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Danish resistance movement

The Danish resistance movements (Danish: Den danske modstandsbevægelse) were an underground insurgency to resist the German occupation of Denmark during World War II. Due to the initially lenient arrangements, in which the Nazi occupation authority allowed the democratic government to stay in power, the resistance movement was slower to develop effective tactics on a wide scale than in some other countries.

Danish Resistance
Part of European theatre of World War II and Occupation of Denmark

Danish resistance fighters battling German soldiers 5 May 1945. Flakhaven, Odense (left), Danish SS soldiers disarmed by resistance fighters in Copenhagen, 1945 (right)
DateNonviolent resistance:
9 April 1940 – 29 August 1943
Violent resistance:
August 29 1943 – 5 May 1945
Location
Denmark
Result German Surrender
Liberation of Denmark
Landing at Bornholm
Belligerents

Danish resistance groups

 Denmark (from 1943)
United Kingdom
New Zealand
Australia
Soviet Union
Occupation Government (until 1943)
Germany
Commanders and leaders
Bernard Montgomery
Povl Falk-Jensen
Various Danish resistance leaders

Leonhard Kaupisch
Werner Best
Frits Clausen

Christian Frederik von Schalburg
Units involved
RAAF
Royal Air Force
RNZAF
Danish Brigade in Sweden

Schalburg Corps
Heer soldiers
Gestapo
Kriegsmarine
Waffen-SS

Casualties and losses
about 380 resistance fighters
600 Danish civilians

Members of the Danish resistance movement were involved in underground activities, ranging from producing illegal publications to spying and sabotage. Major groups included the communist BOPA (Danish: Borgerlige Partisaner, Civil Partisans) and Holger Danske, both based in Copenhagen. Some small resistance groups such as the Samsing Group and the Churchill Club also contributed to the sabotage effort. Resistance agents killed an estimated 400 Danish Nazis, informers and collaborators until 1944. After that date, they also killed some German nationals.

In the postwar period, the Resistance was supported by politicians within Denmark and there was little effort to closely examine the killings. Studies in the late 20th and early 21st centuries revealed cases of improvised and contingent decision making about the targets, including morally ambiguous choices.[citation needed][clarification needed] Several important books and films have been produced on this topic.

Nonviolent resistance: 1940-1943

The "model protectorate"

During the invasion of Denmark on April 9, 1940 and subsequent occupation, the Danish king and government chose not to flee the country and instead collaborated with the German authorities who allowed the Danish government to remain in power. The Germans had reasons to do so, especially as they wanted to showcase Denmark as a "model protectorate", earning the nickname the Cream Front (German: Sahnefront), due to the relative ease of the occupation and copious amount of dairy products.[1] As the democratically elected Danish government remained in power, Danish citizens had less motivation to fight the occupation than in countries where the Germans established puppet governments, such as Norway or France. The police also remained under Danish authority and led by Danes.

Daily life in Denmark remained much the same as before the occupation. The Germans did make certain changes: imposing official censorship, prohibiting dealings with the Allies, and stationing German troops in the country. The Danish government actively discouraged violent resistance because it feared a severe backlash from the Germans against the civilian population.

Resistance groups

Immediately after the occupation began, isolated attempts were made to set up resistance and intelligence activities. Intelligence officers from the Danish army, known as the "Princes," began channeling reports to London allies as early as April 13, 1940. Soon afterwards, Ebbe Munck, a journalist from Berlingske Tidende, arranged to be transferred to Stockholm. From there he could more easily report to and communicate with the British.[2]

Following the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941 the Germans banned the Danish Communist Party and had the Danish police arrest its members.[3] Those members who either avoided arrest or later escaped thus went underground and created resistance cells. From October 1942, they published a clandestine newspaper, Land og Folk ("Land and People"), based on the previous Communist Party newspaper, Arbejderbladet, which was distributed widely across the country. Circulation grew to 120,000 copies per day by the end of the occupation.[4] At the beginning of 1943, the cells were centrally coordinated under BOPA (Borgerlige Partisaner - Civil Partisans), which also began to plan acts of sabotage.

As time went on, many other insurgent groups formed to oppose the occupation. These included the Hvidsten group, which received weapons parachuted by the British, and Holger Danske, which was successful in organizing sabotage activities and the assassinations of collaborators. The Churchill club, one of the first resistance groups in Denmark, was a group of eight schoolboys from Aalborg. They performed some 25 acts of sabotage against the Germans, destroying Nazi German assets with makeshift grenades and stealing Nazi German weapons.

When the Germans forced the Danish government to sign the anti-Comintern pact, a large protest broke out in Copenhagen.[citation needed]

The number of Danish Nazis was low before the war, and this trend continued throughout the occupation. This was confirmed in the 1943 parliamentary elections, in which the population voted overwhelmingly for the four traditional parties, or abstained. The latter option was widely interpreted as votes for the Danish Communist Party. The election was a disappointment for the National Socialist Workers' Party of Denmark (DNSAP) and German Reichsbevollmächtigter. Dr. Werner Best abandoned plans to create a government under Danish Nazi leader Frits Clausen, due to Clausen's lack of public support.

In 1942-43, resistance operations gradually shifted to more violent action, most notably acts of sabotage. Various groups succeeded in making contacts with the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) which began making airdrops of agents and supplies. There were not many drops until August 1944, but they increased through the end of the occupation. In total throughout the war, over 600 ton of weapons, equipment and explosives were airdropped to the Danish resistance by the Allies, while 53 SOE agents were dispatched to Denmark.[5]

Military intelligence operations

On 23 April 1940,[6] members of Danish military intelligence established contacts with their British counterparts through the British diplomatic mission in Stockholm. The first intelligence dispatch was sent by messenger to the Stockholm mission in the autumn of 1940. This evolved into regular dispatches of military and political intelligence, and by 1942-43, the number of dispatches had increased to at least one per week.[6] In addition, an employee of Danmarks Radio was able to transmit short messages to Britain through the national broadcasting network.

The intelligence was gathered mostly by officers in the Danish army and navy; they reported information about political developments, the location and size of German military units, and details about the Danish section of the Atlantic Wall fortifications. In 1942, the Germans demanded the removal of the Danish military from Jutland, but intelligence operations continued. It was carried out by plainclothes personnel or by reserve officers, since this group was not included in the evacuation order.[6] Following the liberation of Denmark, Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery described the intelligence gathered in Denmark as "second to none".[7]

Violent resistance: 1943-1945

Denmark Fights for Freedom, a 1944 U.S. propaganda film about the Danish resistance movement.
 
M1917 Enfield used by a resistance group in Haslev.

As the years went by, the number of acts of sabotage and violence grew. In 1943, the number grew dramatically, to the point that the German authorities became dissatisfied with the Danish authorities' handling of the situation. At the end of August, the Germans took over full administration in Denmark, which allowed them to deal with the population as they wished. The Germans raided every police station in Denmark, disarmed, arrested and deported all 2,000 Danish police officers to Germany.[5] Policing became easier for the Nazis, but more and more people became involved with the movement because they were no longer worried about protecting the Danish government.

In particular, the Danish Freedom Council was set up in September 1943, bringing together the various resistance groups in order to improve their efficiency and resolve. An underground government was established. Allied governments, who had been skeptical about Denmark's commitment to fight Germany, began recognising it as a full ally.[8]

Due to concerns about prisoners and information held in Gestapo headquarters at the Shellhus in the centre of Copenhagen, the resistance repeatedly requested a tactical RAF raid on the headquarters to destroy records and release prisoners. Britain initially turned down the request due to the risk of civilian casualties, but eventually launched Operation Carthage, a very low-level raid by 20 de Havilland Mosquito fighter-bombers, escorted by 30 P-51 Mustang fighters. The raid succeeded in destroying the headquarters, releasing 18 prisoners of the Gestapo, and disrupting anti-resistance operations throughout Denmark. However, 125 civilians lost their lives due to the errant bombing of a nearby boarding school.[9]

Actions

 
Railway shop workers in Frederiksværk built this armored car for offensive use by the Danish resistance. It was employed against Danish Nazis, known as the Lorenzen group, entrenched in the plantation of Asserbo in North Zealand, May 5, 1945.
 
An American pilot in occupied Copenhagen photographed by the Danish resistance while a German pilot looks on. March, 1945.

In 1943, the movement scored a great success in rescuing all but 500 of Denmark's Jewish population of 7,000-8,000 from being sent to the Nazi concentration camps by helping transport them to neutral Sweden, where they were offered asylum.[10][11] The Danish resistance movement has been honoured as a collective at Yad Vashem in Israel as being part of the "Righteous Among the Nations".[12] They were honoured as a collective rather than as individuals at their own request.[13]

Another success was the disruption of the Danish railway network in the days after D-Day, which delayed the movement of German troops to France as reinforcements.

By the end of the war, the organized resistance movement in Denmark had scored many successes. It is believed to have killed nearly 400 persons (the top official number is 385) from 1943 through 1945, who were Danish Nazis, informers or collaborators thought to pose a threat to the Resistance, or Danes working for the Gestapo.[14] The rationale behind the executions was discussed, and several accounts by participants said a committee identified targets, but no historic evidence of this system has been found.[14] In the postwar period, while the killings were criticized, they were also defended by such politicians as Frode Jakobsen and Per Federspiel.

The movement lost slightly more than 850 members, in action, in prison, in Nazi concentration camps, or (in the case of 102 resistance members[15]) executed following a court-martial.

The Danish National Museum maintains the Museum of Danish Resistance in Copenhagen.

Since the late 20th century, there has been more discussion about the morality of some of the killings carried out by the resistance, sparked by a TV series about the death of Jane Horney, a Danish citizen killed at sea in what Frode Jakobsen defended as an act of war.[16]

With the 60th anniversary of the end of the war, the issue was re-examined in two new studies: Stefan Emkjar's Stikkerdrab and Peter Ovig Knudsen's Etter drabet, "the first profound approaches into the topic."[17] Both authors used veterans of the resistance movement, and covered the sometimes contingent, improvised nature of some of the actions. It suggested that some of the noted Bent Faurschou-Hviid (Flammen)'s executions may have been mistakenly directed by a double agent.[18] Knudsen's work was adapted as a 2-hour documentary film, With the Right to Kill (2003), which was shown on TV and later released in theaters.[19] These works have contributed to a national discussion on the topic. Flame and Citron (Flammen og Citronen, 2008) is a fictionalized drama film based on historic accounts of the two prominent Danish resistance fighters, directed by Ole Christian Madsen. It portrays some of the moral ambiguity of their actions.

Prominent members

Strategic result

The extent to which the Danish resistance played an important strategic role in the war has been the subject of much discussion. Immediately after the war and until about 1970, the vast majority of accounts overrated the degree to which the resistance had been effective in battling against the Germans by acts of sabotage and by providing key intelligence to the Allies. More recently, however, after re-examining the archives, historians concur that, while the resistance provided a firm basis for moral support and paved the way for post-war governments, the strategic effect during the occupation was limited. The Germans did not need to send reinforcements to suppress the movement, and garrisoned the country with a comparatively small number of Wehrmacht troops. The resistance did not enter into active combat. Even the overall importance of Danish intelligence in the context of Ultra is questionable.[22]

In his history, No Small Achievement: Special Operations Executive and the Danish Resistance 1940-1945 (2002), Knud Jespersen examined the relationship between British Intelligence and the Danish Resistance. He quoted a report from SHAEF stating that the resistance in Denmark.

"caused strain and embarrassment to the enemy...[and a] striking reduction in the flow of troops and stores from Norway [that] undoubtedly had an adverse effect on the reinforcements for the battles East and West of the Rhine."[23]

Examining the British archives, Jespersen also found a report concluding "that the overall effect of Danish resistance was to restore national pride and political unity."[23] He agreed that this was the movement's most important contribution to the nation.[23]

Representation in other media

 
Sabotørspillet, "The Saboteur Game", published in 1945 - showcasing the saboteur as a hero

Books

  • Carol Matas's 1987 and 1989 novels Lisa and Jesper presented fictionalized accounts of Danish resistance missions.
  • Ken Follett's 2002 suspense novel Hornet Flight presents a fictionalized account of early Danish resistance.
  • Stefan Emkjar's Stikkerdrab (Killing of Informers: The Resistance Movements' Liquidation of Danes during the Occupation, 2000) and Peter Øvig Knudsen's Etter drabet (Following the Death: Reports of the Resistance Liquidations, 2001), were both non-fiction studies of the resistance, published before the 60th anniversary of the end of the war.[17]
  • Number the Stars (1989), children's historical fiction novel by Lois Lowry, won the Newbery Medal.
  • Barry Clemson's alternative history novel, Denmark Rising (2009), imagines a Denmark that implemented a total resistance to the Nazis via strategic nonviolence.
  • Povl Falk-Jensen's Holger Danske - Afdeling Eigils sabotager og stikkerlikvideringer under Besættelsen (2010), Danish resistance member Povl Falk-Jensen's memoir. Povl Falk-Jensen was a leading member of the Danish resistance group Holger Danske during World War II and responsible for eleven executions of informers or collaborators.
  • H. George Frederickson's 1997 text The Spirit of Public Administration compares the response of the bureaucracy in Denmark to other European nations to the rise of the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler.
  • Aage Bertelsen's "October '43" (1954) An autobiographical account of the Jewish escape to Sweden in 1943, written by a prominent member of the Danish resistance. Originally written in Danish, but translated into other languages. Author not to be confused with famous Danish painter Aage Bertelsen.

Film

  • The Twentieth Century with Walter Cronkite: episode Sabotage. CBS approximately 1960. Black and white.
  • Flame and Citron (Flammen og Citronen) (2008) is a drama film based on two prominent Danish resistance fighters,; it is directed by Ole Christian Madsen.
  • Miracle at Midnight (1998), American made-for-TV movie about the rescue of the Jews in Denmark, starring Sam Waterston and Mia Farrow, featuring neighbors helping a family escape to Sweden.
  • The Boys from St. Petri, a 1991 Danish drama film.
  • The Only Way, A 1970 war drama film about the rescue of the Danish Jews starring Jane Seymour.
  • This Life (Hvidstengruppen) (2012) is a Danish drama film based on the activities of the Hvidsten Group.
  • With the Right to Kill (Med ret til at dræbe, 2003), is a documentary adapted from the 2001 book by journalist Peter Øvig Knudsen and directed by Morten Henriksen; it explores the liquidation of nearly 400 people by the Resistance during World War II from 1943 through 1945. It won a Robert Award in 2004 for best full-length documentary.
  • Omvej til friheden (Detour to freedom), a made-for-TV documentary movie about two Jewish families attempting to flee to neutral Sweden and featuring actual Jewish survivors and members of the Danish resistance.
  • Land of Mine, a 2015 Danish film nominated for Oscar for Best Foreign Film, about young German POWs clearing Nazi beach mines. Director: Martin Zandvliet from IMDB.
  • Netflix holds distribution rights to a Danish movie The Bombardment, which was first released in October 2021 in Denmark. The film is also known The Shadow in My Eye (Skyggen i mit øje in Danish) and Netflix released the movie in March 2022.

Music

  • "Denmark 1943", a song by Fred Small on his album I Will Stand Fast

References

  1. ^ Poulsen, Henning (1 January 1991). "Die Deutschen Besatzungspolitik in Dänemark". In Bohn, Robert; Elvert, Jürgen; Rebas, Hain; Salewski, Michael (eds.). Neutralität und Totalitäre Aggression (in German). Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 379. ISBN 978-3-515-05887-2. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  2. ^ Per Eilstrup, Lars Lindeberg: De så de ske under Besættelsen. Forlaget Union, Copenhagen, 1969.
  3. ^ Nielsen, Martin (1947). Rapport fra Stutthof [Report from Stutthof] (in Danish). Gyldendal. 170 pages.
  4. ^ Resistance in Western Europe, edited by Bob Moore, p. 105.
  5. ^ a b Holbraad, Carsten (2017). Danish Reactions to German Occupation. London: UCL Press. ISBN 9781911307495.
  6. ^ a b c H.M. Lunding (1970), Stemplet fortroligt, 3rd edition, Gyldendal, pp. 68-72. (in Danish)
  7. ^ Bjørn Pedersen: Jubel og glæde 2008-02-12 at the Wayback Machine. (in Danish) Retrieved 21 April 2008.
  8. ^ Jerry Voorhis, “Germany and Denmark: 1940-45,” Scandinavian Studies 44:2 (1972) p. 183.
  9. ^ Rasmussen, Anita Brask (21 March 2012). "Bombning af Den Franske Skole blev redigeret ud af erindringen" [The bombing of the French School was edited out of the remembrance] (in Danish). Dagbladet Information. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  10. ^ The Rescue of Danish Jews, Jewish Virtual Library, Retrieved 17 April 2008.
  11. ^ UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM. "RESCUE IN DENMARK".
  12. ^ "The Rescue of Danish Jews". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 2016-02-08.
  13. ^ "The Rescue of Denmark's Jews". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2016-02-08. The Underground did not receive the Righteous Among the Nations title, which is only awarded to individuals, not to groups. This was also in the spirit of the request expressed by the members of the Danish underground not to honor them as individuals.
  14. ^ a b Clement Maier, Making Memories: The Politics of in Postwar Norway and Denmark, pp. 259-263, 2007 thesis at European University Institute, available online as pdf.
  15. ^ Quistgaard, Georg (1944). Fængselsdagbog og breve [Prison Diary and Letters] (in Danish). Prefaced by Elias Bredsdorff. Copenhagen: Nyt Nordisk Forlag, Arnold Busck (published 1946). 101 pages.
  16. ^ Maier (2007), Making Memories, pp. 276-278
  17. ^ a b Maier (2007), Making Memories, pp. 269-272
  18. ^ Maier (2007), Making Memories, pp. 271-272
  19. ^ Maier (2007), Making Memories, p. 272
  20. ^ "Varinka Wichfeld Muus (1922 - 2002 )". Dansk Kvindebiografisk Leksikon (in Danish). KVINFO. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  21. ^ David Schultz was born in Riga, Latvia. Due to his father's work as the Vice Consul in the Danish Foreign Service, David's family lived in a variety of countries while he was a child: first in Tallinn, Estonia [1926], then in Oslo, Norway [1934], and finally in Copenhagen, Denmark [1937]. He attended a School of Commerce in Copenhagen for two years, and during an apprenticeship in Slagelse when he was 17 (1941), he began taking part in Resistance activities. The Resistance was discovered in 1943, at which point David fled to Sweden. He returned to Denmark in 1944 for another year of Resistance activities before escaping to Sweden again in 1945. David was one of the Resistance fighters presented to Sir Winston Churchill in 1950 to honour and thank the Danish Resistance for their support and sacrifices during the German occupation of Denmark. In 1995, David received the Danish nation's Award of Honour for his work in the Resistance.
  22. ^ "Denmark, Historical Role," by Hans Kirchoff in Resistance in Western Europe (p. 112 et seq).
  23. ^ a b c , CSI Studies, Vol. 48, No.1, Retrieved 19 April 2008.

Further reading

  • Ackerman, Peter and Jack DuVall. A Force More Powerful. New York: Palgrave, 2000. ISBN 0-312-24050-3
  • Hæestrup, Jørgen. Secret Alliance - A Study of the Danish Resistance Movement 1940-45. Vols I, II & III. Odense University Press, 1976-77. ISBN 87-7492-168-1, ISBN 87-7492-194-0 & ISBN 87-7492-212-2.
  • Jespersen, Knud J. V. No Small Achievement: Special Operations Executive and the Danish Resistance 1940-1945. Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark. ISBN 87-7838-691-8
  • Lampe, David (1957). The Danish Resistance. New York: Ballantine Books.
  • Moore, Bob (editor). Resistance in Western Europe (esp. Chapter on Denmark by Hans Kirchoff), Oxford : Berg, 2000, ISBN 1-85973-279-8.
  • Besættelsens Hvem Hvad Hvor (Who What Where of the Occupation), Copenhagen, Politikens Forlag, 3rd revised edition, 1985. ISBN 87-567-4035-2.
  • Reilly, Robin. Sixth Floor: The Danish Resistance Movement and the RAF Raid on Gestapo Headquarters March 1, 2002.
  • Stenton, Michael. Radio London and Resistance in Occupied Europe, Oxford University Press. 2000. ISBN 0-19-820843-X
  • Voorhis, Jerry. "Germany and Denmark: 1940-45", Scandinavian Studies 44:2, 1972.
  • Zimmerman, Susan, Prisoner of the Gestapo: Freed by Words, Warfare History Network, 20 March 2019

External links

  • Danish resistance movement – description of its activity to save Jews' lives at the Holocaust, at Yad Vashem website

danish, resistance, movement, danish, danske, modstandsbevægelse, were, underground, insurgency, resist, german, occupation, denmark, during, world, initially, lenient, arrangements, which, nazi, occupation, authority, allowed, democratic, government, stay, po. The Danish resistance movements Danish Den danske modstandsbevaegelse were an underground insurgency to resist the German occupation of Denmark during World War II Due to the initially lenient arrangements in which the Nazi occupation authority allowed the democratic government to stay in power the resistance movement was slower to develop effective tactics on a wide scale than in some other countries Danish ResistancePart of European theatre of World War II and Occupation of DenmarkDanish resistance fighters battling German soldiers 5 May 1945 Flakhaven Odense left Danish SS soldiers disarmed by resistance fighters in Copenhagen 1945 right DateNonviolent resistance 9 April 1940 29 August 1943Violent resistance August 29 1943 5 May 1945LocationDenmarkResultGerman SurrenderLiberation of DenmarkLanding at BornholmBelligerentsDanish resistance groups Denmark from 1943 United Kingdom New Zealand Australia Soviet UnionOccupation Government until 1943 GermanyCommanders and leadersBernard Montgomery Povl Falk Jensen Various Danish resistance leadersLeonhard Kaupisch Werner Best Frits Clausen Christian Frederik von SchalburgUnits involvedRAAF Royal Air Force RNZAF Danish Brigade in SwedenSchalburg Corps Heer soldiers Gestapo Kriegsmarine Waffen SS Free Corps Denmark until 1943 Casualties and lossesabout 380 resistance fighters600 Danish civilians Members of the Danish resistance movement were involved in underground activities ranging from producing illegal publications to spying and sabotage Major groups included the communist BOPA Danish Borgerlige Partisaner Civil Partisans and Holger Danske both based in Copenhagen Some small resistance groups such as the Samsing Group and the Churchill Club also contributed to the sabotage effort Resistance agents killed an estimated 400 Danish Nazis informers and collaborators until 1944 After that date they also killed some German nationals In the postwar period the Resistance was supported by politicians within Denmark and there was little effort to closely examine the killings Studies in the late 20th and early 21st centuries revealed cases of improvised and contingent decision making about the targets including morally ambiguous choices citation needed clarification needed Several important books and films have been produced on this topic Contents 1 Nonviolent resistance 1940 1943 1 1 The model protectorate 1 2 Resistance groups 1 3 Military intelligence operations 2 Violent resistance 1943 1945 3 Actions 4 Prominent members 5 Strategic result 6 Representation in other media 6 1 Books 6 2 Film 6 3 Music 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksNonviolent resistance 1940 1943 EditThe model protectorate Edit During the invasion of Denmark on April 9 1940 and subsequent occupation the Danish king and government chose not to flee the country and instead collaborated with the German authorities who allowed the Danish government to remain in power The Germans had reasons to do so especially as they wanted to showcase Denmark as a model protectorate earning the nickname the Cream Front German Sahnefront due to the relative ease of the occupation and copious amount of dairy products 1 As the democratically elected Danish government remained in power Danish citizens had less motivation to fight the occupation than in countries where the Germans established puppet governments such as Norway or France The police also remained under Danish authority and led by Danes Daily life in Denmark remained much the same as before the occupation The Germans did make certain changes imposing official censorship prohibiting dealings with the Allies and stationing German troops in the country The Danish government actively discouraged violent resistance because it feared a severe backlash from the Germans against the civilian population Resistance groups Edit Immediately after the occupation began isolated attempts were made to set up resistance and intelligence activities Intelligence officers from the Danish army known as the Princes began channeling reports to London allies as early as April 13 1940 Soon afterwards Ebbe Munck a journalist from Berlingske Tidende arranged to be transferred to Stockholm From there he could more easily report to and communicate with the British 2 Following the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22 1941 the Germans banned the Danish Communist Party and had the Danish police arrest its members 3 Those members who either avoided arrest or later escaped thus went underground and created resistance cells From October 1942 they published a clandestine newspaper Land og Folk Land and People based on the previous Communist Party newspaper Arbejderbladet which was distributed widely across the country Circulation grew to 120 000 copies per day by the end of the occupation 4 At the beginning of 1943 the cells were centrally coordinated under BOPA Borgerlige Partisaner Civil Partisans which also began to plan acts of sabotage As time went on many other insurgent groups formed to oppose the occupation These included the Hvidsten group which received weapons parachuted by the British and Holger Danske which was successful in organizing sabotage activities and the assassinations of collaborators The Churchill club one of the first resistance groups in Denmark was a group of eight schoolboys from Aalborg They performed some 25 acts of sabotage against the Germans destroying Nazi German assets with makeshift grenades and stealing Nazi German weapons When the Germans forced the Danish government to sign the anti Comintern pact a large protest broke out in Copenhagen citation needed The number of Danish Nazis was low before the war and this trend continued throughout the occupation This was confirmed in the 1943 parliamentary elections in which the population voted overwhelmingly for the four traditional parties or abstained The latter option was widely interpreted as votes for the Danish Communist Party The election was a disappointment for the National Socialist Workers Party of Denmark DNSAP and German Reichsbevollmachtigter Dr Werner Best abandoned plans to create a government under Danish Nazi leader Frits Clausen due to Clausen s lack of public support In 1942 43 resistance operations gradually shifted to more violent action most notably acts of sabotage Various groups succeeded in making contacts with the British Special Operations Executive SOE which began making airdrops of agents and supplies There were not many drops until August 1944 but they increased through the end of the occupation In total throughout the war over 600 ton of weapons equipment and explosives were airdropped to the Danish resistance by the Allies while 53 SOE agents were dispatched to Denmark 5 Military intelligence operations Edit On 23 April 1940 6 members of Danish military intelligence established contacts with their British counterparts through the British diplomatic mission in Stockholm The first intelligence dispatch was sent by messenger to the Stockholm mission in the autumn of 1940 This evolved into regular dispatches of military and political intelligence and by 1942 43 the number of dispatches had increased to at least one per week 6 In addition an employee of Danmarks Radio was able to transmit short messages to Britain through the national broadcasting network The intelligence was gathered mostly by officers in the Danish army and navy they reported information about political developments the location and size of German military units and details about the Danish section of the Atlantic Wall fortifications In 1942 the Germans demanded the removal of the Danish military from Jutland but intelligence operations continued It was carried out by plainclothes personnel or by reserve officers since this group was not included in the evacuation order 6 Following the liberation of Denmark Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery described the intelligence gathered in Denmark as second to none 7 Violent resistance 1943 1945 Edit source source source source source source Denmark Fights for Freedom a 1944 U S propaganda film about the Danish resistance movement M1917 Enfield used by a resistance group in Haslev As the years went by the number of acts of sabotage and violence grew In 1943 the number grew dramatically to the point that the German authorities became dissatisfied with the Danish authorities handling of the situation At the end of August the Germans took over full administration in Denmark which allowed them to deal with the population as they wished The Germans raided every police station in Denmark disarmed arrested and deported all 2 000 Danish police officers to Germany 5 Policing became easier for the Nazis but more and more people became involved with the movement because they were no longer worried about protecting the Danish government In particular the Danish Freedom Council was set up in September 1943 bringing together the various resistance groups in order to improve their efficiency and resolve An underground government was established Allied governments who had been skeptical about Denmark s commitment to fight Germany began recognising it as a full ally 8 Due to concerns about prisoners and information held in Gestapo headquarters at the Shellhus in the centre of Copenhagen the resistance repeatedly requested a tactical RAF raid on the headquarters to destroy records and release prisoners Britain initially turned down the request due to the risk of civilian casualties but eventually launched Operation Carthage a very low level raid by 20 de Havilland Mosquito fighter bombers escorted by 30 P 51 Mustang fighters The raid succeeded in destroying the headquarters releasing 18 prisoners of the Gestapo and disrupting anti resistance operations throughout Denmark However 125 civilians lost their lives due to the errant bombing of a nearby boarding school 9 Actions Edit Railway shop workers in Frederiksvaerk built this armored car for offensive use by the Danish resistance It was employed against Danish Nazis known as the Lorenzen group entrenched in the plantation of Asserbo in North Zealand May 5 1945 An American pilot in occupied Copenhagen photographed by the Danish resistance while a German pilot looks on March 1945 In 1943 the movement scored a great success in rescuing all but 500 of Denmark s Jewish population of 7 000 8 000 from being sent to the Nazi concentration camps by helping transport them to neutral Sweden where they were offered asylum 10 11 The Danish resistance movement has been honoured as a collective at Yad Vashem in Israel as being part of the Righteous Among the Nations 12 They were honoured as a collective rather than as individuals at their own request 13 Another success was the disruption of the Danish railway network in the days after D Day which delayed the movement of German troops to France as reinforcements By the end of the war the organized resistance movement in Denmark had scored many successes It is believed to have killed nearly 400 persons the top official number is 385 from 1943 through 1945 who were Danish Nazis informers or collaborators thought to pose a threat to the Resistance or Danes working for the Gestapo 14 The rationale behind the executions was discussed and several accounts by participants said a committee identified targets but no historic evidence of this system has been found 14 In the postwar period while the killings were criticized they were also defended by such politicians as Frode Jakobsen and Per Federspiel The movement lost slightly more than 850 members in action in prison in Nazi concentration camps or in the case of 102 resistance members 15 executed following a court martial The Danish National Museum maintains the Museum of Danish Resistance in Copenhagen Since the late 20th century there has been more discussion about the morality of some of the killings carried out by the resistance sparked by a TV series about the death of Jane Horney a Danish citizen killed at sea in what Frode Jakobsen defended as an act of war 16 With the 60th anniversary of the end of the war the issue was re examined in two new studies Stefan Emkjar s Stikkerdrab and Peter Ovig Knudsen s Etter drabet the first profound approaches into the topic 17 Both authors used veterans of the resistance movement and covered the sometimes contingent improvised nature of some of the actions It suggested that some of the noted Bent Faurschou Hviid Flammen s executions may have been mistakenly directed by a double agent 18 Knudsen s work was adapted as a 2 hour documentary film With the Right to Kill 2003 which was shown on TV and later released in theaters 19 These works have contributed to a national discussion on the topic Flame and Citron Flammen og Citronen 2008 is a fictionalized drama film based on historic accounts of the two prominent Danish resistance fighters directed by Ole Christian Madsen It portrays some of the moral ambiguity of their actions Prominent members EditChrister Lyst Hansen Henning Bysted Mogens Fog Flemming Muus Monica Wichfeld Varinka Wichfeld Muus 20 Niels Eberhard Petersen Ove Kampmann Anton Poul Andersen Poul Kristian Brandt Rehberg Poul Bruun Marius Fiil Niels Fiil Jorgen Kieler Thomas Sneum Jorgen Haagen Schmith Citronen Bent Faurschou Hviid Flammen John Christmas Moller Ole Lippmann Borge Bak Tom Dencker GrantJorgen Strange Lorenzen Sven Fage Pedersen Poul Nielsen Find Sandgren David John Valdemar Schultz 1923 2014 21 Kim Malthe Bruun Knud Pedersen Povl Falk Jensen Preben Munch Nielsen Lone Maslocha Ellen Christensen Hans Edvard TeglersStrategic result EditThe extent to which the Danish resistance played an important strategic role in the war has been the subject of much discussion Immediately after the war and until about 1970 the vast majority of accounts overrated the degree to which the resistance had been effective in battling against the Germans by acts of sabotage and by providing key intelligence to the Allies More recently however after re examining the archives historians concur that while the resistance provided a firm basis for moral support and paved the way for post war governments the strategic effect during the occupation was limited The Germans did not need to send reinforcements to suppress the movement and garrisoned the country with a comparatively small number of Wehrmacht troops The resistance did not enter into active combat Even the overall importance of Danish intelligence in the context of Ultra is questionable 22 In his history No Small Achievement Special Operations Executive and the Danish Resistance 1940 1945 2002 Knud Jespersen examined the relationship between British Intelligence and the Danish Resistance He quoted a report from SHAEF stating that the resistance in Denmark caused strain and embarrassment to the enemy and a striking reduction in the flow of troops and stores from Norway that undoubtedly had an adverse effect on the reinforcements for the battles East and West of the Rhine 23 Examining the British archives Jespersen also found a report concluding that the overall effect of Danish resistance was to restore national pride and political unity 23 He agreed that this was the movement s most important contribution to the nation 23 Representation in other media Edit Sabotorspillet The Saboteur Game published in 1945 showcasing the saboteur as a hero Books Edit Carol Matas s 1987 and 1989 novels Lisa and Jesper presented fictionalized accounts of Danish resistance missions Ken Follett s 2002 suspense novel Hornet Flight presents a fictionalized account of early Danish resistance Stefan Emkjar s Stikkerdrab Killing of Informers The Resistance Movements Liquidation of Danes during the Occupation 2000 and Peter Ovig Knudsen s Etter drabet Following the Death Reports of the Resistance Liquidations 2001 were both non fiction studies of the resistance published before the 60th anniversary of the end of the war 17 Number the Stars 1989 children s historical fiction novel by Lois Lowry won the Newbery Medal Barry Clemson s alternative history novel Denmark Rising 2009 imagines a Denmark that implemented a total resistance to the Nazis via strategic nonviolence Povl Falk Jensen s Holger Danske Afdeling Eigils sabotager og stikkerlikvideringer under Besaettelsen 2010 Danish resistance member Povl Falk Jensen s memoir Povl Falk Jensen was a leading member of the Danish resistance group Holger Danske during World War II and responsible for eleven executions of informers or collaborators H George Frederickson s 1997 text The Spirit of Public Administration compares the response of the bureaucracy in Denmark to other European nations to the rise of the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler Aage Bertelsen s October 43 1954 An autobiographical account of the Jewish escape to Sweden in 1943 written by a prominent member of the Danish resistance Originally written in Danish but translated into other languages Author not to be confused with famous Danish painter Aage Bertelsen Film Edit The Twentieth Century with Walter Cronkite episode Sabotage CBS approximately 1960 Black and white Flame and Citron Flammen og Citronen 2008 is a drama film based on two prominent Danish resistance fighters it is directed by Ole Christian Madsen Miracle at Midnight 1998 American made for TV movie about the rescue of the Jews in Denmark starring Sam Waterston and Mia Farrow featuring neighbors helping a family escape to Sweden The Boys from St Petri a 1991 Danish drama film The Only Way A 1970 war drama film about the rescue of the Danish Jews starring Jane Seymour This Life Hvidstengruppen 2012 is a Danish drama film based on the activities of the Hvidsten Group With the Right to Kill Med ret til at draebe 2003 is a documentary adapted from the 2001 book by journalist Peter Ovig Knudsen and directed by Morten Henriksen it explores the liquidation of nearly 400 people by the Resistance during World War II from 1943 through 1945 It won a Robert Award in 2004 for best full length documentary Omvej til friheden Detour to freedom a made for TV documentary movie about two Jewish families attempting to flee to neutral Sweden and featuring actual Jewish survivors and members of the Danish resistance Land of Mine a 2015 Danish film nominated for Oscar for Best Foreign Film about young German POWs clearing Nazi beach mines Director Martin Zandvliet from IMDB Netflix holds distribution rights to a Danish movie The Bombardment which was first released in October 2021 in Denmark The film is also known The Shadow in My Eye Skyggen i mit oje in Danish and Netflix released the movie in March 2022 Music Edit Denmark 1943 a song by Fred Small on his album I Will Stand FastReferences Edit Poulsen Henning 1 January 1991 Die Deutschen Besatzungspolitik in Danemark In Bohn Robert Elvert Jurgen Rebas Hain Salewski Michael eds Neutralitat und Totalitare Aggression in German Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag p 379 ISBN 978 3 515 05887 2 Retrieved 20 April 2016 Per Eilstrup Lars Lindeberg De sa de ske under Besaettelsen Forlaget Union Copenhagen 1969 Nielsen Martin 1947 Rapport fra Stutthof Report from Stutthof in Danish Gyldendal 170 pages Resistance in Western Europe edited by Bob Moore p 105 a b Holbraad Carsten 2017 Danish Reactions to German Occupation London UCL Press ISBN 9781911307495 a b c H M Lunding 1970 Stemplet fortroligt 3rd edition Gyldendal pp 68 72 in Danish Bjorn Pedersen Jubel og glaede Archived 2008 02 12 at the Wayback Machine in Danish Retrieved 21 April 2008 Jerry Voorhis Germany and Denmark 1940 45 Scandinavian Studies 44 2 1972 p 183 Rasmussen Anita Brask 21 March 2012 Bombning af Den Franske Skole blev redigeret ud af erindringen The bombing of the French School was edited out of the remembrance in Danish Dagbladet Information Retrieved 4 December 2014 The Rescue of Danish Jews Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 17 April 2008 UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM RESCUE IN DENMARK The Rescue of Danish Jews Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 2016 02 08 The Rescue of Denmark s Jews Yad Vashem Retrieved 2016 02 08 The Underground did not receive the Righteous Among the Nations title which is only awarded to individuals not to groups This was also in the spirit of the request expressed by the members of the Danish underground not to honor them as individuals a b Clement Maier Making Memories The Politics of in Postwar Norway and Denmark pp 259 263 2007 thesis at European University Institute available online as pdf Quistgaard Georg 1944 Faengselsdagbog og breve Prison Diary and Letters in Danish Prefaced by Elias Bredsdorff Copenhagen Nyt Nordisk Forlag Arnold Busck published 1946 101 pages Maier 2007 Making Memories pp 276 278 a b Maier 2007 Making Memories pp 269 272 Maier 2007 Making Memories pp 271 272 Maier 2007 Making Memories p 272 Varinka Wichfeld Muus 1922 2002 Dansk Kvindebiografisk Leksikon in Danish KVINFO Retrieved 5 August 2018 David Schultz was born in Riga Latvia Due to his father s work as the Vice Consul in the Danish Foreign Service David s family lived in a variety of countries while he was a child first in Tallinn Estonia 1926 then in Oslo Norway 1934 and finally in Copenhagen Denmark 1937 He attended a School of Commerce in Copenhagen for two years and during an apprenticeship in Slagelse when he was 17 1941 he began taking part in Resistance activities The Resistance was discovered in 1943 at which point David fled to Sweden He returned to Denmark in 1944 for another year of Resistance activities before escaping to Sweden again in 1945 David was one of the Resistance fighters presented to Sir Winston Churchill in 1950 to honour and thank the Danish Resistance for their support and sacrifices during the German occupation of Denmark In 1995 David received the Danish nation s Award of Honour for his work in the Resistance Denmark Historical Role by Hans Kirchoff in Resistance in Western Europe p 112 et seq a b c Hayden B Peake The Intelligence Officer s Bookshelf includes a review of Knud Jespersen s No Small Achievement CSI Studies Vol 48 No 1 Retrieved 19 April 2008 Further reading EditAckerman Peter and Jack DuVall A Force More Powerful New York Palgrave 2000 ISBN 0 312 24050 3 Haeestrup Jorgen Secret Alliance A Study of the Danish Resistance Movement 1940 45 Vols I II amp III Odense University Press 1976 77 ISBN 87 7492 168 1 ISBN 87 7492 194 0 amp ISBN 87 7492 212 2 Jespersen Knud J V No Small Achievement Special Operations Executive and the Danish Resistance 1940 1945 Odense University Press of Southern Denmark ISBN 87 7838 691 8 Lampe David 1957 The Danish Resistance New York Ballantine Books Moore Bob editor Resistance in Western Europe esp Chapter on Denmark by Hans Kirchoff Oxford Berg 2000 ISBN 1 85973 279 8 Besaettelsens Hvem Hvad Hvor Who What Where of the Occupation Copenhagen Politikens Forlag 3rd revised edition 1985 ISBN 87 567 4035 2 Reilly Robin Sixth Floor The Danish Resistance Movement and the RAF Raid on Gestapo Headquarters March 1 2002 Stenton Michael Radio London and Resistance in Occupied Europe Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 19 820843 X Voorhis Jerry Germany and Denmark 1940 45 Scandinavian Studies 44 2 1972 Zimmerman Susan Prisoner of the Gestapo Freed by Words Warfare History Network 20 March 2019External links EditDanish resistance movement description of its activity to save Jews lives at the Holocaust at Yad Vashem website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Danish resistance movement amp oldid 1140729155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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