Nur für Deutsche
The slogan Nur für Deutsche (English: "Only for Germans") was during World War II, in many German-occupied countries, a German ethnocentric slogan indicating that certain establishments and transportation were reserved for Germans. Signs bearing the slogan were posted at entrances to parks, cafes, cinemas, theaters and other facilities.
History
In German-occupied Poland, racial segregation was nearly complete. In streetcars and trains, the first car was usually reserved for German administrative and military personnel, Nazi party members, and German civilians. Other nationalities were to use the remaining car(s).
In Polish partisan parlance, toxic or otherwise undrinkable moonshine was jocularly called "nur für Deutsche".
Partisans were also fond of painting the words "nur für Deutsche" on graveyard fences or street lampposts (a reference to hanging).[1]
See also
- No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs
- Apartheid
- Dogs and Indians not allowed
- Ghetto benches
- History of Poland (1939–1945)
- Nazi eugenics
- Nazi Glossary
- No dogs and Chinese allowed
- Operation Ostra Brama
- Racial segregation
- Separate but equal
References
- "OKUPACYJNA CODZIENNOŚĆ", by KATARZYNA GRACZYKOWSKA, (also in the archive of Wiedza i Życie no. 9, 1999)
External links
Media related to Nur für Deutsche at Wikimedia Commons