
The
Christmas Truce, which occurred primarily between the British and
German soldiers along the Western Front in December 1914, is an event
the official histories of the "Great War" leave out, and the Orwellian
historians hide from the public. Stanley Weintraub has broken through
this barrier of silence and written a moving account of this
significant event by compiling letters sent home from the front, as
well as diaries of the soldiers involved. His book is entitled Silent Night: The Story of the World War I Christmas Truce.
The book contains many pictures of the actual events showing the
opposing forces mixing and celebrating together that first Christmas of
the war. This remarkable story begins to unfold, according to
Weintraub, on the morning of December 19, 1914:
"Lieutenant Geoffrey Heinekey, new to the 2nd Queen's Westminister
Rifles, wrote to his mother, 'A most extraordinary thing happened. . .
. Some Germans came out and held up their hands and began to take
in some of their wounded and so we ourselves immediately got out of our
trenches and began bringing in our wounded also. The Germans then
beckoned to us and a lot of us went over and talked to them and they
helped us to bury our dead. This lasted the whole morning and I talked
to several of them and I must say they seemed extraordinarily fine men.
. . . It seemed too ironical for words. There, the night before we
had been having a terrific battle and the morning after, there we were
smoking their cigarettes and they smoking ours." (p. 5)
Weintraub reports that the French and Belgians reacted differently
to the war and with more emotion than the British in the beginning. The
war was occurring on their land and "The French had lived in an
atmosphere of revanche since 1870, when Alsace and Lorraine
were seized by the Prussians" in a war declared by the French (p. 4).
The British and German soldiers, however, saw little meaning in the war
as to them, and, after all, the British King and the German Kaiser were
both grandsons of Queen Victoria. Why should the Germans and British be
at war, or hating each other, because a royal couple from Austria were
killed by an assassin while they were visiting in Serbia? However,
since August when the war started, hundreds of thousands of soldiers
had been killed, wounded or missing by December 1914 (p. xvi).
It is estimated that over eighty thousand young Germans had gone to
England before the war to be employed in such jobs as waiters, cooks,
and cab drivers and many spoke English very well. It appears that the
Germans were the instigators of this move towards a truce. So much
interchange had occurred across the lines by the time that Christmas
Eve approached that Brigadier General G.T. Forrestier-Walker issued a
directive forbidding fraternization:
"For it discourages initiative in commanders, and destroys offensive
spirit in all ranks. . . . Friendly intercourse with the enemy,
unofficial armistices and exchange of tobacco and other comforts,
however tempting and occasionally amusing they may be, are absolutely
prohibited." (p. 6–7)
Later strict orders were issued that any fraternization would result
in a court-martial. Most of the seasoned German soldiers had been sent
to the Russian front while the youthful and somewhat untrained Germans,
who were recruited first, or quickly volunteered, were sent to the
Western Front at the beginning of the war. Likewise, in England young
men rushed to join in the war for the personal glory they thought they
might achieve and many were afraid the war might end before they could
get to the front. They had no idea this war would become one of
attrition and conscription or that it would set the trend for the whole
20th century, the bloodiest in history which became known as the War
and Welfare Century.
As night fell on Christmas Eve the British soldiers noticed the
Germans putting up small Christmas trees along with candles at the top
of their trenches and many began to shout in English "We no shoot if
you no shoot"(p. 25). The firing stopped along the many miles of the
trenches and the British began to notice that the Germans were coming
out of the trenches toward the British who responded by coming out to
meet them. They mixed and mingled in No Man's Land and soon began to
exchange chocolates for cigars and various newspaper accounts of the
war which contained the propaganda from their respective homelands.
Many of the officers on each side attempted to prevent the event from
occurring but the soldiers ignored the risk of a court-martial or of
being shot.
Some of the meetings reported in diaries were between Anglo-Saxons
and German Saxons and the Germans joked that they should join together
and fight the Prussians. The massive amount of fraternization, or maybe
just the Christmas spirit, deterred the officers from taking action and
many of them began to go out into No Man's Land and exchange Christmas
greetings with their opposing officers. Each side helped bury their
dead and remove the wounded so that by Christmas morning there was a
large open area about as wide as the size of two football fields
separating the opposing trenches. The soldiers emerged again on
Christmas morning and began singing Christmas carols, especially
"Silent Night." They recited the 23rd Psalm together and played soccer
and football. Again, Christmas gifts were exchanged and meals were
prepared openly and attended by the opposing forces. Weintraub quotes
one soldier's observation of the event: "Never . . . was I so
keenly aware of the insanity of war" (p. 33).
The first official British history of the war came out in 1926 which
indicated that the Christmas Truce was a very insignificant matter with
only a few people involved. However, Weintraub states:
"During a House of Commons debate on March 31, 1930, Sir H. Kinglsey
Wood, a Cabinet Minister during the next war, and a Major 'In the front
trenches' at Christmas 1914, recalled that he 'took part in what was
well known at the time as a truce. We went over in front of the
trenches and shook hands with many of our German enemies. A great
number of people [now] think we did something that was degrading.'
Refusing to presume that, he went on, 'The fact is that we did it, and
I then came to the conclusion that I have held very firmly ever since,
that if we had been left to ourselves there would never have been
another shot fired. For a fortnight the truce went on. We were on the
most friendly terms, and it was only the fact that we were being
controlled by others that made it necessary for us to start trying to
shoot one another again.' He blamed the resumption of the war on 'the
grip of the political system which was bad, and I and others who were
there at the time determined there and then never to rest. . .
. Until we had seen whether we could change it.' But they could
not." (p. 169–70)
Beginning with the French Revolution, one of the main ideas coming
out of the 19th century, which became dominant at the beginning of the
20th century, was nationalism with unrestrained democracy. In contrast,
the ideas which led to the American Revolution were those of a
federation of sovereign states joined together under the Constitution
which severely limited and separated the powers of the national or
central government in order to protect individual liberty. National
democracy was restrained by a Bill of Rights. These ideas came into
direct conflict with the beginning of the American War Between the
States out of which nationalism emerged victorious. A principal idea of
nationalism was that the individual owed a duty of self-sacrifice to
"The Greater Good" of his nation and that the noblest act a person
could do was to give his life for his country during a war, which
would, in turn, bring him immortal fame.
Two soldiers, one British and one German, both experienced the
horrors of the trench warfare in the Great War and both wrote moving
accounts which challenged the idea of the glory of a sacrifice of the
individual to the nation in an unnecessary or unjust war. The British
soldier, Wilfred Owen, wrote a famous poem before he was killed in the
trenches seven days before the Armistice was signed on November 11,
1918. He tells of the horror of the gas warfare which killed many in
the trenches and ends with the following lines:
If in some smothering dreams you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues —
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.[1]
The German soldier was Erich M. Remarque who wrote one of the best anti-war novels of all time, entitled All Quiet On The Western Front,
which was later made into an American movie that won the 1930 Academy
Award for Best Picture. He also attacked the idea of the nobility of
dying for your country in a war and he describes the suffering in the
trenches:
"We see men living with their skulls blown open; We see soldiers run
with their two feet cut off; They stagger on their splintered stumps
into the next shell-hole; A lance corporal crawls a mile and half on
his hands dragging his smashed knee after him; Another goes to the
dressing station and over his clasped hands bulge his intestines; We
see men without mouths, without jaws, without faces; We find one man
who has held the artery of his arm in his teeth for two hours in order
not to bleed to death."
I would imagine that the Christmas Truce probably inspired the
English novelist and poet, Thomas Hardy, to write a poem about World
War I entitled "The Man He Killed," which reads as follows:
Had he and I but met
By some old ancient inn,
We should have sat us down to wet
Right many a nipperkin!
But ranged as infantry,
And staring face to face,
I shot at him as he at me,
And killed him in his place.
I shot him dead because —
Because he was my foe,
Just so: my foe of course he was;
That's clear enough; although
He thought he'd 'list, perhaps,
Off-hand like — just as I —
Was out of work — had sold his traps —
No other reason why.
Yes, quaint and curious war is!
You shoot a fellow down
You'd treat if met where any bar is,
Or help to half-a-crown.
The last chapter of Weintraub's book is entitled "What If — ?" This
is counterfactual history at its best and he sets out what he believes
the rest of the 20th century would have been like if the soldiers had
been able to cause the Christmas Truce of 1914 to stop the war at that
point. Like many other historians, he believes that with an early end
of the war in December of 1914, there probably would have been no
Russian Revolution, no Communism, no Lenin, and no Stalin. Furthermore,
there would have been no vicious peace imposed on Germany by the
Versailles Treaty, and therefore, no Hitler, no Nazism and no World War
II. With the early truce there would have been no entry of America into
the European War and America might have had a chance to remain, or
return, to being a Republic rather than moving toward World War II, the
"Cold" War (Korea and Vietnam), and our present status as the world
bully.
Weintraub states that:
". . . Franklin D. Roosevelt, only an obscure assistant
secretary of the navy — of a fleet going nowhere militarily — would
have returned to a boring law practice, and never have been the losing
but attractive vice presidential candidate in 1920, a role earned by
his war visibility. Wilson, who would not be campaigning for reelection
in 1916 on a platform that he kept America out of war, would have lost
(he only won narrowly) to a powerful new Republican president, Charles
Evans Hughes. . . ." (p. 167)
He also suggests another result of the early peace:
"Germany in peace rather than war would have become the dominant
nation in Europe, possibly in the world, competitor to a more slowly
awakening America, and to an increasingly ambitious and militant Japan.
No Wilsonian League of Nations would have emerged. . . . Yet, a
relatively benign, German-led, Commonwealth of Europe might have
developed decades earlier than the European Community under leaders not
destroyed in the war or its aftermath." (p. 167)
Many leaders of the British Empire saw the new nationalistic Germany
(since 1870–71) as a threat to their world trade, especially with
Germany's new navy. The idea that economics played a major role in
bringing on the war was confirmed by President Woodrow Wilson after the
war in a speech wherein he gave his assessment of the real cause of the
war. He was campaigning in St. Louis, Missouri in September of 1919
trying to get the US Senate to approve the Versailles Treaty and he
stated:
"Why, my fellow-citizens, is there [anyone] here who does not know
that the seed of war in the modern world is industrial and commercial
rivalry? . . . This war, in its inception, was a commercial
and industrial war. It was not a political war."
The great economist, Ludwig von Mises, advocated a separation of the
economy from the government as one important solution to war so that
business interests could not get government assistance in foreign or
domestic markets:
Durable peace is only possible under perfect capitalism, hitherto
never and nowhere completely tried or achieved. In such a Jeffersonian
world of unhampered market economy the scope of government activities
is limited to the protection of the lives, health, and property of
individuals against violence or fraudulent aggression. . . .
All the oratory of the advocates of government omnipotence cannot
annul the fact that there is but one system that makes for durable
peace: A free market economy. Government control leads to economic
nationalism and thus results in conflict.[2]
Weintraub alludes to a play by William Douglas Home entitled A Christmas Truce
wherein characters representing British and German soldiers have just
finished a soccer game in No Man's Land on Christmas day and are
engaged in a conversation which very well could represent the feelings
of the soldiers on that day. The German lieutenant concedes the
impossibility of the war ending as the soccer game had just done, with
no bad consequences — "Because the Kaiser and the generals and the
politicians in my country order us that we fight."
"So do ours," agrees Andrew Wilson (the British soldier).
"Then what can we do?"
"The answer's 'nothing.' But if we do nothing . . . like we're
doing now, and go on doing it, there'll be nothing they can do but send
us home."
"Or shoot us." (p. 110)
The Great War killed over ten million soldiers and Weintraub states,
"Following the final Armistice came an imposed peace in 1919 that
created new instabilities ensuring another war," (p. 174). This next
war killed more than fifty million people, over half of whom were
civilians. Weintruab writes:
"To many, the end of the war and the failure of the peace would
validate the Christmas cease-fire as the only meaningful episode in the
apocalypse. It belied the bellicose slogans and suggested that the men
fighting and often dying were, as usual, proxies for governments and
issues that had little to do with their everyday lives. A candle lit in
the darkness of Flanders, the truce flickered briefly and survives only
in memoirs, letters, song, drama and story." (p. xvi)
He concludes his remarkable book with the following:
"A celebration of the human spirit, the Christmas Truce remains a
moving manifestation of the absurdities of war. A very minor Scottish
poet of Great War vintage, Frederick Niven, may have got it right in
his 'A Carol from Flanders,' which closed,
O ye who read this truthful rime From Flanders, kneel and say:
God speed the time when every day
Shall be as Christmas Day. (p. 175)
John V. Denson is the editor of two books: The Costs of War and Reassessing the Presidency. Send him mail. Discuss this article in the blog.
1. The
Latin phrase is translated roughly as "It is sweet and honorable to die
for one's country," a line from the Roman poet Horace used to produce
patriotic zeal for ancient Roman wars.
2. Omnipotent Government: The Rise of the Total State and Total War, pp. 284 and 286.