Rhineland bastard (German:Rheinlandbastard) was a derogatory term used inNazi Germany to describeAfro-Germans,born of mixed-race relationships between German women and black African men of the French Army who were stationed in theRhineland duringits occupation by France afterWorld War I.
After 1933, underNazi racial theories, Afro-Germans deemed to beRheinlandbastarde were persecuted. They were rounded up in a campaign ofcompulsory sterilization.[1]
The term "Rhineland bastard" can be traced to 1919, just after World War I, whenEntente troops, most of them French, occupied theRhineland.[2] The British historianRichard J. Evans suggests the number ofmixed-race children among them was not more than five or six hundred.[3]
All World War I belligerents with colonial possessions went to great lengths to recruit soldiers from their colonies. Germany was the only one of theCentral Powers with substantial overseas possessions; it used numerous non-white troops to defend its colonies. Regardless of German attitudes toward the indigenous inhabitants of German colonies, Germany's lack of control of the sea lanes would have made it nearly impossible for the German Army to bring any substantial number of colonial troops to European battlefields. Notwithstanding the exact circumstances, most Germans quickly came to view non-white Allied troops with disdain and were contemptuous of the Allies' willingness to use these troops in Europe.[citation needed]
Germans across the political spectrum regarded the occupation as a national disgrace. Many considered all forms ofcollaboration andfraternization with the occupiers as immoral (if not illegal)treason. From the spring of 1920 onward, German newspapers frequently ran stories about the alleged "Black Horror on the Rhine", accusingSenegalese soldiers of routinely gang-raping thousands of German women and girls on a daily basis.[4] In the popular 1921 novelDie Schwarze Schmach: Der Roman des geschändeten Deutschlands (The Black Shame A Novel of Disgraced Germany) by Guido Kreutzer, he wrote that all mixed race children born in the Rhineland are born "physically and morally degenerate" and are not German at all.[5] Kreutzer also declared that the mothers of these children ceased to be German the moment they had sex with non-white men, and they could never join theVolksgemeinschaft.[5]
As Germans considered the occupation to be carried out by "B-grade" troops (a notion that was drawn from colonial and racial stereotypes), their humiliation was heightened, increasing hostility toward the women and children in these unions.[6] In May 1920, the foreign minister of the new German government lodged a protest to his French counterpart stating that "we will accept the inferior discipline amongst your white troops if you will only rid us as fast as possible of this black plague".[7]
In the Rhineland itself, local opinion of the troops has been argued to have been different. The soldiers were described as "courteous and often popular", possibly because French colonial soldiers harbored less ill-will towards Germans than war-weary French occupiers.[8]
In his bookMein Kampf,Adolf Hitler described children resulting from any kind of relationship to African occupation soldiers as a contamination of the white race "by Negro blood on the Rhine in the heart of Europe."[9] He thought that "Jews were responsible for bringing Negroes into the Rhineland, with the ultimate idea of bastardizing the white race which they hate and thus lowering its cultural and political level so that the Jew might dominate."[10] He also implied that this was a plot on the part of the French, since the population of France was being increasingly "negrified".[11]
Most of the tinymultiracial population in Germany at that time were children of German settlers andmissionaries in the formerGerman colonies inAfrica andMelanesia, who had married local women or had children with themout of wedlock. With the loss of theGerman colonial empire afterWorld War I, some of these colonists returned to Germany with their mixed-race families.[3] While the black population ofNazi Germany was small – 20–25,000 in a population of over 65 million[12] – the Nazis decided to take action against those in the Rhineland. They despised black culture, which they considered inferior, and sought to prohibit "traditionally black" musical genres such as Americanjazz as being "corruptnegro music".[13] No official laws were enacted against the black population, or against the children of mixed parentage, as they were born from marriages and informal unions that preceded theNuremberg laws of September 1935. The latter prohibited "miscegenation". However, future sexual relations and"mixed marriages", between so-called "Aryans" and "non-Aryans" were banned. In addition, persons of mixed parentage were deprived completely of the right to marry.
The government established theSonder Kommission Nr.3 ("Special Commission 3") and appointedEugen Fischer, of theKaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics, to head it. He was tasked with preventing procreation and reproduction by Rhineland bastards. It was decided that anyone so deemed would be sterilized under the 1933Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring.[1]
The program began in 1937, when local officials were asked to identify all Rhineland bastards under their jurisdiction.[1] All together, some 800 children of mixed parentage were arrested and sterilized. According to Susan Samples, the Nazis went to great lengths to conceal their sterilization and abortion program.[1]