Heim ins Reich

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The Heim ins Reich initiative (German: Home into the Country, see Reich) was a policy pursued by Adolf Hitler starting in 1939 and was one of the factors leading to World War II. The initiative attempted to convince people of German descent living outside of Germany that they should strive to bring these regions "home" into a greater Germany. This includes both areas ceded after the Treaty of Versailles and areas which were not previously part of Germany.

Concurrent with this were the beginnings of attempts to ethnically cleanse non-Germans both from Germany and from the areas intended to be part of a "Greater Germany". Alternately, Hitler also made attempts to Germanize those who were considered ethnically or racially close enough to Germans to be "worth keeping" as part of a future German nation, such as the population of Luxembourg (officially, Germany considered these populations to actually be German, only in need of being brought home into the flock, so to speak). These attempts were largely unpopular with the targets of the Germanization, and the citizens of Luxembourg voted in a referendum 98% against becoming citizens of Germany.

The same motto (Heim ins Reich) was also applied to a different, but somewat related policy: the uprooting and relocation of ethnically German communities from some Eastern European countries (Volksdeutsche), which had been there for hundreds of years. The Nazi government determined which of these communities were not "viable", started propaganda among the local population, and then made arrangements and organized their transport. This included Germans from Bukovina, Bessarabia, Dobruja and Yugoslavia. For example, after the Soviets had assumed control of this territory, about 45,000 ethnic Germans had left Northern Bukovina by November 1940. [1] Despite the wording that suggested resettlement in Germany, most of the people ended up in the Warthegau, which had been part of Poland. They were housed in farms left vacant by expulsion of the local Poles. They were harassed by Polish partisans (Armia Krajowa) during the war. As Nazi Germany lost the war, they were expelled to Germany.

Heim ins Reich also referred to lost territories of the German Empire. Joseph Goebels described in his diary that Belgium and Holland were heim ins Reich in 1940. Belgium was lost to Germany in 1794 and Holland in 1648. Lost territories that legally became part of Germany during the 1940s were Luxembourg, Alsace-Lorraine (Elsass-Lothringen), Slovenia, Bohemia, Moravia and parts of Poland. The German Empire was actually expanded eastwards into Poland, the Baltic states and the Soviet Union.

  • Leonid Ryaboshapko. Pravove stanovishche nationalinyh mensyn v Ukraini (1917-2000) - P. 259 (in Ukrainian)

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