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World War IImage:Guerre 14-18-Humour-L'ingordo, trop dur-1915.JPG French Propaganda Postcard from World War I era showing a caricature of Kaiser Wilhelm II biting the world During World War I, in many countries, propaganda attempted to dehumanize the German enemy. The Germans were depicted as Huns capable of infinite cruelty and violence.
When Australia, Canada, and the United States entered the war, some German immigrants were looked upon with suspicion and attacked regarding their loyalty. Some German immigrants in America were even tried, convicted and imprisoned, on charges of sedition, merely for refusing to swear allegiance to the American war effort.[4] Anti-German tension culminated in the killing of German-born immigrant Robert Prager, a coal miner living in Collinsville, Illinois, on April 4, 1918. Anti-German sentiment may have been stoked by the 1916 German saboteur bombing of Black Tom island.[5] In England, anti-German sentiment was so severe that the ruling House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha became the House of Windsor, Battenberg became Mountbatten and the German Shepherd was renamed the Alsatian. In New Orleans, Berlin St. was renamed for General Pershing (head of the Allied Expeditionary Force) and sauerkraut came to be called (by some) Liberty Cabbage. In Canada, the Ontario town of Berlin changed its name to Kitchener, Ontario, after the British military hero pictured on the famous "I want YOU!" recruiting poster. Anti-German sentiment due to World War IIMuch current anti-German sentiment is related to World War II. Anti-German sentiment was particularly strong in countries that were at war with Germany and its allies during WWII. As a result of the devastating consequences of the war, anti-German sentiment was widespread and strong after WWII. American General George S. Patton complained that the U.S. policy of denazification following Germany's surrender harmed American interests and was motivated simply by hatred of the defeated German people.
Although views fluctuate somewhat in response to geopolitical issues (such as the invasion of Iraq), Americans regard modern Germany as an ally[6] and anti-German sentiments are held by few Americans. In Poland and some other east European countries wartime memories still revive tensions.[7] European continental relations regarding contemporary EuropeAfter the separation into two countries following World War II, West Germany generally had good relationships with its western neighboring states, as did East Germany with its eastern neighbors. Many of these relationships continued after the end of the Cold War with the unified Germany. West Germany was a co-founder of the European Union and the reunified Germany continues as a leading member. Germany has a strong relationship with France, which had been a major enemy for quite some time, especially during the 19th century that saw Napoleon's invasion and the Franco-Prussian War. World War I represents the peak of ethnic hostility, even though the two countries were enemies in early World War II. Anti-German sentiment has endured in some countries, particularly Poland. Anti-Germanism is heavily rooted in Polish popularized perceptions of its western neighbors, dating back to the Teutonic Order.[citation needed] Tensions had only increased with the rise of nationalism and events such as the three partitions of Poland, germanization in the 19th and 20th centuries, and unfortunate pre-World War II situations. Germany's invasion of Poland in 1939, controversies such as Bloody Sunday and the Polish experience until 1945 have only contributed to sentiments, as has bitterness over finalized borders. Germano-Polish relations have also been damaged more recently: the Poles are suspicious of the campaign by Germans expelled by Poland following the Second World War to seek reparation for their lost property; in addition, the proposed Russo-German pipeline through the Baltic Sea, which would undermine Poland's ability to negotiate with Russia over energy supplies, was described as a new Molotov-Ribbentrop pact by members of the Polish government. Against this, German analysts have accused the Kaczyński twins of stoking up popular anti-German sentiment in order to secure the survival of their government. [2] Germans sometimes complain of stereotypical associations of them with acts and a regime of more than sixty years ago, such as the use of anti-German sentiment in headlines by parts of the British press, recent examples arising when German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI. "British public people, whether journalists or politicians, are more prepared to demonise the Germans than any other people I know are prepared to vilify any other nation I have heard of, with the possible exception of Arabs and Jews."Hugo Young (The Guardian) [8] References
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