Leon Degrelle
NAME- Leon Degrelle
NATION-
Belgium
DATE (S) OF INTERVIEW (S) March 1984, April 1993 (Telephonic)
PLACE OF INTERVIEW (S)
Barcelona, Spain
LANGUAGE (S) CONDUCTED English, German, French
SIGNIFICANCE OF SUBJECT- Leader of the Belgian Socialist Rexist
Movement; German volunteer, Waffen SS
General and 28th Waffen SS Division Commander.
OTHERS IN ATTENDANCE- Michele Ulovey
FORMAT- Q & A standard.
Q- When and where were you born?
A- I was born in Bouillon, Luxembourg
on 15 June 1906.
Q- What was your family like?
A- My father was a brewer, a good
Catholic man, and my mother was the most wonderful woman in the world.
Q- What was your education like?
A- My family had been Jesuit educated
for many generations, and I went to the College of Notre Dame de la Paix. I
studied the classics and theology, but was seriously drawn to politics. The
Jesuits taught us to expand our mind and pursue knowledge, which I did.
Unfortunately some of my fellow countrymen took a dim view of my independent
writing and publishing on certain political thoughts. I had a tough time.
Q- You were arrested, were you not?
A- Yes, I was arrested in 1940 by
French troops, beaten, and moved around from damp jail cells where I was
tortured until finally freed by German troops. They knew who I was since I was a
leader of the Rexist Party, which was a Socialist anti-Communist political
party. Seeing that I would not receive any help, let alone justice from the
authorities in Belgium I knew that that government was illegitimate, and I decided that the
corruption must be challenged.
Q- How did you join the German army?
A- My brother had been murdered, my
parents and wife killed after torture, and my eight children were taken away and
scattered to the winds, a situation that would not be resolved for many years. I
basically had some additional political problems, and until the Germans invaded
and captured the country I was not safe. I felt that Belgium would only be a
great and sovereign nation again once Germany won the war and eliminated the
dangers of Communism. I formed the first group of volunteers from the Flemish
and Walloons, and we were formed in our own battalion. Later we were assigned to
the training centres, and then deployed to
Army Group Center
at first. Many of our men were sent to the Demyansk region as support in late
1941 to early 1942, but were then recalled and joined 5th SS
‘Wiking’ in the Ukraine later. We later became our own independent Waffen
SS unit, the 28th der Waffen SS Panzergrenadier Division
‘Wallonien’ in April 1944 at a ceremony in Brussels. ‘Sepp’ Dietrich, Max
Wuensche and other notables were there for the induction ceremony. We started
with 400 men in 1940, later growing to about 15,000, but only about 400 would be
around after the war, including myself and two other original members. Of the
original 6,000 men in the regiment before becoming a division 2,500 were killed.
We had a great combat record, and Hitler personally congratulated me and gave me
the Oak Leaves. I believe that we had the greatest number of Knight’s Crosses of
any foreign unit, but I am not sure.
Q- What was it like for you, fighting
on the Russian Front?
A- Well, that was where the real war
was. The greatest threat was from Communist Russia and the Western Allies
discovered this only too late; we live in the world created by this today. As
far as Russia, it must be the weather, especially the bitter winters, and the
endless steppe that goes forever. We were not prepared for this environment. The
Russians were used to it and were well clothed to resist the cold. The greatest
assets we had were the opportunity to strip Russian dead and take their padded
clothing and felt boots, as well as those marvelous fur hats. They were very
adapted to ski warfare, which we also used, and were perhaps even better at
since we were Edelweiss trained as well. The partisan war was the worst,
we had to adapt immediately to very situation, and the situation always changed.
This was especially bad since they did not wear uniforms and could blend into
any village. A typical day was when we moved all night on foot, sometimes with
trucks and always looking for the next ambush. The Soviets sent artillery in to
try and channel us into their killing zones, but we hit the earth and pushed
through, taking casualties every time. The largest partisan fighting I was
involved in was near the road at Cherkassy, where the partisan cavalry attacked
and withdrew quickly. I ordered my men not to pursue, as it was not our mission.
When we linked up with members of 4th Army we felt safer. But that was
just the beginning.
Q- You wrote about Soviet atrocities
in you your book, Campaign in
Russia.
Would you describe some of the things you witnessed during the war on both
sides?
A-
The partisans were usually the worst group to be captured by; they gouged
out eyes, cut off fingers, genitalia, toes, and would butcher a man in front of
his comrades before beginning their field interrogation. This was confirmed from
both soldiers who escaped captivity and defecting partisans who were sickened by
the sight and later joined the anti-Stalinist cause. One even had photographs
that were turned over to the intelligence section of 2nd SS Panzer Army.
I saw them. I saw a young German soldier, part of a reconnaissance patrol that
had disappeared who had his legs crudely amputated at the knees with a saw or
knife. We could see that even dying after this procedure he had managed to crawl
several meters with his fingers. Another SS man had been crucified alive
and his genitals removed and stuffed in his mouth. Several times we witnessed
the Soviets and partisans retreating after a battle, stopping long enough to
kill our wounded, usually by smashing their heads with their weapons or using a
bayonet, shovel, ax handle, or knife. This did nothing to engender a more humane
attitude towards the partisans when captured.
Q- What was the atmosphere like
fighting next to the other European volunteers?
A- Well, the Russians hated the
Italians certainly, I think even more than they hated the Germans, which I wrote
about. I remember Italians being killed and tortured in horrible ways. Once a
group of prisoners was stripped of their clothes and dowsed in ice water and
were allowed to freeze to death. This was during the winter, and they died
frozen alive. They even killed doctors and the chaplain. We discovered these
events after recapturing a couple of villages. It was absolutely horrible.
Q- How were the peasants’ attitudes
towards your unit and the Germans?
A- The peasants were just simple
people who had suffered under Stalin and the great promises of Communism, and
they were, for the most part very supportive of us. This was most evident when
we attended their religious services. I attended regularly whenever possible,
although I am a Catholic, the Russian Orthodox services were handled by priests
who had either been in prison, sent to
Siberia, or living in hiding
for many years. We supported their religious freedom and they responded very
well. It was very moving to see parents bring their young children for Baptisms
and Christenings, and the old people holding their icons and crucifixes. They
prayed for an end to Stalin and his measures, they also prayed for us to win.
Another thing that must be remembered is that we also assisted the peasants in
bringing in their crops, protected them from partisan reprisals and gave them
jobs. They lived a better life under us for three years than under the
Communists during their entire lives. They also gave us great intelligence on
partisan and Red Army activity, and worked as translators and scouts. This was
especially true in the Ukraine, although sometimes the Germans in charge would
do stupid things and destroy the support we had gained. One village I remember
was called Baibusy; we had a great relationship with these Ukrainians and others
who fled there. They were marvelous. In the Caucasus the anti-Soviet feeling was
incredible, especially among the Kalmucks and Armenians, and they fought with us
and for us in a fanatical way. Another great memory was an entire village
turning out to welcome us as we entered. The people brought out their religious
icons and gave us information and valuable intelligence, food, places to stay,
everything. The orders from the upper command were to treat the locals humanely;
they were our allies. These people became a second family for many of us, and
when we left there was a great deal of sadness. Once Paul Hausser and I attended
a religious mass; the people knelt before him as if he were a Patriarch,
blessing him for his presence and for restoring their religious freedom. With
the candles and gilt images it was quite an impressive scene.
Q- You fought the partisans; what was
this type of warfare like?
A-
Well, it was the worst. First, there were many different types of partisans.
There were the Communist fanatics who were the most dangerous and could not be
bargained with. Then there were the peasants, conscripts who had little choice
in the matter, and then there were the former Red Army men who joined the
partisans due to their units having been cut off and destroyed, although many of
the last two groups defected to us at some point. They moved quickly in their
pig skin sandals as light infantry and in small groups, usually at night, using
hit and run tactics and creating turmoil in general. They placed mines in roads,
killed sentries, kidnapped officials and forcibly conscripted recruits, and they
were very difficult to catch. In the Caucasus the terrain was a jungle, very
thick with valleys and great forests where we had a very difficult time against
the partisans; snipers climbed trees in the very dense forests, they had bunker
complexes, underground hospitals, weapons manufacturing centres, everything.
They had dug live graves; holes in the ground where they shared body heat and
were well camouflaged. They lived like animals and fought the same way. Many
were freed criminals, even murderers who were brought from jails and placed into
units. Their snipers were very deadly and were difficult to locate, let alone
capture or kill. This type of fighting was the worst; it wore on the nerves of
the men and reduced humanity to the lowest level. I would rather face the Red
Army than these people. The one thing my men and I knew was that however large
and present the threat presented by the Red Army, the partisans were the worst
enemy to fight. Since they did not wear uniforms, unless they were in German
clothing sometimes, and they blended well with the local population, which
created a problem in choosing who was and was not a partisan. Unless you caught
one with a weapon or were actively engaged against them it was impossible. Later
during the war they were absorbed into Red Army infantry and tank units, and
sometimes they were given uniforms. I would say the most disturbing aspect of
fighting the partisans was that, unlike the Soviet military, the partisans
adhered to no set doctrine, used no set order of battle that we could study, and
basically struck where it was the most opportune. If we caught and cornered them
they were dead, and they knew it. That was why they fought like fanatics.
Q-
What was your impression of the Red Army?
A- Very undisciplined and suicidal in
their tactics, but very determined in the fight. They had men and women of all
ages and racial backgrounds, teenagers to pensioners, it was incredible. I once
saw a boy no older than nine years old who had been killed in action, and it
made me hate the Communists even more for their disregard for human life. It was
also difficult for our men (Walloons) to shoot women and children; we were not
accustomed to this, but it became necessary since they fought just as hard as
the men.
Q- What were the prisoners you
captured like?
A- Most Russians only wanted to
surrender; these were usually peasants who had been caught up in the war and
were hoping for something better. Many carried the safe conduct passes
distributed along the front, guaranteeing safe passage to anyone surrendering.
Thousands deserted carrying these passes.
Q- You mentioned the wearing on the
nerves of the men. What was the typical condition of the men?
A- We had a few suicides and some
went mad. It was a type of war that cannot be described, it must be experienced,
but once experienced it still cannot be described. Does this make sense? I know
it seems vague, but that is the best I can do. The exhaustion, hunger, fear, and
pain, not to mention the cold of the winter all played their part. Seeing the
brutality only made the situation worse. The men were walking ghosts; skeletons
that had not eaten a hot meal in weeks, or even a solid meal unless we came
across a dead horse or a village that offered us assistance. The orders were
that no one would steal or commit any crime against the people. We needed their
support, and anything that reduced that support would return to haunt us ten
fold. Unfortunately, many German units did not observe this reality. We served
with the 5th SS ‘Wiking’ Division during this period [1943], and
they generally observed the rules. However, there were exceptions.
Q-
How did the authorities handle desertions?
A- Those who were caught, and bear in
mind that nearly everyone deserting was caught, were hanged, shot, or executed
in some fashion and displayed for public viewing. Many were just children who
had been sent into a war that was too much for them. They broke and they were
killed by their own men for it. It was better to stay and face the enemy with
the chance of surviving, than to desert and definitely be caught by the German
Field Police, who were a judge and jury of their own. It was very sad.
Q- Did you ever work with the
Freiwilligen?
A- Yes, many times, and it was both a
success and a failure. There were some former Communists who re-defected to the
Soviets, but I think most stayed and fought until the end. They knew what their
fate was if captured by the Communists, and many were anti-Communists who were
loyal to us. The best volunteers were generally the Western European units, such
as our own Walloons, the French ‘Charlemagne’, and the Dutch and
Norwegian units. The ‘Wiking’ was perhaps the most notable and we served
with them. They were perhaps the best of all, and were actually the only foreign
unit to be designated as an actual SS division, not an auxiliary unit,
and they were also made a full panzer division as well.
Q- Were you ever exposed to Soviet
propaganda?
A- Yes, quite often. The Reds knew
who were and they would broadcast in French to us, asking us to come over and
fight for De Gaulle. This did not work of course. We actually found it quite
amusing.
Q- Tell us about your meetings with
the Nazi elite, such as Hitler and Himmler, and what you thought of them.
A- I met Himmler only four times
during the war, if my memory is correct, and Hitler I met several times, besides
the Knight’s Cross and Oak Leaves awards. I once had a meeting with both of them
at one time, when I made a request in 1943 that my men be allowed to have
Catholic chaplains, and they agreed. I also refused to have my men partake in
anything that we deemed un-soldierly, and Paul Hausser, ‘Sepp’ Dietrich and
others supported me. Hitler once told me that if he had ever had a son, he
wished that he would have been like me. I am not exactly sure why he said this,
but I know he respected me, and I think Himmler did as well, although I never
trusted him, and I was not quite comfortable with him as the supreme commander
of the SS, including the Waffen SS, which we had joined. I
believed that Germany could have won the war even after the Americans came into
it if the mass of the eastern peoples had been rallied to our cause.
Q- Hitler decorated you with the
Knight’s Cross personally, didn’t he?
A- Yes, in February 1944, following
the Cherkassy battle, which was quite rare. I think only perhaps twenty men
received the Knight’s Cross from Hitler personally, and twelve of those were for
the Eban Emael operation in 1940. I received my Knight’s Cross at the same
ceremony where General Herbert Gille received the Oak Leaves, as both of us were
at Cherkassy together, and General Herman Fegelein and Himmler were in
attendance as well. Josef Goebbels made a great propaganda exploit out of the
situation, which was meant to assist the foreign recruiting effort. Gille would
later be awarded the Diamonds, while Fegelein would be shot on Hitler’s orders.
Q- When did you first arrive in
Russia?
A- We entered the Ukraine beginning
in October 1941, after finishing basic training and mountain warfare school,
although some of our troops had been diverted to the Demyansk region under
Olivier Thoring, a Knight’s Cross winner who was later killed. They were
assigned to 9th Army, then later joined us in the south the next year.
It was his detachment that captured Andrei Vlasov in July 1942, for your
information.
Q-
How did you escape to Spain?
A- This was an interesting situation.
After a crazy course through Germany, Belgium, and Denmark, where I met with
Himmler in Kiel for the last time, we ended up in Oslo, Norway by ship, and we knew
that this situation would not last after my meeting with [Vidkun] Quisling. We
refueled the aircraft and took off on our flight. We ran out of fuel and crashed
on a beach in Spain, and I have been here ever since. My own government
condemned me to death, but they have not pursued those who murdered my family
and killed in the name of their own causes. Justice is determined by those in
power, nothing else.
Q- What was your final rank?
A- My rank was Oberfuehrer,
which is one rank above a full colonel and just below a brigadier general, so
there is no Allied equivalent. I was promoted to general in the last week of the
war, but I never [personally] received the promotion to Brigadefuehrer.
Q- How has your life been since the
war?
A- I spend my time writing about the
war and meeting old friends, and now making new ones. I think that people need
to understand that there is always another side to a story. If people in your
country had suffered the loss of their families due to a political party that
was in conflict with your beliefs, then many of your countrymen may find
themselves on the other side. Your American Civil War is a prime example.
Q- What do you see yourself doing for
the rest of your life?
A- Hopefully still writing, as long
as my mind is sharp and I can see; always reading books, and wondering at the
great changes that have taken place in my lifetime. The collapse of Communism in
Europe has proven that we were right; we just needed validation, and now we have
it. I think that what we may write is important, but the history as it unfolds
will prove who was right, and who was wrong. I never believed in the purging of
Jews and civilians in general, and that was not my war. My war was to fight for
my country, which would have been an independent partner of
Germany in a Communist free Europe. This is only now a reality, but we fought for it fifty years ago all the
same.
Q- Do you feel that Communism will
eventually die in the rest of the world as well?
A- Yes, it will
fall. Governments are the most intangible structures made by man, they change
shapes, and are altered by the forces of time and nature. However, I am an
optimist; I am hopeful that we as a species will learn from our mistakes, and
perhaps there will be hope for us all. But then again, I could be wrong.