Everybody had come out of the war with somebody to hate, we should
hate ourselves as humans who claim to such superiority in who we are but
are barbaric and animalistic to the core.
Humiliated: Her head shaved by angry neighbors, a tearful Corsican woman is stripped naked and taunted for consorting with German soldiers during their occupation.
Humiliated: Her head shaved by angry neighbors, a tearful Corsican woman is stripped naked and taunted for consorting with German soldiers during their occupation.
The truth is that World War
II, which we remember as a great moral campaign, had wreaked
incalculable damage on Europe’s ethical sensibilities. And in the
desperate struggle for survival, many people would do whatever it took
to get food and shelter.
In Allied-occupied
Naples, the writer Norman Lewis watched as local women, their faces
identifying them as ‘ordinary well-washed respectable shopping and
gossiping housewives’, lined up to sell themselves to young American GIs
for a few tins of food.
Another observer, the
war correspondent Alan Moorehead, wrote that he had seen ‘the moral
collapse’ of the Italian people, who had lost all pride in their ‘animal
struggle for existence’.
Amid the trauma of
war and occupation, the bounds of sexual decency had simply collapsed.
In Holland one American soldier was propositioned by a 12-year-old girl.
In Hungary scores of 13-year-old girls were admitted to hospital with
venereal disease; in Greece, doctors treated VD-infected girls as young
as ten.
What was more, even in those countries
liberated by the British and Americans, a deep tide of hatred swept
through national life.
In northern Italy, some 20,000 people were summarily murdered by their own countrymen in the last weeks of the war.
And
in French town squares, women accused of sleeping with German soldiers
were stripped and shaved, their breasts marked with swastikas while mobs
of men stood and laughed. Yet even today, many Frenchmen pretend these
appalling scenes never happened.



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