possessed Danzig
many years prior to the time that it ever belonged to Germany. And how can you
say that you do not intend to make war on women and children and then send
planes to bomb cities?
No, I feel no bitterness against the German people. I
am deeply sorry for them, as I am for the people of all other European nations
facing this horrible crisis. But for the man who has taken this responsibility
upon his shoulders I can feel little pity. It is hard to see how he can sleep at
night and think of the people in many nations whom he may send to their
deaths.
Eleanor Roosevelt,
HYDE PARK, SEPTEMBER 2, 1939
No comments:
Post a Comment