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Howard J. Romanek
Main Ideas
Connection with the Curriculum
Teaching Level
Materials for Each Student
• A copy of this article's narrative portion
Objectives for Each Student
• Decide if there should be limits on how a war may be conducted by a government and its soldiers.
The student should be assigned the article to read several days before any of these activities are done in class. Each handout is designed for a single class period. Many follow-up assignments are possible for each handout.
Opening the Lesson
Developing the Lesson
Concluding the Lesson
Extending the Lesson
The students may also interview or invite to the classroom veterans of World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the Persian Gulf War. If the class is studying the Civil War, a visit by a Confederate and Union reenactor may be a worthwhile experience.
Assessing the Lesson
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In earlier periods of history, the victorious forces in a war often gave no thought of treating the enemy with compassion after the battle or of sparing civilians on the losing side. If the captives were not killed, they were often made slaves. The practice of ransoming captured leaders developed during the Middle Ages. It was not until the seventeenth century that some scholars suggested that captives should be treated as innocent victims. Because of the cruelty of the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) in Europe, a debate began on whether it was possible to limit the devastation of war. The idea that warfare should be brought under the rule of law was not really accepted by governments and the military until the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries. After American independence, the U.S. government included in its treaties the humane treatment of prisoners. Early in the Civil War, many people consulted one of the major works on the laws of war, The Laws of Nation, written by the Swiss jurist Emmerich de Vattel in 1758. One hundred years later, in May 1861, another book on the laws of war was published. The author was Henry Wager Halleck, who became General-in-Chief of the Union Armies in July 1862. In 1874 fifteen European nations met in Brussels to try to create regulations that would guarantee better treatment of prisoners. Conferences followed at the Hague in 1899 and 1907, and at Geneva in 1929 and 1940. Their goal was civilized treatment of prisoners and civilians. At the Hague Convention of 1907 there was also an attempt to regulate the weapons used in warfare. In 1945 twenty-two top German officials were tried as war criminals at Nuremberg. In 1946 the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the conviction of General Yamashira, who was sentenced to death for his failure to restrain his troops from committing war crimes against civilians. Questions:
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According to the narrative portion of this article, "both North and South had gone to war with an idealized version of war and the warrior." What is the reality of warfare? What does the warrior experience? Paul Fussel, an infantry officer during World War II, argues that in many wars the homefront never learns the truth about the warfare. Fussel wrote of his experience as a warrior in 'The Real War, 1939-1945," The Atlantic Monthly, 264:2 (August 1989):
There was a blinding flash a few yards in front of me. I had no idea of what it was and fell flat on my face. I found out soon enough; a number of the infantry were carrying mines strapped to the small of their backs, and either a rifle or machine gun bullet had struck one, which had exploded, blowing the man into three pieces—two legs and a head and chest. His inside was strewn on the hillside and I crawled into it in the darkness, (p. 35). Besides being wounded or observing death, a World War II soldier could experience malaria, dengue, blackwater fever, dysentery, pneumonia, and trench foot. Questions:
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Faces of the Enemy by Sam Keen raises a number of questions. Why is there a tendency to dehumanize the enemy? Why are human beings from the other side often turned into an abstraction? Is this the only way to get ordinary people to kill the enemy? In Ordinary Men: Reserve Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, author Christopher R. Browning examines a group of five hundred policemen, mainly from Hamburg, who participated in the shootings or the transport to the concentration camp at Treblinka of approximately eighty-three thousand Jews. Browning argues that it was easier for many of these policemen to kill Jews because Jews had been portrayed as not really being human beings and because Jews were held responsible for the bombing deaths of German women and children. Also, many of these policemen said that they were not responsible; they were only following orders of a superior and ultimately the orders of the leaders of the German state. However, not all soldiers will participate in committing atrocities against innocent people. Watch the film "Joseph Schultz," a true story about a German enlisted man. Schultz, a member of the 714th Wehracht Division, fought in Yugoslavia in 1941. After destroying a Yugoslav village, he was ordered to join a firing squad to execute a group of innocent blindfolded hostages. He refused, and he was executed along with the hostages on July 19, 1941. Included in the filmed reenactment of that day are photos taken by an officer. Questions:
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