NAZIS IN OUR MIDST:
German-Australians, Internment and the Second World War
DAVID HENDERSON
Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2016, 197 pages
Review by Phil Shannon
Australia’s then conservative Prime Minister, Robert Menzies,
said that it would be “absurd to intern refugees and anti-fascists when they
were on the Allies’ side” but, writes La Trobe University historian, David
Henderson, in his case-study history, Nazis
in our Midst, this is exactly what happened in Australia during World War
11 as German Jews and anti-Nazis were detained along with Nazis in Australia’s
five internment camps. Most of the 1,500
German-Australian internees were the innocent victims of racial prejudice or
espionage hysteria simply because they were German.
Military intelligence justified blanket internment because
they saw refugees as ‘excellent cover for agents’ or as susceptible to
blackmail by Hitler’s Nazi regime threatening their relatives in Germany. The Australian press was vigorously
pro-internment - ‘this is no time for squeamishness in dealing with foreigners
in our midst’, honked the Hobart Mercury,
for example.
Both the Menzies and Labor governments used broad internment
powers to respond to a public sentiment that had reanimated latent World War 1
Germanophobia with paranoia about Nazi fifth columnists. In this toxic atmosphere, the wildest
denunciations about disloyalty were treated by the security agencies as good
coin, including gossip, rumour, personal animosities, conflicts between
neighbours, professional rivalries, even a fondness for German music composers.
Appeals tribunals offered scant scope for remedy. These quasi-judicial bodies had a legal
veneer but the hearings were held in secret, specific allegations by (mostly
anonymous) informants were not disclosed and could therefore not be tested under
the usual rules of evidence, a presumption of guilt applied to the internee,
and judges could only make non-enforceable recommendations to the
Attorney-General for an internee’s release.
The appeals process was “at best an unequal struggle, at
worst a sham”, says Henderson, noting the discrepancy between a war ostensibly
fought for liberty, democracy and the rule of law versus the legal-face-saving
travesties of justice that accompanied internment.
The outcomes for those unjustly interned (years of monotony,
morning roll calls, weather extremes, overcrowding, social stigma and long-term
“damage, trauma and loss”) were vastly disproportionate to any actual domestic Nazi
threat. There were fewer than a couple
of hundred full-blown German Nazis in Australia, whilst any nationalist
hankering for Germany amongst Anglicised German immigrants was largely sentimental
nostalgia.
No matter how diligently the Auslandsorganisation (the foreign arm of the German Nazi party) cultivated
recruits from Germans living in Australia, their returns were meagre. The Nazis’ takeover of Australia’s German
Clubs (including celebrations of the Führer’s birthday and Hitler’s beer-hall
putsch, swastika flag-flying and Nazi salutes) yielded few political gains
amongst the Club membership, although the visible display of Nazi rituals and propaganda
mistakenly fed suspicions amongst Australian authorities that German-Australian
communities were “outposts of the Third Reich”.
They weren’t. No German-Australian
internee was ever convicted of espionage or sabotage, whilst only 77 internees
were deported after the war.
Henderson generally strives for non-committal ‘balance’ in
his treatment of internment but he does bloody his knuckles against historians
who suggest that the Australian security agencies’ obsession with the Red
Menace rather than fascism led to a rushed implementation of dragnet internment
of Nazis which also netted the innocent.
Henderson’s message is clear - beware governments who grant
themselves broad, sweeping powers and ask us to trust that they will not abuse
them, he says. The political temptation
to be seen to be doing something muscular at the time of a ‘national security’
crisis will almost certainly result in harmful overreaction.
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