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Federation of Expellees
Federation of Expellees
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The Federation of Expellees (German: Bund der Vertriebenen; BdV) is a non-profit organization formed in West Germany on 27 October 1957 to represent the interests of German nationals of all ethnicities and foreign ethnic Germans and their families (usually naturalised as German nationals after 1949) who either fled their homes in parts of Central and Eastern Europe, or were forcibly expelled following World War II.

Key Information

Since 2014 the president of the Federation has been Bernd Fabritius, who arrived in West Germany in 1984 as a Transylvanian Saxon refugee from Agnita, Socialist Republic of Romania, and who has since been elected as a Christian Social Union in Bavaria Member of the Bundestag.

History

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It is estimated that in the aftermath of World War II between 13 and 16 million ethnic Germans fled or were expelled from parts of Central and Eastern Europe, including the former eastern territories of Germany (parts of present-day Poland), the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, Croatia, Serbia (mostly from the Vojvodina region), the Kaliningrad Oblast of (now) Russia, hitherto USSR (in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War) and prior to this, the northern part of East Prussia, Lithuania, Romania and other East European countries.

Charter of the German Expellees

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The Charter of the German Expellees (German: Charta der deutschen Heimatvertriebenen) of 5 August 1950, announced their belief in requiring that "the right to the homeland is recognized and carried out as one of the fundamental rights of mankind given by God", while renouncing revenge and retaliation in the face of the "unending suffering" (unendliche Leid) of the previous decade, and supporting the unified effort to rebuild Germany and Europe.

The charter has been criticised for avoiding mentioning Nazi atrocities of Second World War and Germans who were forced to emigrate due to Nazi repressions.[1] Critics argue that the Charter presents the history of German people as starting from the expulsions, while ignoring events like the Holocaust.

Professor Micha Brumlik pointed out that one third of signatories were former devoted Nazis and many actively helped in realisation of Hitler's goals.

Ralph Giordano wrote in Hamburger Abendblatt "the Charter doesn't contain a word about Hitler, Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Not to mention any sign of apologies for the suffering of the murdered people", "avoids mentioning the reasons for expulsions" and called the document "example of German art of crowding out the truth (...) The fact that the charter completely ignores the reasons for the expulsions deprives it of any value".[2][3][4]

German laws concerning the expellees

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Between 1953, when the Federal Expellee Law was passed, and 1991, the West German government passed several laws dealing with German expellees. The most notable of these is the "Law of Return" which granted German citizenship to any ethnic German. Several additions were later made to these laws.

The German Law of Return declared refugee status to be inheritable. According to the Federal Expellee Law,[5] "the spouse and the descendants" of an expellee are to be treated as if they were expellees themselves, regardless of whether they had been personally displaced. The Federation of Expellees has steadily lobbied to preserve the inheritability clause.

Formation of the Federation

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The Federation of Expellees was formed on 27 October 1957 in West Germany. Before its founding, the Bund der Heimatvertriebenen (League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights), formed in 1950, represented the interests of displaced German expellees. Intriguingly, in its first few years, the league was more successful in West Germany than in East Germany.

German reunification

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Previous West German governments, especially those led by the Christian Democratic Union, had shown more rhetorical support for the territorial claims made on behalf of German refugees and expellees. Although the Social Democrats showed strong support for the expellees, especially under Kurt Schumacher and Erich Ollenhauer, Social Democrats in more recent decades have generally been less supportive – and it was under Willy Brandt that West Germany recognized the Oder-Neisse line as the eastern German border with Poland under his policy of Ostpolitik. In reality, accepting the internationally recognized boundary made it more possible for eastern Germans to visit their lost homelands.

In 1989–1990 the West German government realized they had an opportunity to reunify the Federal Republic of Germany and the Soviet created German Democratic Republic. But they believed that if this were to be achieved, it had to be done quickly. One of the potential complications was the claim to the historical eastern territories of Germany; unless this was renounced, some foreign governments might not agree to German reunification. The West German government under the CDU accepted the 1990 Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany (Two Plus Four Agreement), which officially re-established the sovereignty of both German states. A condition of this agreement was that Germany accept the post-World War II frontiers. Upon reunification in 1990, the constitution was amended to state that Germany's territory had reached its full extent. Article 146 was amended so that Article 23 of the current constitution could be used for reunification. Once the five "reestablished federal states" in the east had been united with the west, the Basic Law was amended again to show that there were no other parts of Germany, which existed outside of the unified territory, that had not acceded.

2000s

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In 2000 the Federation of Expellees also initiated the formation of the Center Against Expulsions (German: Zentrum gegen Vertreibungen). Chairwoman of this Center is Erika Steinbach, who headed it together with former SPD politician Prof. Dr. Peter Glotz (died 2005).

Recently Erika Steinbach, the chair of the Federation of Expellees, has rejected any compensation claims.[citation needed] The vice president of the Federation Rudi Pawelka is however a chairman of the supervisory board of the Prussian Trust.

A European organisation for expellees has been formed — EUFV — headquartered in Trieste, Italy. [citation needed]

Organization

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The expellees are organized in 21 regional associations (Landsmannschaften), according to the areas of origin of its members, 16 state organizations (Landesverbände) according to their current residence, and 5 associate member organizations. It is the single representative federation for the approximately 15 million Germans who after fleeing, being expelled, evacuated or emigrating, found refuge in the Federal Republic of Germany. The Federation claims to have 1.3 million members (including non-displaced persons),[6] and to be a political force of some influence in Germany. This figure was disputed in January 2010 by the German news service DDP, which reported an actual membership of 550,000.[7] According to Erika Steinbach only 100,000 of the members contribute financially.[8]

The federation helps its members to integrate into German society. Many of the members assist the societies of their place of birth.

Presidents

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From 1959 to 1964, the first president of the Federation was Hans Krüger, a former Nazi judge and activist.[9] After the war Krüger was a West German politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), was a member of parliament from 1957 to 1965, served as Federal Minister for Displaced Persons, Refugees and War Victims for 4 months in 1963–64 in the First Cabinet of Ludwig Erhard. He stepped down from cabinet and other positions in 1964 amid controversy about his war-time background. Krüger was succeeded as president by Wenzel Jaksch in 1964 who held the position until his untimely death in 1966.[10]

Member organizations

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Regional

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State

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  • Landesverband Baden-Württemberg
  • Landesverband Bayern
  • Landesverband Berlin
  • Landesverband Brandenburg
  • Landesverband Bremen
  • Landesverband Hamburg
  • Landesverband Hessen
  • Landesverband Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
  • Landesverband Niedersachsen
  • Landesverband Nordrhein-Westfalen
  • Landesverband Rheinland-Pfalz
  • Landesverband Saar
  • Landesverband Sachsen / Schlesische Lausitz
  • Landesverband Sachsen-Anhalt
  • Landesverband Schleswig-Holstein
  • Landesverband Thüringen

Criticism

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When in government, both CDU and SPD have tended to favor improved relations with Central and Eastern Europe, even when this conflicts with the interests of the displaced people. The issue of the eastern border and the return of the Heimatvertriebene to their ancestral homes are matters which the current German government, German constitutional arrangements and German treaty obligations have virtually closed.

The refugees' claims were unanimously rejected by the affected countries and became a source of mistrust between Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic. These governments argue that the expulsion of Germans and related border changes were not enacted by the Polish or Czech governments, but rather were ordered by the Potsdam Conference. Furthermore, the nationalization of private property by Poland's former communist government did not apply only to Germans but was enforced on all people, regardless of ethnic background. A further complication is that many of the current Polish population in historical eastern Germany are themselves expellees (or descendants of expellees) who, totaling 1.6 million, were driven from Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union and were forced to leave their homes and property behind as well.

Some German-speakers had been settled in occupied Poland after 1939 by the Nazis. Treating these ex-colonists as expellees under German law, Erika Steinbach included, adds to the controversy. However, the vast majority of expelled Germans were descended from families who had lived in Eastern Europe for many centuries, while the majority of German colonists in Nazi-occupied Poland were Baltic and other East European Germans themselves displaced by the Nazi-Soviet population transfers.

Nazi background

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During the Cold War, the Federation was accused by the GDR and Poland of continuing Nazi ideology. A 2012 study confirmed that eleven of the thirteen members of the first council of the Federation "...were deeply involved in the Nazi regime."[11]

The Polish daily newspaper Rzeczpospolita reported that during BdV meetings in 2003, publications expressing anti-Polish sentiment and accusing Poles of ethnic cleansing towards ethnic Germans were available for sale, as were recordings of Waffen SS marches on compact discs, including songs glorifying the Invasion of Poland. Also, far right organizations openly distributed their materials at BdV meetings. While the BdV officially denied involvement in this, no steps were taken to address the concerns raised.[12]

In February 2009, the Polish newspaper Polska alleged that over one third of the Federation top officials were former Nazi activists, and based this on a 2006 article published by the German magazine Der Spiegel.[13] The German paper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, later revealed that Der Spiegel had written this not in respect to the Federation of Expellees, but instead about a previous organization that was dissolved in 1957.[13][14]

In 2019, the Federation's Vice President Siegbert Ortmann acknowledged that several members of the organization had been former Nazis, as well that some members had expressed support for far-right parties like NPD and AfD, he also reiterated that the organization would not cooperate with AfD.[15]

Notable people

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Federation of Expellees (Bund der Vertriebenen, BdV) is a German non-profit founded on 27 October 1957 through the merger of predecessor groups, representing the interests of approximately 15 million ethnic Germans who sought refuge in the of owing to flight, expulsion, and forced resettlement from former eastern territories and other Eastern European regions in the aftermath of the Second . Comprising 18 Landsmannschaften (homeland associations tied to specific pre-war regions), 15 state-level branches (Landesverbände), and three affiliated member organizations, the BdV originated from initiatives aimed at securing livelihoods, reuniting families, and addressing the immediate welfare needs of displaced persons who constituted a substantial portion—up to one-fifth—of West Germany's population by the early 1950s. Its core activities include interest representation on expellee-related matters, provision of counseling and social care irrespective of membership status, and efforts to document and commemorate the displacements, which involved the uprooting of 12 to 14 million individuals amid widespread violence and . The organization endorses the Charter of the German Expellees (proclaimed in 1950), which repudiates revenge, affirms commitment to a united , and asserts the inalienable right to one's while rejecting force as a means of resolution. Initially advocating for territorial restoration and the return of expellees during the era, the BdV adapted following Germany's by emphasizing cultural preservation, intergenerational dialogue, and reconciliation, though it has encountered persistent scrutiny over the Nazi-era affiliations of some founding figures and episodic tensions with neighboring states regarding historical narratives.

Background on German Expellees

Scale and Circumstances of Expulsions

Between 1944 and 1950, approximately 12 to 14 million ethnic Germans were displaced from their homes in eastern European territories, including areas ceded to Poland (such as Silesia, Pomerania, and East Prussia), the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia, and parts of the Baltic states under Soviet control, through a combination of flight and organized expulsions. These displacements primarily affected civilian populations, with a demographic skew toward women, children, and the elderly, as military-age men were often already conscripted or deceased by war's end. Historical analyses, drawing on Allied occupation records and demographic reconstructions, indicate that the process began with uncoordinated evacuations and flights ahead of advancing Soviet forces in late 1944, escalating into systematic removals by local authorities in 1945-1946. The causal sequence originated with the Red Army's eastern front offensives from onward, which prompted mass panic and exodus among ethnic German communities fearing reprisals for prior Nazi occupations and wartime atrocities committed in those regions. Local ethnic majorities, empowered by retreating German forces and incoming Soviet or Polish/Czech administrations, initiated reprisal actions including pogroms and forced marches, compounded by wartime destruction that left populations vulnerable to exposure and famine. By mid-1945, these spontaneous movements transitioned to state-directed policies, with and enacting decrees for rapid population transfers to consolidate national majorities in border areas disputed or altered by and border shifts. The of August 2, 1945, between the , , and , formalized the framework by endorsing the "orderly and humane" transfer of German populations from Polish, Czechoslovak, and Hungarian territories pending final border delineations, while placing the onus on receiving zones (primarily ) to absorb arrivals. In practice, implementation deviated sharply from this stipulation, as expulsions proceeded amid chaos, with inadequate transportation, in open-air camps, and minimal provisioning, exacerbated by the priorities and resource shortages in occupation zones. Declassified conference protocols reveal the Allies' awareness of ongoing "wild expulsions" preceding formal approval, yet prioritized geopolitical stabilization over immediate humanitarian safeguards. Casualties during these displacements are estimated at 500,000 to 2 million, attributable to direct , , , and exposure in transit or temporary camps, with higher figures encompassing pre-expulsion flight deaths and post-arrival hardships in . Official West German statistical reconstructions from the 1950s, based on survivor registries and cemetery data, pegged civilian expulsion deaths at around 273,000, though broader scholarly reviews incorporating Soviet archival releases adjust upward to account for unreported losses in remote marches and labor conscriptions. Eyewitness compilations and Allied observer reports document recurrent patterns of beatings, rapes, and summary executions by expulsion enforcers, alongside systemic neglect leading to and outbreaks, particularly during winter treks of 1946-1947. The Potsdam Agreement, signed on August 2, 1945, by the United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union, explicitly authorized the "orderly and humane" transfer of German populations from Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary to Germany, with the stated aim of addressing national minorities in newly delineated states. This provision in Article XIII legitimized population movements already underway, but implementation deviated significantly from the humane intent, resulting in widespread disorder, violence, and an estimated 500,000 to 2 million deaths among the approximately 12 million ethnic Germans displaced by 1950. The agreement deferred final territorial adjustments pending a peace settlement, yet it effectively endorsed ethnic homogenization without mechanisms for individual consent or compensation, prioritizing geopolitical stability over personal rights. Preceding the , the of February 1945 established precedents for post-war border revisions, with Allied leaders agreeing to compensate for eastern territorial losses to the by granting it administration over German lands up to the Oder-Neisse line, without conducting plebiscites or consulting affected populations. This provisional boundary, formalized later, shifted roughly 114,000 square kilometers of pre-war German territory to Polish control, displacing millions and altering demographic realities unilaterally to reflect Soviet influence and Polish security claims. Absent explicit provisions for return or restitution, these decisions embedded the expulsions in international diplomacy, treating collective population transfers as a tool for state reconfiguration rather than addressing underlying property or residency claims under . German expellees received no formal recognition as refugees under the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, which applied primarily to pre-1951 displacements from persecution and explicitly excluded the post-war ethnic German transfers as state-sanctioned actions. While analogous to refugee flows in scale—encompassing over 10 million individuals by some accounts—the expellees were denied repatriation rights or international protections equivalent to those for other wartime displaced persons, with host states like West Germany instead enacting domestic laws to classify and integrate them as citizens entitled to welfare but not extraterritorial remedies. Subsequent expellee advocacy has invoked principles of international law, such as the enduring validity of private property rights absent explicit treaty forfeiture, to challenge the agreements' finality, though no binding restitution mechanisms emerged from Potsdam or Yalta frameworks. This legal ambiguity persists, as post-war settlements like the 1990 Two Plus Four Treaty affirmed the Oder-Neisse border without resolving individual claims, underscoring the agreements' emphasis on collective outcomes over personal entitlements.

Establishment of the Federation

Pre-1957 Expellee Organizations

Following the end of , expellees in the Allied occupation zones of initially relied on fragmented, localized aid organizations to address acute humanitarian crises, including shortages, makeshift in camps, and issues affecting millions displaced from eastern territories. Church-affiliated groups, such as Catholic and Protestant welfare associations, provided early efforts starting in , coordinating with military governments to distribute aid amid restrictions on political imposed by Allied authorities. State-level refugee offices (Flüchtlingsämter) in western zones also emerged by 1946 to manage registration and basic support for the approximately 9.7 million expellees recorded in the October 1946 census, focusing on immediate survival rather than long-term representation. These entities operated independently across zones, hampered by processes and bans on nationalist groupings until around 1948. By the late 1940s, as occupation policies eased, regional Landsmannschaften—homeland associations tied to specific expelled groups—began forming to represent cultural identity, mutual aid, and integration advocacy amid West Germany's postwar economic challenges, including severe housing shortages where expellees often occupied up to 20% of available space in receiving areas. The Landsmannschaft Ostpreußen, for instance, was established on October 3, 1948, in Hamburg, serving as an early model for preserving regional traditions while lobbying for resettlement assistance. Similar organizations followed by 1949, such as those for Silesians and Sudeten Germans, which coordinated at state levels to address employment barriers and social stigma, with membership growing as expellees comprised about 20% of West Germany's population by 1950. These groups emphasized self-help networks, vocational training, and petitions to federal authorities, though rivalries among ethnic subgroups limited broader coordination. Precursor federations of these Landsmannschaften adopted the Charta der deutschen Heimatvertriebenen on August 5, 1950, articulating principles of equal rights and homeland attachment without immediate , which influenced subsequent advocacy. The 1952 Lastenausgleichsgesetz (Burden Equalization Law), effective from , further supported integration by redistributing war-related losses through taxes and compensation, allocating billions of Deutsche Marks to expellees for property equalization and housing, as documented in federal records—reducing economic strain and bolstering organizational legitimacy as a step toward unified representation. This law, building on earlier 1949-1950 equalization decrees, marked a shift from relief to structured policy, yet the proliferation of over a dozen independent associations underscored the need for consolidation amid ongoing debates over and .

Formation and Initial Structure in 1957

The Bund der Vertriebenen (BdV), or Federation of Expellees, was founded on October 27, 1957, in , , as a merger of the Bund der vertriebenen Deutschen () and the Verband der Landsmannschaften, with the explicit intent to consolidate fragmented expellee organizations into a single, non-partisan umbrella entity amid the political fragmentation following the decline of earlier partisan efforts like the BHE party. This unification brought together regional Landsmannschaften—self-organizations of expellees from specific eastern territories—and independent associations, creating a structure headquartered in to coordinate advocacy without direct party affiliation. The organization's initial statutes outlined core objectives centered on representing expellee interests in the West German Bundestag, securing restitution and compensation for properties and losses from the expulsions, and fostering the preservation of linked to former homelands, while emphasizing integration into West German society under realities. These aims reflected a pragmatic response to the incomplete political integration of expellees, prioritizing collective over ideological division, though the framework explicitly excluded revanchist pursuits in favor of legal and diplomatic channels. From inception, the BdV faced structural limitations due to Germany's division, operating solely in the and unable to incorporate East German expellees under Soviet influence, which constrained its claim to full representation despite encompassing associations for over 8 million affected individuals and descendants in the West. The Bonn headquarters served as the administrative core, facilitating early coordination among member groups while adapting to the geopolitical isolation that prevented unified action across divided .

Charter of the German Expellees

The Charta der deutschen Heimatvertriebenen, adopted on August 5, 1950, in by representatives of 30 major expellee organizations, constitutes the foundational document articulating the principles guiding German expellees in the post-World War II era. Signed amid the integration challenges faced by approximately 7.5 million expellees in , many still in displacement camps, it balances acknowledgment of the expulsions' injustices with a solemn commitment to non-violence and reconciliation. At its core, the charter declares: "We, the expellees, renounce all thought of revenge and retaliation," framing this as a sacred resolve born from the "infinite suffering" endured, particularly by women and children. This rejection of violence extends to opposition against any form of retribution, positioning the expellees' cause within a broader ethical imperative for peaceful resolution of displacement as a global issue affecting all refugees. Key provisions affirm the expulsions as a violation of human dignity, recognizing forced uprooting as tantamount to "" and demanding the right to as an inalienable, God-given entitlement. The document invokes principles akin to under the Charter, insisting that peoples must freely choose their homelands without coercion, and calls for the restoration of justice through equal citizenship rights, fair burden-sharing from the war, and restitution of confiscated properties on equitable terms. The further advocates European unity as the pathway to enduring peace, urging expellees to contribute actively to rebuilding and a federated where no one lives in fear of displacement. Proclaimed publicly on August 6, 1950, before an audience of 150,000, it underscores for ethical solutions over unilateral demands. Post-1990, following , the charter's unaltered text has retained its status as a guiding , with its principles applied to affirm moral rights to and without endorsing forceful reclamation, in harmony with ratified agreements and the enduring pledge against .

Organizational Framework

Leadership and Succession of Presidents

The presidency of the Bund der Vertriebenen (BdV), or Federation of Expellees, constitutes the organization's paramount executive role, with the president elected by the federal assembly of affiliated groups to represent expellee interests in parliamentary committees, consultations, and diplomatic engagements concerning historical displacements from post-1945. Terms are not fixed at four years but determined by assembly votes, often extending over extended periods amid evolving priorities from socioeconomic integration in the Federal Republic's early decades to cultural preservation and advocacy in later years. Hans Krüger, a Christian Democratic Union (CDU) member of the Bundestag and expellee from , assumed the inaugural presidency upon the BdV's formal constitution in 1957, holding office until his resignation in 1964. His leadership emphasized securing federal legislation for expellee property equalization and social welfare, including advocacy for the 1952 Burden Equalization Law amendments that allocated reparations from wartime damages to support integration. Krüger's background as Federal Minister for Displaced Persons, Refugees, and War Victims from further aligned his tenure with pragmatic resettlement policies, though it concluded amid scrutiny of his prior membership and judicial role in occupied territories. Successive presidents shifted toward memorialization as integration advanced. Wenzel Jaksch, a Social Democratic expellee leader from the , served from 1964 to 1966, bridging early organizational consolidation with emerging dialogues. Longer-term figures, such as those in the late 1960s through 1990s, including presumed extended tenures like that of W. Heinrich Timpe from 1969 to 1994, prioritized documentation of expulsion hardships and heritage maintenance amid declining direct membership, reflecting a pivot from immediate aid to long-term cultural safeguarding. Erika Steinbach, a CDU deputy born in 1943 to a Rahmen family displaced from Danzig, led as president from 1998 to 2014, amplifying international awareness of expellee fates through initiatives like the proposed Centre Against Expulsions while navigating membership erosion from generational turnover. Her era marked intensified focus on bilateral remembrance protocols, such as with , though it drew partisan debate over perceived nationalist undertones. Bernd Fabritius, a CSU politician and 1967-born Transylvanian Saxon who resettled to West Germany in 1984, succeeded her in 2014, serving until 2025; his priorities included advocacy in and EU forums, addressing a shrinking base estimated below 1 million active affiliates by sustaining youth engagement programs. In October 2025, Stephan Mayer, a 51-year-old CSU member and prior BdV vice-president since 2016, was elected president with 98% delegate support, succeeding Fabritius who transitioned to honorary status after 11 years. Mayer's platform underscores memory culture, enforcement against forced migrations, and adaptation to demographic decline, positioning the BdV for continued representation of approximately 15 million descendants amid modern geopolitical shifts.

Member Associations and Regional Focus

The Federation of Expellees functions as an encompassing Landsmannschaften, which are specialized associations dedicated to Germans expelled from particular pre-1945 regions, including the Landsmannschaft Schlesien for and the for the Sudeten areas. These groups, totaling 18 to 20, preserve regional identities through documentation of customs, dialects, and historical narratives specific to their origins, such as East Prussian or Pomeranian heritage. Complementing the Landsmannschaften are 15 to 16 Landesverbände, state-level branches that adapt federal goals to local contexts across Germany's federal states, emphasizing welfare services like financial aid for elderly members and family tracing assistance. Three additional affiliated organizations provide supplementary support, focusing on niche issues such as integration counseling for late resettlers from . Collectively, these entities sustain expellee identity via community-driven initiatives, including dialect workshops and regional festivals that counteract assimilation pressures amid generational decline. By the 2020s, the affiliates organized approximately 1.3 million members within about 6,000 local subgroups, a figure diminished by demographic aging and low youth recruitment compared to the multimillion peak in the mid-20th century. Coordination among them occurs through the Bundesversammlung, the federation's supreme body, which convenes annually in following reunification to align on policy positions and resource allocation. This structure ensures decentralized yet unified efforts in cultural continuity and mutual aid.

Advocacy and Political Engagement

Integration Laws and Domestic Influence

The expellee organizations preceding the Bund der Vertriebenen (BdV), formed in 1957, advocated for key legislation addressing the absorption of roughly 8 million ethnic German refugees and expellees who comprised 16.1% of West Germany's population in 1950. The Lastenausgleichsgesetz, enacted on June 14, 1952, and effective from September 1, redistributed war-related financial burdens across the population, allocating partial compensation for expellee property losses estimated at billions of Reichsmarks and facilitating economic stabilization through levies on non-affected assets. This measure directly supported the integration of displaced persons by , resettlement, and livelihood programs amid postwar shortages. Complementing this, the Bundesvertriebenengesetz (BVFG) of May 19, 1953, codified expellees' equal citizenship status, entitling them to federal welfare, vocational training, and land distribution preferences while prohibiting discrimination in employment and . These laws, driven by from groups like the Zentralverband vertriebener Deutscher, integrated expellees as a distinct yet protected category, averting social fragmentation in a where they formed nearly one-fifth of residents by the mid-1950s. Post-1957, the BdV amplified these efforts through coordination with working groups of expellee parliamentarians, particularly via the influence of parties such as the All-German Bloc/League of Expellees, which held coalition leverage in the 1950s and secured amendments for targeted pensions, reforms, and extended aid durations into the 1960s. This parliamentary advocacy ensured ongoing implementation, including equalization payments and regional settlement quotas, amid economic recovery that raised expellee employment rates from under 50% in 1950 to parity with natives by decade's end. By the , sustained integration reduced reliance on expellee-specific provisions, with benefits increasingly subsumed under universal welfare frameworks as per Federal Ministry evaluations, reflecting demographic assimilation where expellees and descendants approached 20% of the populace without distinct socioeconomic markers. The BdV's domestic focus thus evolved from exceptionalist policies to oversight of residual claims, underscoring the laws' efficacy in fostering long-term societal cohesion.

Stances on Territorial Claims and Reconciliation

Prior to , the Federation of Expellees (BdV) consistently advocated for a review of the Oder-Neisse line as the eastern German border, viewing its imposition at the in 1945 as unjust and provisional pending a future peace settlement. This position aligned with West German constitutional claims to pre-1945 territories until the early 1970s, when Chancellor Willy Brandt's led to a de facto moratorium on border challenges in exchange for diplomatic normalization with Poland and the Soviet bloc. Following treaties like the 1970 Moscow Treaty, which implicitly deferred final border recognition, the BdV shifted toward demanding moral acknowledgment of the expellees' losses rather than immediate territorial revision, though it rejected full acceptance without addressing historical injustices. By the late , amid accelerating East-West , BdV leaders emphasized peaceful dialogue while maintaining that the expulsions constituted a humanitarian catastrophe warranting restitution discussions. The BdV criticized the 1990 German-Polish Border Treaty, which definitively confirmed the Oder-Neisse line, as a unilateral concession by the Kohl that sidelined expellee claims without adequate or compensation mechanisms. Similarly, it opposed the 1992 German-Czechoslovak Treaty and the 1997 German-Czech Joint Declaration on mutual reconciliation, arguing these agreements prioritized political expediency over unresolved issues of confiscated assets and restitution. In response, the BdV pursued legal avenues for individual compensation, rejecting territorial but insisting on bilateral funds or state acknowledgments to address the estimated 12-15 million expellees' dispossession. Internal BdV debates pitted a pragmatic wing, favoring integration and EU-mediated , against hardliners who prioritized unyielding advocacy for homeland rights, though the organization's 1950 Charter of explicitly renounced revenge, retaliation, or violence in favor of legal and moral restitution. This charter's commitment to peaceful means has been invoked by BdV presidents to counter accusations, underscoring a consensus against while sustaining calls for historical truth-telling. The BdV supported Poland's and the Czech Republic's EU enlargement in , viewing it as enabling cross-border access to ancestral sites, cultural exchanges, and normalized relations conducive to reconciliation without endorsing prior treaties' finality. This stance reflected an evolution toward pragmatic engagement, prioritizing remembrance centers and joint commemorations over confrontation, as evidenced by post-enlargement initiatives fostering dialogues.

Cultural and Memorial Activities

Preservation of Heritage and Documentation Centers

The Federation of Expellees has advocated for dedicated institutions to document the of displaced Germans, including the preservation of personal narratives and material remnants from former eastern territories. In 1999, the BdV proposed a specialized center to address the expulsions, influencing subsequent governmental initiatives that culminated in the Documentation Centre for Displacement, Expulsion, and Reconciliation in , which opened on June 21, 2021, in the renovated Deutschlandhaus at Anhalter Bahnhof. This facility, stemming from BdV's long-standing emphasis on memory preservation under the Federal Expellees Law (§96), houses a testimony collecting over thousands of eyewitness accounts of flight and expulsion, alongside libraries and exhibits featuring artifacts like period handcarts and household items evacuated during the chaos of 1944–1950. BdV member associations, such as Landsmannschaften representing specific regions like or , operate regional museums and archives that safeguard maps, photographs, folk costumes, and tools evocative of pre-expulsion life in the lost homelands. These collections, numbering in the dozens across and often established post-1950 under legal provisions for cultural continuity, prioritize empirical documentation of everyday existence rather than interpretive narratives. Collaborations with public museums ensure exhibits integrate expulsion artifacts within the historical continuum of II-era displacements, drawing on primary sources to depict causes including wartime advances and retaliatory policies without foregrounding partisan viewpoints. Since the early 2000s, BdV-supported efforts have incorporated digital archiving to enhance accessibility, including scanned testimonies and interactive mappings of migration routes, as seen in the center's multimedia installations that allow virtual reconstruction of landscapes based on survivor inputs. These projects, approved in conceptual phases around , facilitate broader into the estimated 12–14 million affected individuals while maintaining fidelity to original accounts over generalized interpretations.

Commemorative Events and Educational Programs

The Federation of Expellees (BdV) organizes annual commemorative events centered on the National Day of Remembrance for the Victims of Flight and Expulsion, observed on June 20 since its formal establishment by the German Bundestag in 2008. This date commemorates the forced displacement of an estimated 12 to 14 million ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe between 1944 and 1950, with events including wreath-laying ceremonies, memorial speeches, and ecumenical services often held at venues like Berlin's Konzerthaus. In 2024 and 2025, BdV President Bernd Fabritius delivered addresses emphasizing historical accountability and reconciliation, drawing attendance from government officials and expellee descendants. Educational programs form a core component of BdV's outreach, including initiatives through regional working groups like the Jugend & Schule group in Thuringia, which develops curricula and workshops for schools to integrate expellee history into lessons on post-World War II Europe. These efforts aim to preserve cultural elements such as regional dialects and traditions via youth seminars and publications that document personal testimonies, countering what BdV describes as understated academic portrayals of the expulsions' scale and human cost. Partnerships with churches facilitate ecumenical events, such as joint memorials blending Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox observances to foster intergenerational dialogue on loss and integration. While these activities promote awareness of verified demographic impacts—over 500,000 deaths during treks and internments, per postwar German records—they face critiques for perceived selectivity in framing, prioritizing German civilian suffering amid Allied decisions like the Potsdam Agreement without equal emphasis on preceding wartime contexts. BdV responses incorporate reconciliation themes, as in 2025 federal observances highlighting women's roles in survival narratives, yet independent analyses note ongoing debates over narrative balance in publicly funded remembrances.

Criticisms and Controversies

Nazi-Era Involvement of Early Leaders

A 2012 study commissioned by the German Federal Ministry of the Interior and conducted by the Institut für Zeitgeschichte (IfZ) analyzed the Nazi-era records of the 13 members of the 's initial , established in the organization's formative years following its founding in 1950. The research, drawing on archival evidence including personnel files and de-Nazification proceedings, determined that 11 of these leaders had affiliations with the Nazi regime, ranging from NSDAP party membership to SS enrollment and active wartime service. Only two—Linus Kather, a Catholic resister, and Wenzel Jaksch, a Social Democrat—exhibited documented opposition or consistent distancing from Nazi policies. Among the affiliated members, eight joined the NSDAP after the Nazi seizure of power, often citing career or opportunistic motives in post-war interrogations, while others held roles in occupied Eastern European administrations or anti-partisan operations, such as Hellmut Gossing and Heinrich Schellhaus in combat units. SS memberships were recorded for a subset, including figures like those involved in propaganda or security apparatus extensions, though none qualified as "old fighters" with pre- commitments. The study's 84% NSDAP affiliation rate among the surpassed contemporaneous rates in broader West German society (around 10-15% for adults), underscoring selective elite retention despite efforts. These ties reflected patterns of continuity in German organizations, where expellee leaders leveraged pre-1945 administrative experience amid the chaos of displacement affecting 12-14 million ethnic Germans from Eastern territories. The IfZ report highlighted how such backgrounds enabled organizational efficiency but also perpetuated unaddressed Nazi-era networks within the BdV's early structure. Subsequent BdV charters, notably the 1950 Charta der deutschen Heimatvertriebenen, incorporated democratic renunciations of violence and , signaling institutional efforts from the mid-1950s onward to align with West Germany's constitutional framework and distance from any residual authoritarian legacies, as affirmed in the organization's self-described commitment to parliamentary processes.

Charges of Revanchism and Nationalist Agendas

Critics in Poland and the have frequently accused the Bund der Vertriebenen (BdV) of advancing agendas that undermine reconciliation efforts and evoke fears of revising post-World War II borders, despite Germany's 1990 treaty recognitions of the Oder-Neisse line with and the Agreement's invalidation with . These apprehensions stem from the BdV's advocacy for acknowledging the expulsion of approximately 12-14 million ethnic Germans from between 1944 and 1950, which some interpret as implicitly challenging settled frontiers, even though the organization officially renounced territorial claims in line with West Germany's shifts by the 1970s. A focal point of controversy involved former BdV president Erika Steinbach, who in September 2010 resigned a Christian Democratic Union leadership role after remarks implying Poland's intransigence over Danzig contributed to the war's outbreak, statements Polish officials decried as equating German and Polish responsibilities and reviving nationalist tensions. Steinbach's subsequent characterization of Polish diplomat and Auschwitz survivor as possessing a "bad character" for critiquing her organization intensified accusations of inflammatory rhetoric aimed at stoking ethnic grievances. The BdV's role in the protracted development of a documentation center amplified charges of obstructionism; its insistence on "balance"—demanding comprehensive coverage of German expulsions alongside other 20th-century forced migrations to avoid perceived relativization of Allied or Soviet actions—delayed federal plans around 2009, with critics arguing this prioritized expellee narratives over a reconciliatory framework acceptable to and the . Portrayals in European media, often from outlets with left-leaning editorial slants skeptical of nationalist memory politics, framed such positions as impeding enlargement and bilateral ties, though these accounts sometimes overlook the empirical scale of documented expulsion deaths estimated at 500,000 to 2 million by German federal commissions. The BdV has countered revanchism allegations by affirming its focus on to truth and remembrance rather than geopolitical revision, citing its 1950 Charter's emphasis on peaceful integration and human dignity, which evolved to endorse the 1990 Two Plus Four Treaty without demands. Organization leaders argue this mirrors advocacy by other displaced groups, such as pressing for 1915 recognition amid Turkish denials, where calls for historical do not equate to territorial but reflect causal acknowledgment of state-orchestrated ethnic cleansings. Such parallels underscore that empirical of suffering, absent explicit border claims, aligns with international norms on rather than nationalist .

Federation's Defenses and Reforms

The Federation of Expellees has countered allegations of harboring revanchist agendas by emphasizing its commitment to reconciliation and the rejection of territorial revisionism, particularly since the when expellee organizations pivoted from irredentist demands toward platforms centered on , pan-European integration, and cross-cultural dialogue. This adaptation included public affirmations of post-war border inviolability, aligning with West Germany's , while advocating for the historical recognition of expellee suffering as a humanitarian issue distinct from geopolitical revision. In addressing criticisms of Nazi-era ties among early leaders, the BdV has supported or engaged with scholarly examinations revealing that approximately two-thirds of its founding members held or affiliations, some as active participants, prompting internal efforts toward greater historical transparency and distancing from those legacies. These responses included leadership changes and policy shifts to underscore the organization's democratic orientation, though without formal expulsions or public purges of historical figures. Concurrently, the BdV has backed individual legal claims by expellees, such as constitutional complaints challenging Eastern treaties like the Ostverträge, which sought to protect property rights and compensation without endorsing territorial demands. Efforts to refresh its image and credibility have involved promoting youth engagement to facilitate a generational transition, reducing reliance on first-generation expellees and fostering perspectives more attuned to contemporary European norms over historical grievances. This has manifested in programs emphasizing on expulsion within frameworks of , while maintaining legal arguments that post-war expulsions contravened international norms on transfers, separate from affirmations of the Holocaust's singular character.

Post-Cold War Evolution

Effects of

The reunification of Germany on October 3, 1990, enabled the Bund der Vertriebenen (BdV) to expand its organizational presence and activities into the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), where expellee associations had been prohibited or severely restricted under communist rule. This development allowed the BdV to connect with suppressed expellee groups in the East, fostering renewed interest in documenting flight and expulsion experiences that had been censored in the GDR's official narrative. While the BdV endorsed the overarching goal of reunification, it mounted significant opposition to the Two Plus Four Treaty signed on September 12, 1990, particularly its provisions confirming the Oder-Neisse line as the permanent eastern border, which precluded any legal basis for reclaiming lost territories. BdV President Herbert Czaja (1970–1994) voiced fierce resistance, decrying the treaty as consigning Germany to its "smallest" configuration and betraying the non-renunciation principle in the 1950 Charter of German Expellees. Reunification yielded tangible benefits, including unrestricted access to GDR state archives and Stasi records, which revealed extensive documentation on the , surveillance, and of expellees in the Soviet occupation zone and GDR—materials previously inaccessible and enabling comprehensive historical research. It also permitted family reunifications and cross-border contacts for expellees with surviving ties to eastern regions, alleviating decades of separation imposed by the . However, these gains were offset by the treaty's irreversible border finality, which eroded the BdV's long-standing advocacy for homeland rights and reduced its influence on matters related to territorial losses. Post-reunification economic integration strained federal budgets, indirectly impacting expellee welfare through broader austerity measures amid the costs of absorbing the East German economy. BdV membership, which the organization claimed approached 2 million in the late , began a steady decline thereafter as aging first-generation expellees passed away and younger descendants increasingly assimilated, diluting generational ties to specific expellee identities and causes.

Contemporary Challenges and Activities Since 2000

Since the early 2000s, the Federation of Expellees (Bund der Vertriebenen, BdV) has confronted significant demographic challenges stemming from the aging and diminishing ranks of direct survivors of post-World War II expulsions, with membership increasingly comprising descendants who form a "commitment generation" committed to preserving family histories rather than personal experiences. This shift has prompted efforts to adapt organizational focus toward intergenerational transmission of , including educational outreach to younger Germans on the themes of flight, expulsion, and . The BdV has maintained ongoing activities such as annual receptions and thematic congresses emphasizing remembrance without territorial revisionism, as evidenced by its 2023 program under the "Flight and Expulsion—Scourges of Humanity," which linked historical German displacements to contemporary global conflicts. In 2024, the organization advocated for a worldwide condemnation of expulsions and enhanced international efforts for , positioning itself as a steward of victim-centered memory rather than political . For 2025, activities center on the theme "80 Years: Remembering—Preserving—Shaping," underscoring a forward-looking approach to cultural preservation amid declining direct ties to the events of 1945–1950. In response to the 2022 Russian invasion of , the BdV has drawn implicit parallels between modern displacements and historical expellee experiences, providing practical support through its migration counseling centers to integrate Ukrainian refugees while highlighting the enduring relevance of rule-of-law protections against forced migrations. This includes counseling on employment and integration, informed by the organization's historical advocacy for expellee rights, and public calls for to lead in supporting Ukraine against aggression akin to past expulsions. On the European level, the BdV engages in with German minorities across the continent, advocating for protections against and cultural erosion, though without pursuing revanchist property restitutions en masse; instead, it supports case-by-case filings where legal avenues remain open under bilateral agreements. Recent annual reports highlight continued involvement in migration policy consultations, emphasizing orderly expulsions under in contexts like irregular migration crises, while rejecting narratives of resurgence in territorial claims. No significant upheavals have marked the period from 2023 to 2025, with the organization prioritizing digital and educational tools for heritage documentation to counter demographic attrition.

Notable Figures

Hans Krüger served as the first president of the Bundesverband der Vertriebenen (Federation of Expellees) from 1959 to 1963 but resigned following revelations of his role as a Nazi district administrator in occupied during . Wenzel Jaksch, a Sudeten German social democrat who actively opposed National Socialism, acted as a and briefly as president in the mid-1960s, representing anti-Nazi elements within early expellee leadership. Erika Steinbach held the presidency from 1998 to 2014, during which she promoted expellee rights, including efforts toward a documentation center on displacement, while drawing criticism for statements perceived as minimizing German wartime responsibility. Bernd Fabritius, a Transylvanian Saxon who arrived in in 1984, led the organization as president from 2014 until 2025, emphasizing integration of expellee heritage into broader German remembrance. Stephan Mayer, a CSU member of the Bundestag since 2002 and former parliamentary state secretary, was elected president on October 10, 2025, succeeding Fabritius.

References

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