Upvote:0
It seems that the German and Polish government, under influence of the League of Nations, decided to give protection to minorities in Silesia, and that the Polish government gave some autonomy to the region in creating a local parliament, and the same goes for the Germans. You should look into: "Richard Blanke, Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland, 1918-1939. Lexington, KY: The University of Kentucky Press, 1993." As for Wikiepedie look up "upper Silesia plebiscite" and "silesian uprising"
Upvote:2
I've found one contemporary source in the university library but it seems to be extremely biased. It's a slim 30-pages brochure called "The Poles in Germany and the Germans in Poland" by one George Kurnatowski, a political science professor from Warsaw, published in 1927.
Prof. Kurnatowski is strenuosly trying to show that the Poles in Germany are persecuted and oppressed while the Germans in Poland are treated with respect and are given protection. As one would expect, he cites many outrageous examples for the former contention but is very light on details for the latter one. He cites no sources (such as newspapers) so it's hard to factcheck or verify anything.
Still, you might find this useful.
There is also a large bibliography which surely contains interesting material.
Upvote:4
First of all, it is very important to notice that the situation in both Province of Upper Silesia within Prussia/Germany and The Voivodship of Silesia within Poland was extremely tense, due to the plebiscite and the 3 polish insurrections. It is absolutely impossible to find a contemporary source which is not extremely biased toward either Germany or Poland, as both nations considered the whole area to be theirs and the other part to be illegally occupied by the other. Because it was a highly industrialized region, both countries wanted it more for its economical value than out of care for its people. This created a very difficult situation.
My source is "Le PlΓ©sbicite et le partage de la Haute-SilΓ©sie", Kasimir Smogorzewski, 1931, and it is very pro-polish biased.
After peace was restored in the end of the 1921, the League of Nations obligated Germany to recognize Poles as a national minority and to have special laws protecting them for the next 15 years. (On the other hand, the special laws protecting German minority in Poland did not have any date of expiration.) Approx. 500'000 Poles were living there. The policy of germanisation in Upper Silesia remained after the war pretty much identical to what it was before. The area was considered to be definitively part of Germany and the dispute was supposed to be over.
According to the pro-Polish sources, the laws guaranteeing special minority rights to Poles in German Upper Silesia was simply not applied - Polish was only taught in primary school (and only rarely so), never in secondary school. Even though there were approximately 5x more Poles living in the Province in Upper Silesia than Germans living in the Voivodship of Silesia, there was more German schools in Poland than Polish schools in Germany.
People living in Germany were pretty much obligated to have very good knowledge of the German language to have any future. Also, there was a lot of discrimination from Germans, which was largely exaggerated and used as a propaganda in the Second Polish Republic. Similarly, Germany constantly claimed that Germans were discriminated in the Voivodship of Silesia, whether that was true or not, and all German parties (not only the NSDAP!) were revisionist about borders and pursued to annex the Voivodship of Silesia back into Vaterland.
Interestingly enough, Poles of the area spoke the Silesian Dialect, which differs itself a lot from standard literal Polish language, most notably due to Czech and German borrowings. Another interesting fact is that Silesia was the only Polish speaking region which was never part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as it had belonged to the Crown of Bohemia and to the Holy Roman Empire before it belonged to Prussia. The result was that Polish speaking Silesians were not "affected" by the partitions of Poland like the other Poles, because they were already part of Prussia. Silesia is also the only part of Poland where a significant Protestant minority exists. All those facts were used by German propaganda to claim the area, and to "proof" that the people living there "weren't really Polish". Their real considerations, however, were purely economical, as Germans wanted to control the whole industrial region.
In 1922 in Berlin, an association for Poles in Germany, the Bund der Polen in Deutschland was created ( deutsch english polski ), with the goal to defend and promote Polish culture within the Weimar Republic. Surprisingly enough, when Hitler took control of the country he did not ban the association, as he feared that this would result on further persecution for Germans in the Second Polish Republic. They waited as late as August 1939, just one month before the war, to ban the association and imprison its activists in concentration camps.
German citizens had to serve in the German army no matter if they were Poles or not. This caused difficulties for them to be recognized as Poles when the Soviet authorities expelled Germans from their homes in Silesia. Paradoxically, other sources mention the new Soviet regime nourished the "autochthons" and tried to keep as much of them as possible home, despite most knew only dialect and not the standard Polish. Sources are thus contradictory on this particular aspect. They however agree that Silesians which stayed in Poland were only partially accepted as "Poles" by their new compatriots.
Today, the Opole Voivodship remains the last place of Silesia (and of Poland) where the German language is spoken and where many people are bilingual and could pass as either Germans or Poles depending on what the situation would cast.