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Chapter 11
Displaced Persons, Allies, and Germans
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Occupation and the Emergence of Two States (1945-1961)
Chapter (11/28)
Sources
“Displaced Persons” (DPs) Take Part in a Flag Ceremony (1945)
The First Refugees Arrive at the Zeilsheim Camp (1945)
A DP Camp in Wetzlar (June 1945)
The Harrison Report (September 1945)
Refugees in Transit in Ulm (September 1945)
Camp for “Displaced Persons” from the Soviet Union (1945-46)
British Soldiers in Front of the Bergen-Belsen DP Camp (1945-46)
Alfred Döblin on the German Population (1946)
Children’s Tracing Services: A Success Story (1946)
Wedding in the Heidenheim Camp (1946)
Math Lessons in the Camp (1945-48)
Working on the Camp Newsletter “Unterwegs” (1945-48)
Preparation of Matzah for Passover (c. 1947)
Memorial for Victims of the Holocaust (1947)
Jewish Displaced Persons Leave Munich on Trains Bound for France (1948)
The City Director of Haltern on the Housing of Displaced Persons (December 16, 1946)
Residents of the Kabel Neighborhood of Hagen to the State Government of North Rhine-Westphalia: Request for the Vacation of Residences Confiscated for Displaced Persons (January 2, 1947)
Marion Gräfin Dönhoff, “People on the Train” (September 18, 1947)
Newspaper Commentary, “Where Clay is Wrong” (October 5, 1948)
Ulrich Scheuner, Remarks on the Legal Status of “Displaced Persons” in Germany (December 14–15, 1948)
Repression and Flight Movements from East to West Germany
Scarcity and Moral Uncertainty in Occupied Germany