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1935 Saar status referendum

A referendum on territorial status was held in the Territory of the Saar Basin on 13 January 1935. Over 90% of voters opted for reunification with Germany, with 9% voting for the status quo as a League of Nations mandate territory and less than 0.5% opting for unification with France.[1]

1935 Saar status referendum
13 January 1935 (1935-01-13)
Results
Choice
Votes %
Reunification with Germany 477,089 90.73%
Status quo 46,613 8.86%
Unification with France 2,124 0.40%
Valid votes 525,826 99.59%
Invalid or blank votes 2,161 0.41%
Total votes 527,987 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 539,542 97.86%

Background edit

At the end of World War I, the Saar was separated from Germany and administered by the League of Nations.[2] France was given control of the Saar's coal mines.[3] After fifteen years of League of Nations administration, a referendum was scheduled to take place in the territory.[2][1]

Peacekeeping operation edit

 
Dutch Marines preparing to leave Rotterdam for the Saar

Towards the end of 1934, the League of Nations Council determined that a peacekeeping force would be necessary for the plebiscite period. The German and French governments agreed to allow an international force to enter the Saar. On 8 December 1934, the council unanimously approved a resolution calling for such a force. Britain (1,500 troops), Italy (1,300), Sweden (260) and the Netherlands (250) agreed to provide troops for the 3,300-strong International Force in the Saar.[4][5] All expenses above and beyond those normally incurred for the same troops were charged to the League fund set aside for the plebiscite.[6][7] The League appointed a commander, General John Brind, with operational control of the force. Troops patrolled, but did not police, the Saar. They were not to respond except to emergencies and at the request of local authorities. There was little to no violence during the plebiscite and the peacekeeping effort was regarded as a success.[7]

Campaign edit

While most political groups in the Saar initially supported its return to Germany, opponents of Nazism in the Saar began having doubts and misgivings after Adolf Hitler came to power.[8] Due to Hitler's oppression of their German counterparts, communists and socialists supported a continuation of the League of Nations administration, and a delay in the plebiscite until after the Nazis were no longer in power in Germany.[8] Roman Catholics were divided in regards to returning to German rule.[8]

In order to achieve victory in the referendum, the Nazis resorted to "a mixture of cajolery and brutal pressure".[9] In 1933, Sarah Wambaugh, one of the members of the Plebiscite Commission, stated that complaints of a Nazi "reign of terror" had been made by non-Nazi Saarlanders and by the foreign press.[10] The complaints included allegations that the Nazis engaged in intimidation, "espionage, secret denunciations, kidnappings ..., ... interception of letters and telegrams, [and] listening-in to telephone conversations", among other things.[10] In response, the Saar Governing Commission had to "promulgate several restrictive decrees for the maintenance of public order".[11]

In November 1934, fearing an armed intervention by France, which the German armed forces of the time would have been in no position to resist, the German government changed its tactics and reduced its belligerency.[12] Josef Bürckel, Hitler's commissioner for the Saar, banned the wearing of uniforms within a 40-kilometre (25 mi) zone along the Saar frontier between 10 January 1935 and 10 February 1935.[12] Burckel also banned meetings, parades, and processions in this area.[12] Jakob Pirro, the Nazi leader in the Saar, told his followers to obey the strictest discipline and implemented harsh penalties for any infractions.[12]

The German government was determined to score a landslide victory in the referendum for propaganda purposes, and created the Deutsche Front for this purpose in July 1933, which became a formidable force in the Saar thanks to generous financial support from Germany and its brutal methods, such as threats and voter intimidation. The Catholic Centre Party of the Saar was merged into the new pro-German front, "yielding to threats of what would happen after the day of reckoning in 1935." According to Guenter Lewy, the people of the Saar increasingly preferred to stay in France because of the suppression and harassment of the Catholic Church in Germany by Nazi authorities.[13]

 
Territory of the Saar Basin

Voters were outraged by the killings of two prominent Catholic leaders, Erich Klausener and Adalbert Probst, in the Night of the Long Knives. A requiem mass for them drew large crowds, and a Catholic newspaper Neue Saar Post opposing Saar's return to Germany gained many new followers. Sarah Wambaugh observed "that the odds were now even, that the Church held the balance, and that unless Hitler should succeed in rehabilitating himself and should placate the Church, or unless the Nazi regime should be overthrown before January [the plebiscite had been scheduled for January 13, 1935], the Territory might be indefinitely lost to the Reich."[13] The campaign on both sides focused on appealing to the Political Catholicism of the voters. On 30th of November, 1934, over seventy members of the Catholic clergy founded an organisation named Deutscher Volksbund für Christlichsoziale Gemeinschaft, which held meetings every Sunday under mottoes "for return to Germany, but not to Hitler Germany" and "Christ is our leader, not Hitler."[13] The Volksbund proclaimed that a "great majority" of Saar clergy supported the status quo and urged voters to block the return of the Saar on the grounds that the best way to serve Germany is to block the "un-German National Socialist dictatorship".[13] The Nazis made an effort to combat concerns about their anti-clericalism by appealing to the voters' anti-communism; pro-German newspapers printed pictures of atrocities from the Soviet Union, contrasting them to the "peace and prosperity" of the German Reich. However, ultimately the National Socialists mainly focused on intimidation, with Nazi paramilitaries "threatening retribution to all those who might dare to vote against return to the fatherland".[13]

Results edit

In the referendum, voters were asked whether the Saar should remain under League of Nations administration, return to Germany or become part of France.[2] To the surprise of neutral observers as well as the Nazis themselves, over 90% voted in favour of reuniting with Germany.[14] Every voting district saw at least 83% of voters support returning the Saar to German rule,[14] and despite Georges Clemenceau's claim that there were 150,000 Frenchmen in the Saar, fewer than 1% of voters supported the annexation of the Saar by France.[14][15]

The legitimacy of the referendum was questioned by foreign observers on grounds of widespread voter intimidation by the Berlin-sponsored Deutsche Front.[16] The Sundy Mail of Adelaide, South Australia, reported that the opponents of the Saar's return to Germany were "hounded off the streets and even blockaded in homes".[16] Jewish shops were boycotted and vandalised, and Nazi supporters visited Jewish homes and demanded their voting identity cards in exchange for protection. In his report, Marinus van der Goes van Naters stated that the Deutsche Front infiltrated public services such as municipal authorities and the police, and voters were forced to vote for Saar's return to Germany under threats of dismissals or loss of pension.[17] The Bulletin of International News wrote that the Nazi militias "went from house to house asking people to sign an undertaking to do all they could to secure the return of the Saar to Germany", while pro-Nazi police officials kept "black lists" of people opposed to German rule of the Saar to be prevented from voting.[18] In addition, socialist and separatist newspapers such as the Volkstimme and Volkszeitung were taken down, and there were reports of illegal seizures and confiscations of documents by the members of the Deutsche Front.[18] Lewy Gunter believes that the result of the referendum could have been different with proper supervision, given the Catholic hostility towards the Nazi regime.[13]

ChoiceVotes%
Reunification with Germany477,08990.73
Status quo46,6138.86
Unification with France2,1240.40
Total525,826100.00
Valid votes525,82699.59
Invalid/blank votes2,1610.41
Total votes527,987100.00
Registered voters/turnout539,54297.86
Source: Direct Democracy

Aftermath edit

 
"The death of the Jews will end the Saarland's distress"—graffiti in a Jewish cemetery, November 1938

Following the referendum, the Council of the League of Nations decided that the Saar should return to Germany.[14] The Saar once again became part of Germany on 1 March 1935,[14] with Josef Bürckel as Reichskommissar. In 1936, it was incorporated into the Gau of Rheinpfalz (Rhine Palatinate) to form the Gau Pfalz-Saar (renamed Gau Saarpfalz in January 1936 and Gau Westmark in December 1940).[19] Josef Bürckel remained the Gauleiter and, from 11 March 1941, Reichsstatthalter until his death in September 1944. He was succeeded by Willi Stöhr who served until the end of the war in May 1945.[20]

After the plebiscite, the Nazi authorities proceeded to clamp down on the Catholic Church's influence in public life, repressing and forcefully disbanding Catholic organisations. Guenter Lewy reports that the prosecution of the Catholic Church in the Saar was even worse than in the rest of Germany, as the Reichskonkordat did not apply to the territory. Even the part of Catholic clergy that campaigned for return of the Saar to Germany, such as Johann Ludger Schlich, was now forced to flee.[13]

The report of General Brind on the Saar force recommended that in the future all such peacekeeping forces be assembled from countries with no direct interest in the matter at hand. He noted that only a small force was necessary, since it was the moral authority of its presence that mattered. Both observations are central to modern peacekeeping as opposed to collective security.[7]

The Nansen International Office for Refugees was responsible for the successful settlement of the Saar refugees in Paraguay after 1935.[21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Pollock, James K. (1935). "The Saar Plebiscite". American Political Science Review. 29 (2): 275–282. doi:10.2307/1947508. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1947508. S2CID 143303667.
  2. ^ a b c M G Callagher. . Moodle.kkc.school.nz. Archived from the original on 12 February 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  3. ^ "The Saar plebiscite". History Today. 13 January 1935. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  4. ^ Norrie MacQueen (ed.), The United Nations, Peace Operations and the Cold War, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2011), doc. 1.
  5. ^ Alfred F. Kugel, Allied Plebiscite Activity in the Saar Territory, 1935 Military Postal History Society.
  6. ^ Mohammed Bedjaoui, The New World Order and the Security Council: Testing the Legality of Its Acts (Martinus Nijhoff, 1994), p. 240.
  7. ^ a b c Paul F. Diehl, Peace Operations (Polity Press, 2008), pp. 34–36.
  8. ^ a b c Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1 ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 88.
  9. ^ Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1 ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 91.
  10. ^ a b Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1 ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 89.
  11. ^ Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1 ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 90.
  12. ^ a b c d Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1 ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 96.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Lewy, Guetner (1964). "The German Roman Catholic Hierarchy and the Saar Plebiscite of 1935". Political Science Quarterly. 79 (2): 184–208. doi:10.2307/2146062. JSTOR 2146062.
  14. ^ a b c d e Russell, Frank (1951). The Saar Battleground And Pawn (1st ed.). Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 104.
  15. ^ Greenwood, H. Powys (25 January 1935). "Lessons of the Saar". The Spectator. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  16. ^ a b "Tension grows hourly over vital Saar Plebiscite". Adelaide. 12 January 1935. from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  17. ^ van der Goes van Naters, Marinus (20 August 1953). The Future Position of the Saar: Some Historical, Legal and Economic Aspects of the Saar Problem (1 ed.). Strasbourg: Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. p. 40.
  18. ^ a b L., H. (1934). "The Campaign for the Plebiscite in the Saar". Bulletin of International News. 11 (5): 3–11. JSTOR 25639323.
  19. ^ "Reich Celebrates Year of Saar Rule," The New York Times (New York) 13 January 1936, p.8.
  20. ^ Michael D. Miller & Andreas Schulz: Gauleiter: The Regional Leaders of the Nazi Party and Their Deputies, 1925-1945, Volume I (Herbert Albrecht - H. Wilhelm Hüttmann). R. James Bender Publishing, 2012, p. 94, ISBN 1-932970-21-5.
  21. ^ Nansen International Office for Refugees - History Nobel Prize

1935, saar, status, referendum, referendum, territorial, status, held, territory, saar, basin, january, 1935, over, voters, opted, reunification, with, germany, with, voting, status, league, nations, mandate, territory, less, than, opting, unification, with, f. A referendum on territorial status was held in the Territory of the Saar Basin on 13 January 1935 Over 90 of voters opted for reunification with Germany with 9 voting for the status quo as a League of Nations mandate territory and less than 0 5 opting for unification with France 1 1935 Saar status referendum13 January 1935 1935 01 13 ResultsChoice Votes Reunification with Germany 477 089 90 73 Status quo 46 613 8 86 Unification with France 2 124 0 40 Valid votes 525 826 99 59 Invalid or blank votes 2 161 0 41 Total votes 527 987 100 00 Registered voters turnout 539 542 97 86 Contents 1 Background 2 Peacekeeping operation 3 Campaign 4 Results 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 ReferencesBackground editAt the end of World War I the Saar was separated from Germany and administered by the League of Nations 2 France was given control of the Saar s coal mines 3 After fifteen years of League of Nations administration a referendum was scheduled to take place in the territory 2 1 Peacekeeping operation edit nbsp Dutch Marines preparing to leave Rotterdam for the Saar Towards the end of 1934 the League of Nations Council determined that a peacekeeping force would be necessary for the plebiscite period The German and French governments agreed to allow an international force to enter the Saar On 8 December 1934 the council unanimously approved a resolution calling for such a force Britain 1 500 troops Italy 1 300 Sweden 260 and the Netherlands 250 agreed to provide troops for the 3 300 strong International Force in the Saar 4 5 All expenses above and beyond those normally incurred for the same troops were charged to the League fund set aside for the plebiscite 6 7 The League appointed a commander General John Brind with operational control of the force Troops patrolled but did not police the Saar They were not to respond except to emergencies and at the request of local authorities There was little to no violence during the plebiscite and the peacekeeping effort was regarded as a success 7 Campaign editWhile most political groups in the Saar initially supported its return to Germany opponents of Nazism in the Saar began having doubts and misgivings after Adolf Hitler came to power 8 Due to Hitler s oppression of their German counterparts communists and socialists supported a continuation of the League of Nations administration and a delay in the plebiscite until after the Nazis were no longer in power in Germany 8 Roman Catholics were divided in regards to returning to German rule 8 In order to achieve victory in the referendum the Nazis resorted to a mixture of cajolery and brutal pressure 9 In 1933 Sarah Wambaugh one of the members of the Plebiscite Commission stated that complaints of a Nazi reign of terror had been made by non Nazi Saarlanders and by the foreign press 10 The complaints included allegations that the Nazis engaged in intimidation espionage secret denunciations kidnappings interception of letters and telegrams and listening in to telephone conversations among other things 10 In response the Saar Governing Commission had to promulgate several restrictive decrees for the maintenance of public order 11 In November 1934 fearing an armed intervention by France which the German armed forces of the time would have been in no position to resist the German government changed its tactics and reduced its belligerency 12 Josef Burckel Hitler s commissioner for the Saar banned the wearing of uniforms within a 40 kilometre 25 mi zone along the Saar frontier between 10 January 1935 and 10 February 1935 12 Burckel also banned meetings parades and processions in this area 12 Jakob Pirro the Nazi leader in the Saar told his followers to obey the strictest discipline and implemented harsh penalties for any infractions 12 The German government was determined to score a landslide victory in the referendum for propaganda purposes and created the Deutsche Front for this purpose in July 1933 which became a formidable force in the Saar thanks to generous financial support from Germany and its brutal methods such as threats and voter intimidation The Catholic Centre Party of the Saar was merged into the new pro German front yielding to threats of what would happen after the day of reckoning in 1935 According to Guenter Lewy the people of the Saar increasingly preferred to stay in France because of the suppression and harassment of the Catholic Church in Germany by Nazi authorities 13 nbsp Territory of the Saar Basin Voters were outraged by the killings of two prominent Catholic leaders Erich Klausener and Adalbert Probst in the Night of the Long Knives A requiem mass for them drew large crowds and a Catholic newspaper Neue Saar Post opposing Saar s return to Germany gained many new followers Sarah Wambaugh observed that the odds were now even that the Church held the balance and that unless Hitler should succeed in rehabilitating himself and should placate the Church or unless the Nazi regime should be overthrown before January the plebiscite had been scheduled for January 13 1935 the Territory might be indefinitely lost to the Reich 13 The campaign on both sides focused on appealing to the Political Catholicism of the voters On 30th of November 1934 over seventy members of the Catholic clergy founded an organisation named Deutscher Volksbund fur Christlichsoziale Gemeinschaft which held meetings every Sunday under mottoes for return to Germany but not to Hitler Germany and Christ is our leader not Hitler 13 The Volksbund proclaimed that a great majority of Saar clergy supported the status quo and urged voters to block the return of the Saar on the grounds that the best way to serve Germany is to block the un German National Socialist dictatorship 13 The Nazis made an effort to combat concerns about their anti clericalism by appealing to the voters anti communism pro German newspapers printed pictures of atrocities from the Soviet Union contrasting them to the peace and prosperity of the German Reich However ultimately the National Socialists mainly focused on intimidation with Nazi paramilitaries threatening retribution to all those who might dare to vote against return to the fatherland 13 Results editIn the referendum voters were asked whether the Saar should remain under League of Nations administration return to Germany or become part of France 2 To the surprise of neutral observers as well as the Nazis themselves over 90 voted in favour of reuniting with Germany 14 Every voting district saw at least 83 of voters support returning the Saar to German rule 14 and despite Georges Clemenceau s claim that there were 150 000 Frenchmen in the Saar fewer than 1 of voters supported the annexation of the Saar by France 14 15 The legitimacy of the referendum was questioned by foreign observers on grounds of widespread voter intimidation by the Berlin sponsored Deutsche Front 16 The Sundy Mail of Adelaide South Australia reported that the opponents of the Saar s return to Germany were hounded off the streets and even blockaded in homes 16 Jewish shops were boycotted and vandalised and Nazi supporters visited Jewish homes and demanded their voting identity cards in exchange for protection In his report Marinus van der Goes van Naters stated that the Deutsche Front infiltrated public services such as municipal authorities and the police and voters were forced to vote for Saar s return to Germany under threats of dismissals or loss of pension 17 The Bulletin of International News wrote that the Nazi militias went from house to house asking people to sign an undertaking to do all they could to secure the return of the Saar to Germany while pro Nazi police officials kept black lists of people opposed to German rule of the Saar to be prevented from voting 18 In addition socialist and separatist newspapers such as the Volkstimme and Volkszeitung were taken down and there were reports of illegal seizures and confiscations of documents by the members of the Deutsche Front 18 Lewy Gunter believes that the result of the referendum could have been different with proper supervision given the Catholic hostility towards the Nazi regime 13 ChoiceVotes Reunification with Germany477 08990 73Status quo46 6138 86Unification with France2 1240 40Total525 826100 00Valid votes525 82699 59Invalid blank votes2 1610 41Total votes527 987100 00Registered voters turnout539 54297 86Source Direct DemocracyAftermath edit nbsp The death of the Jews will end the Saarland s distress graffiti in a Jewish cemetery November 1938 Following the referendum the Council of the League of Nations decided that the Saar should return to Germany 14 The Saar once again became part of Germany on 1 March 1935 14 with Josef Burckel as Reichskommissar In 1936 it was incorporated into the Gau of Rheinpfalz Rhine Palatinate to form the Gau Pfalz Saar renamed Gau Saarpfalz in January 1936 and Gau Westmark in December 1940 19 Josef Burckel remained the Gauleiter and from 11 March 1941 Reichsstatthalter until his death in September 1944 He was succeeded by Willi Stohr who served until the end of the war in May 1945 20 After the plebiscite the Nazi authorities proceeded to clamp down on the Catholic Church s influence in public life repressing and forcefully disbanding Catholic organisations Guenter Lewy reports that the prosecution of the Catholic Church in the Saar was even worse than in the rest of Germany as the Reichskonkordat did not apply to the territory Even the part of Catholic clergy that campaigned for return of the Saar to Germany such as Johann Ludger Schlich was now forced to flee 13 The report of General Brind on the Saar force recommended that in the future all such peacekeeping forces be assembled from countries with no direct interest in the matter at hand He noted that only a small force was necessary since it was the moral authority of its presence that mattered Both observations are central to modern peacekeeping as opposed to collective security 7 The Nansen International Office for Refugees was responsible for the successful settlement of the Saar refugees in Paraguay after 1935 21 See also edit1955 Saar Statute referendumReferences edit a b Pollock James K 1935 The Saar Plebiscite American Political Science Review 29 2 275 282 doi 10 2307 1947508 ISSN 0003 0554 JSTOR 1947508 S2CID 143303667 a b c M G Callagher The Saar Plebiscite 1935 Moodle kkc school nz Archived from the original on 12 February 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2014 The Saar plebiscite History Today 13 January 1935 Retrieved 2 May 2014 Norrie MacQueen ed The United Nations Peace Operations and the Cold War 2nd ed Routledge 2011 doc 1 Alfred F Kugel Allied Plebiscite Activity in the Saar Territory 1935 Military Postal History Society Mohammed Bedjaoui The New World Order and the Security Council Testing the Legality of Its Acts Martinus Nijhoff 1994 p 240 a b c Paul F Diehl Peace Operations Polity Press 2008 pp 34 36 a b c Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1 ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 88 Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1 ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 91 a b Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1 ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 89 Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1 ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 90 a b c d Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1 ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 96 a b c d e f g Lewy Guetner 1964 The German Roman Catholic Hierarchy and the Saar Plebiscite of 1935 Political Science Quarterly 79 2 184 208 doi 10 2307 2146062 JSTOR 2146062 a b c d e Russell Frank 1951 The Saar Battleground And Pawn 1st ed Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 104 Greenwood H Powys 25 January 1935 Lessons of the Saar The Spectator Retrieved 2 May 2014 a b Tension grows hourly over vital Saar Plebiscite Adelaide 12 January 1935 Archived from the original on 13 January 2023 Retrieved 13 January 2023 van der Goes van Naters Marinus 20 August 1953 The Future Position of the Saar Some Historical Legal and Economic Aspects of the Saar Problem 1 ed Strasbourg Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe p 40 a b L H 1934 The Campaign for the Plebiscite in the Saar Bulletin of International News 11 5 3 11 JSTOR 25639323 Reich Celebrates Year of Saar Rule The New York Times New York 13 January 1936 p 8 Michael D Miller amp Andreas Schulz Gauleiter The Regional Leaders of the Nazi Party and Their Deputies 1925 1945 Volume I Herbert Albrecht H Wilhelm Huttmann R James Bender Publishing 2012 p 94 ISBN 1 932970 21 5 Nansen International Office for Refugees History Nobel Prize Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1935 Saar status referendum amp oldid 1216698943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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