There are aspects of the Second World War that receive scant
attention in the West. We know about Dunkirk, Pearl Harbor and D-Day, but far
less about the Battle of Stalingrad or the Sino-Japanese War, simply because
Western countries weren’t directly involved. Yet the Battle of Stalingrad was
the bloodiest conflict in history, while the Japanese occupation of China
resulted in the deaths of between 10 and 25 million Chinese.
It’s very easy to forget, too, that the main victims of the war
were civilians. Civilian deaths totalled an estimated 50-55 million – more than
twice the number of military dead. China and the Soviet Union accounted for
roughly half of that total.
That civilians paid by far the highest price – either directly,
due to military activity and deliberate extermination, or through war-related famine
and disease – was brought home to me on my recent visit to Poland. Between 5
and 6 million Poles died during the war, of whom an estimated 3 million were
Jewish. That’s roughly 20 per cent of Poland’s population – a higher ratio of civilian
dead than even the Soviet Union, and more than twice that of Germany.
Walk around Warsaw and you can’t fail to be aware of the enormous
price Poland paid for events over which it had no control. In an article I
wrote for this week’s issue of The
Listener, marking the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, I
mention that there are at least 160 memorial plaques dotted around the Polish
capital, each signifying a place where civilians were the victims of Nazi
atrocities.
I now realise that my wife’s parents, who were forcibly
removed from Warsaw in the reprisals that followed the Uprising and were transported
to Germany to work in a labour camp, were among the lucky ones. As my Listener story points out, 10,000 civilians
were killed in the Ochota district where my parents-in-law lived. In another
part of the city, the Wola district, 40,000 died in acts of unimaginable
savagery.
As a point of comparison, New Zealand lost 12,000 people in the
same war, nearly all of them combatants. That equated to 0.72 percent of the
population. Yet proportionately, our military losses were the highest of any
Commonwealth country and caused immense grief. On Anzac Day, we quite rightly mourn
and honour the New Zealanders who died far away in a terrible conflict for
which they were blameless. But I wonder whether our commemorations should also
include acknowledgment of the many millions of civilians – Polish, Russian,
Chinese and, yes, German and Japanese too – who bore by far the harshest cost
of the conflict.
It's so important to remember those moments. Its even more important to write it down as a recorded history. In a time where some people believe the world is flat - I fear history will be rewritten, and the with it, the lessons we should learn from it. Lest we forget.
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