Which German general was afraid of Jews during WW2, and thought we were doing wrong?


 In World War II, the majority of German generals were merely taking orders and not questioning them. However, there was a senior officer by the name Johannes Blaskowitz who was not like the rest.


Later in 1939, when he was serving in Poland, he witnessed extremely brutal acts committed by SS units. Innocent individuals were being murdered such as Jewish families. These were not soldiers but civilians.


Blaskowitz did not overlook what he saw. Although it was risky to his career, he prepared formal reports and forwarded them to the senior leaders, including Hitler. He emphatically wrote in such reports that such actions were wrong. According to him, a real soldier must not kill innocent men, women, and children, but rather fight against other soldiers.


Hitler reacted with anger. Rather than taking the criticism, he offended Blaskowitz. Subsequently, this influenced the role of Blaskowitz in the army. Although he was a good commander, he never attained the highest ranks as being a Field Marshal as other people remained quiet.


He cautioned against cruel treatment of local people by saying this would cause great resentment and long-term opposition. According to him, this kind of behavior would not help win the war, but would make it harder.


Blaskowitz was able to speak out in a time when the majority of the officers preferred to remain quiet. He took a chance with his career to speak what he felt was right.

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