Letter, General Dwight D. Eisenhower to President Harry S. Truman
This letter details the attitudes and circumstances of displaced persons in the U.S. Zone of Occupation, including the commonly held fear of returning to their homelands, the likelihood that caring for displaced persons would be a long-term problem, the special circumstances o...
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OCR Page 1 of 4jile
DDE/mgc
18 September 1945
Dear Mr. President:
the
During my absence from this Headquarters, receipt of your letter
concerning the problem of displaced persons was acknowl edged.
I
was then on a trip during which I made an inspection of a number
of the installations in which we have displaced persons. This
letter deals primarily with my own observations and will be sup-
plemented, either immediately or in the near future, by a more
extensive report comprehending the findings of subordinate com-
manders and staffs and of a special Jewish investigator.
As to the seriousness of the problem, there is not the slightest
doubt. The hopelessness of the ordinary displaced person comes
about from fear of the future, which involves questions, always
of international politics, and from the proctioal impossibility
of participating, at this time, in any useful occupation.
To speak very briefly about the psychological attitude of these
people, I give you a fow impressions gained by direct conversations
with them. A very large percentage of the persons from the Baltic
States, as well as from Poland and Rumania, definitely do not want
to return to their own countries at this time. Although such a re-
turn represents the height of their ultimate ambitions, they con-
stantly state, "We cannot go back until there is a change in the
political situation - otherwise we will all be killed." They state
that the governments of all these states will persecute them to the
point of death, although they insist that they bitterly opposed
German domination of their respective states just es they opposed
domination by any other government.
With respect to the Jews, I found that most want to go to Palestine.
I note in your letter that you have already ins tituted action in
the hope of making this possible. All of these matters are, of
course, distinotly outside any military responsibility or authority
and there is nothing whatsoever that I or my subordinates would be
justified in promising or intimating in regard to them. However,
the matter draws practical importance for us out of the possibility
that caring for displaced persons may be a long-time job. Since
I assume that most countries would be unwilling to absorb masses
of these people as citizons in their respective countries, the only
cc- Dem Smith
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