Dr. Jacques R. Pauwels
Global Research
25 December 2016
An excerpt from Jacques Pauwels’ book The Great Class War, 1914-1918
Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/world-war-i-the-1914-christmas-truce/5421076
Global Research
25 December 2016

The situation in the fall 1914, after the “war of movement” has given way to the infamous stationary “trench warfare”:
The ordinary soldiers developed more and more antipathy and
even hatred toward their own officers. Simultaneously, they started to
empathize and even sympathize for the men facing them on the far side of
the no man’s land. The official enemy – the Germans, Russians, French,
whatever – were demonized by the authorities but the soldiers had little
or nothing against them. In many cases, they hardly knew the people
they were supposed to hate and kill. Furthermore, they soon found out
that they had much in common with “the enemy,” first and above all a
lower-class social background, and second, the same exposure to danger
and misery.
The men learned in many
ways that the official enemy was in fact not the real enemy, that the
soldiers on the other side were human beings just like themselves. This
lesson could be learned, for example, by reading letters and looking at
pictures found on taken from prisoners. The contempt for the “other,”
deliberately fabricated by the military and political superiors, thus
soon gave way for mutual respect and the feeling “that we are all the
same,” for a “reciprocal respect and even sympathy.” In January 1915, a
French poilu commented as follows on letters he had found on a prisoner:
“The same as on our side. The misery, the desperation, the longing for peace, the monstrous stupidity of this whole thing. The Germans are just as unhappy as we are. They are just as miserable as us.”
This kind of lesson was also learned by physical meetings
with the enemy. What is meant is obviously not hand-to-hand combat,
which was actually far less frequent than we have tended to believe, but
encounters with prisoners of war. About German captives a British
officer reported that “they were pleasant chaps, who generally behaved
like gentlemen.” And in 1916 a Scottish soldier, Joseph Lee, expressed his pity and sympathy for German prisoners as follows:
When first I saw you in the curious street,Like some platoon of soldier ghosts in grey,My mad impulse was all to smite and slay,To spit upon you – tread you ’neath my feet.But when I saw how each sad soul did greetMy gaze with no sign of defiant frown,(…)I knew that we had suffered each as other,And could have grasped your hand and cried, ‘My brother!’
Sympathy for German prisoners was also reflected in the poem “Liedholz,” written by the British officer Herbert Read.
He may have been an officer but he happened to be a convinced
anarchist. Read captured a German named Liedholz, and already before
they reach the British trenches, “werden de versperringen van formele
vijandschap weggenomen,” to use the words of a literary commentator:
Before we reached our wireHe told me he had a wife and three children.In the dug-out we gave him a whiskey.(…)In broken French we discussedBeethoven, Nietzsche and the International.
In “Memoirs of an Infantry Officer,” published in 1930, Siegfried Sassoon
was to write that, during the war, the Germans were generally hated by
British citizens, but not, or certainly far less, by British soldiers.
He himself, he added, “had nothing against them.” Countless French
soldiers likewise failed to develop feelings of hatred with respect to
their German “neighbours on the other side.” “We don’t hate the
Germans,” wrote a poilu in a letter that was intercepted by the censors.
The French soldier Barthas soon felt sympathy for the German
prisoners he escorted on a train travelling from the front to a camp
somewhere in southern France, and who were verbally abused by civilians
in railway stations. He and his comrades shared the wine and the grapes
those same civilians had offered them with their prisoners in a gesture
of camaraderie. “Those who has seen the dreadful realities of war,”
observes Max Hastings, “recoiled from displays of chauvinism.” The
soldiers loathed the civilians, journalists, and politicians who could
or would not understand their miserable fate. Conversely, they found it
impossible to hate a so-called enemy who shared their misery. “The
soldiers of the rival armies felt a far stronger sense of community with
each other than with their peoples at home,” writes Hastings.
The “no man’s land” that separated the armies revealed
itself to be less wide than the gap that separated the soldiers from the
officers of these armies. During the late summer and fall of 1914, two
different wars had thus actually started to ravage Europe. First, a
highly visible “vertical” war, a conflict between groups of countries,
in which all uniformed men of the one side were enemies of all uniformed
men on the other side. Second, below the surface, so to speak: a
“horizontal” war, an explosion of class conflict, a conflict in which
the officers of each army were the enemies of their own subordinates,
while a high degree of solidarity united the ordinary soldiers of both
sides. In the first war, a geographic (or topographic) frontline
separated friend and foe. In the second war, a social gap separated the
antagonists.
In the autumn of 1914,
when on the western front the “war of movement” petered out and gave way
to a “stationary war,” the soldiers discovered that their enemies were
human beings just like themselves, with whom they happened to have a lot
in common. They were overwhelmingly of a lower-class origin and they
all experienced an urgent need to curb the mutual massacre as much as
possible. Practices emerged that have been described as
“live-and-let-live.” For example, the soldiers often deliberately
refrained from firing their weapons, especially during mealtimes, hoping
that the enemy would do the same, as usually turned out to be the case.
When, during such a pause, a mortar did suddenly get fired, a German
voice loudly offered excuses to the British “Tommies,” which prevented
an escalation of the firing. When specific orders arrived from “above”
to open fire, the men deliberately aimed too high, and the enemy did the
same. The artillerists also often opened fire at the same time of the
day, aiming at the same target, this in order to give the enemy a chance
to withdraw to a safe area.
Quiet sectors thus originated along the front, areas where
the casualty rate was noticeably lower than elsewhere. In the vicinity
of Ypres the British and Germans thus agreed to let the men on both
sides sit on the parapet of their muddy and frequently flooded trenches,
in full view of each other, in order to stay dry. Yet another form of
“live-and-let-live” consisted in the conclusion of inofficial
ceasefires, unauthorized by the superiors, after heavy fighting, which
allowed both sides to recuperate the wounded and bury the dead. Those
opportunities were often used to start a conversation with the enemy and
to exchange small presents such as tobacco and insignia, in other
words, to “fraternize.” Occasionally this even involved visits to the
trenches on the other side of no man’s land! A German soldier later
remembered such a pause in the fighting in France toward the end of
November 1914: “French and German soldiers walked around, fully visible
in the bright daylight. Nobody fired their weapons. It was said that
some brave men even visited the enemy trenches.” The same soldier
related how even later, for example in February 1915, “it was silently
agreed to leave each other in peace as much as possible.” And a French
poilu, Gervais Morillon, described in a letter how on December 12, 1914.
Frenchmen and Germans shook hands after unarmed Germans
came out of their trenches, waving a white flag…We reciprocated, and we
visited each other’s trenches and exchanged cigars and cigarets, while a
few hundred metres further they were shooting at each other.
In some sectors such
fraternizations developed into an almost daily routine. In the area of
the town of Pont-à-Mousson French as well as German soldiers started in
November 1914 to fetch water daily at the Fountain of Father Hilarion
(Fontaine du Père Hilarion), a spring situated in a ravine in the middle
of no man’s land. Normally, they took turns to go there, and no shots
were fired while water was being collected. But it frequently came to
meetings and conversations. According to a report that appears to refer
to that site, Frenchmen and Germans exchanged “bread, cheese, and wine,”
ate together, showed each other pictures of wife and children, amused
themselves together, sang songs, played the accordion. That sociability
abruptly ended when, on December 7, heavy fighting erupted in the area.
The soldiers were supposed to hate each other, but
something very different actually happened: on both sides many men,
though admittedly not all, developed a considerable measure of empathy
for, and solidarity with, their counterparts on the other side of the no
man`s land. The outbreak of war had produced an explosion of
nationalism and had dealt a heavy blow to the ideal of internationalist
solidarity among proletarians, exactly as the elite had hoped. But it
now appeared that the vagaries of war caused the uniformed proletarians
to rediscover and re-appreciate internationalist solidarity. The
military elite did not approve. Of the war it was indeed expected that
it would bury internationalism once and for all instead of resurrecting
it. According to Adam Hochschild, such an “outburst of
spontaneous solidarity among ordinary, working-class soldiers…outraged
higher-ups and militarists on both sides.”
` `The ordinary soldiers were keenly aware that their
superiors had their reasons for execrating all forms of
“live-and-let-live,” even though it sometimes proved possible to
persuade or even force them to participate, as we will see later. It is
therefore understandable that these activities often occurred when the
officers were not present, which was often the case in the dangerous
first lines. The fraternizations were immediately aborted whenever it
was signaled that officers were on their way. Barthas describes such an
occurrence that took place in rhe Champagne region in the summer of
1916. The French had to inform the German soldiers with whom they were
socializing that their officers had become suspicious, so that they had
to suspend the meetings. “The Germans were deeply moved and thanked us
cordially. Before they disappeared behind their sandbags, oone of them
lifted his hand and called out: ‘Frenchmen, Germans, soldiers, we are
all comrades!’ Then he made a fist: ‘But the officers, NO.’ “ Barthas commented as follows:
God! That German was right. One should not generalize, but
the majority of the officers were morally farther removed from us than
those poor devils of German soldiers who are being dragged against their
will to the same slaugherhouse.
The officers did indeed
abominate any arrangements reflecting solidarity between their own
subordinates and the “enemy.” Charles De Gaulle, for example, the
progeny of a Catholic bourgeois family in Lille, a young officer during
the First World War, condemned each form of “live-and-let-live” as
“lamentable.” But there were also many ordinary soldiers who did not
approve of such gatherings, since they had internalized the elite’s
nationalist and militarist ethos and thus genuinely hated the enemy.
Hitler was one of them.
The authorities condemned and prohibited all forms of
fraternization and “live-and-let-live” in general. The officers
sometimes put snipers to work when they suspected that fraternizations
“threatened” to take place. However, the spontaneous truces and
fraternizations also reflected the need of all warriors to maintain and
display a semblance of humanity even in the middle of an unprecedently
bestial war. This explains why officers too sometimes chose to
participate. The French soldier Gervais Morillon described how an
officier walked at the head of a group of Germans who came out of their
trenches. Sometimes superiors with a rank as high as that of colonel
participated.
The fact that fraternizations were officially strictly
prohibited, apparently made them even more fascinating and appealing to
soldiers. It is probably thus that we can interpret a myth that enjoyed
an inordinate amount of success among soldiers of both sides throughout
the war. Countless soldiers were convinced that, somewhere in the no
man’s land, in abandoned trenches and preferably deep under the ground,
and thus beyond the reach of projectiles and of officers, beastlike
deserters of all armies dwelled together in a kind of permanent state of
fraternization. By night they would rob the dead and wounded, seek
food, etc. They became such a threat to the troops that eventually the
army brass ordered them to be exterminated with gas. This myth was a
cocktail of many ingredients. It amounted to a modern version of the
Medieval theme of the simultaneously feared and admired “wild man.” But
is was also a commentary of the soldiers on their own beastly existence
in the trenches and a fantasy about disobedience. Last but not least, it
vaguely reflected the soldiers’ solidarity with the men on the other
side of the no man’s land, combined with the ardent desire to wave adieu
to their own superiors and the miserable war. “An anti-establishment
smell was attched to this myth,” writes Tim Cook, it was “a form of
disobedience.” Indeed, the generals could prohibit fraternizations in
the real world, but they proved powerless in the face of such mythical
fraternization – this clearly to the satisfaction of the soldiers who
wished to believe in this myth.
In any event, the
authorities were also unable to prevent the wave of fraternizations that
took place on Christmas Day, 1914. In the vicinity of Ypres, the sector
of the western front that was held from September-October of that year
by the British and became known to them as “Flanders’ Fields,” it
already started on Christmas eve. The Germans decorated trees near their
trenches with burning candles and started to sing Christmas songs such
as Stille Nacht, “Silent Night.” The British reacted by lighting
bonfires and singing English Christmas carols. Then the soldiers on both
sides started to loudly call out Christmas wishes. The Germans arranged
to deliver a chocolate tart to the British, accompanied by an
invitation to conclude a truce. Shortly thereafter soldiers crawled out
of their trenches in order to fraternize in no man’s land and in each
other’s trenches. That sort of thing continued on Christmas Dayitself,
and in some sectors even on Boxing Day. Presents such as tobacco,
whiskey, and cigars were exchanged, and the two sides helped each other
to bury the dead. In the no man’s land a soccer game was also played,
which the British claimed to have won. An English soldier wrote in a
letter that this was “the most remarkable Christmas” he had ever
experienced, and that he “had had the pleasure to shake hands with
numerous Germans,…to smoke together and to enjoy a friendly chat.” A
favourite conversation topic was the madness of ta war of which both
sides had had more than enough.
Between the British and the Germans the unofficial
Christmas truce affected virtually the entire front of approximately
forty kilometers along which they faced each other. In some sectors of
that front the truce dragged on until New Year’s Day. Some historians
claim that the Anglo-German fraternizations of the end of December 1914
were nothing less than “massive.” But on Christmas Day similar truces
and fraternizations also occurred between the Germans and the French.
Barthas confided to his diary that, in their sector, the morning of
Christmas witnessed “singing and shouting and the firing of flares” and
that no shots were fired. And it is known that poilus met boches to sing
and exchange tobacco, cognac, postcards, newspapers, and other presents
in the vicinity of Soissons and in villages of Picardy such as Cappy
and Foucaucourt. A poilu later remembered that
The boches signalled us and indicated that they wanted to
talk to us. I approached to three or four meters from their trench in
order to talk to three of them who had surfaced…They asked that we would
refrain all day and night from shooting and said that they themselves
would not fire one single shot. They had enough of the war, they said,
they were married and had nothing against the French, only against the
English. They gave me a box of cigars and a package of sigarets, and I
gave them a copy of [the magazine] Le Petit Parisien in exchange for a
German newspaper. Then I withdrew to the French trench, where many men
were keen to try my German tobacco. Our neighbours on the other side
kept their word, even better than we did. Not even one single rifle shot
was fired.
There were many other
sites along the front where groups of French soldiers visited the German
trenches in order to enjoy a drink, or where Germans came to offer
cigars to the Franzosen. Christmas carols were performed in both
languages, for example Minuit chrétien and O Tannenbaum. Belgians and
Germans, who faced each other in the lowlands of the Yser River estuary,
allegedly also fraternized on Christmas 1914. The Germans agreed to
mail letters from Belgian soldiers to family members in occupied
Belgium. At the eastern front it also came to fraternizations. The
Russians met their Austrian-Hungarian enemies in the no man’s land in
Galicia and exchanged the usual tobacco, but also schnapps, bread, and
meat.
The superiors were far from enchanged with the Christmas
truces, but could not prevent them. On the British side an officer
rushed to the scene with this intention, apparantly from the safety of
the rear, but he arrived too late. His men had already started to
socialize with Germans in the no man’s land. He could only resign
himself to the fait accompli. He himself and a handful of other officers
ended up joining their subordinates and went to greet the German
officiers. One of the latter ordered beer to be fetched for everyone,
and the officers courteously drank to each other’s health. A British
officer reciprocated by treating those present with pieces of a
traditional English plum pudding. It was finally agreed that the
inofficial truce would last until midnight, so that everyoone would have
to be back in their own trenches by midnight. The “damage” done by the
fraternizations, at least from the viewpoint of the superiors, was thus
limited somewhat, at least in that sector.
The higher the rank of the superiors, the less they liked
this strange Christmas idyll. The British commander in chief, Generaal
French, who on Christmas Day enjoyed a gourmet dinner, featuring turtle
soup, with as digestif a brandy from 1820 offered by the Rotschilds,
issued a specific order to nip in the bud any future attempts to
fraternize. One year later, the artillery would be made to fire into no
man’s land all day, starting on Christmas Eve, in order to prevent any
meetings there. However, it proved impossible to prevent fraternizations
to occur here and there and from time to time.
In the 1980s, the strange events of Christmas 1914 inspired
the song Christmas in the Trenches, 1914, written and put to music by
the American folksinger John McCutcheon. It features the following
lines:
’T was Christmas in the trenches where the frost so bitter hung,The frozen fields of France were still, no Christmas song was sung,Our families back in England were toasting us that day,Their brave and glorious lads so far away.(…)There’s someone coming towards us!’ the front line sentry criedAll sights were fixed on one lone figure coming from their sideHis truce flag, like a Christmas star, shone on that plain so bright
As he bravely strode unarmed into the night.Soon one by one on either side walked into No Man’s landWith neither gun nor bayonet we met there hand to handWe shared some secret brandy and we wished each other wellAnd in a flare-lit soccer game we gave ’em hell.We traded chocolates, cigarettes, and photographs from homeThese sons and fathers far away from families of their ownYoung Sanders played his squeeze box and they had a violinThis curious and unlikely band of men.(…)’T was Christmas in the trenches, where the frost so bitter hungThe frozen fields of France were warmed as songs of peace were sungFor the walls they’d kept between us to exact the work of warHad been crumbled and were gone for evermore.My name is Francis Tolliver, in Liverpool I dwellEach Christmas come since World War I I’ve learned its lessons wellThat the ones who call the shots won’t be among the dead and lameAnd on each end of the rifle we’re the same.
Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/world-war-i-the-1914-christmas-truce/5421076
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