Matthew Murrey
AHTC Summer Institute 2007
WWII and the Holocaust
Throughout this week I have been thinking a lot about one of the paradoxes of teaching WWII and the Holocaust. On the one hand we educators hope to teach students to think critically about the past so that they can bring their critical thinking skills to bear on current and future situations. However, the Nazi enterprise in its vision and implementation was so extreme and horrific, that there is an unspoken ban on ever comparing any actions of our own government or its allies with any of the actions of Nazi Germany. For example, when Sen. Dick Durbin compared the torture of detainees at Guantanamo to the treatment experienced by prisoners of the Gestapo he was roundly denounced and forced to retract his statement. But if we are to learn the lessons of GermanyÕs descent into dictatorship, militarism, and mass murder shouldnÕt we try to bring issues of WWII into a contemporary setting?
I
was unable to find a document source that tackled this head on, but my thinking
led me to look for a document that would have strong connections to current
issues. My document is one from
the Illinois State Archives selection that we were given during this workshop. It is document #48, ÒCommunication from
Pfc. Rudolph Cornacchia Concerning Service in Saudi Arabia.Ó Document #48 is a
handwritten letter from Cornacchia, written on October 5, 1945 and addressed to
the governor of Illinois.
Cornacchia is writing to complain to the governor about the fact that
instead of being sent home now that the war is over, he has been deployed to
Arabia to do work for Standard Oil Company (SOC). It is a remarkable document for several reasons.
CornacchiaÕs letter, which has many spelling and grammar errors, offers a rare Òfoot soldierÕsÓ glimpse into military and political events in the immediate aftermath of WWII—events that will have profound repercussions for the future. This letter has direct relevance to current debates about oil resources and the role of the US in the Middle East. CornacchiaÕs complaint about having his tour extended both in terms of duration and scope has echoes in the current situation of todayÕs US troops in Iraq having their tours of duty extended. One other fascinating issue raised is CornacchiaÕs complaint about receiving low pay compared to private sector workers who are performing the same job—paralleling todayÕs debates over privatization and contractors.
In
this document Cornacchia clearly expected to be returned home at the end of the
war. He writes that after V.J. day
Òmy frist thoughts were of home an my family, but the army had different
idealÕsÉ.Ó Cornacchia is clearly
skeptical about the military necessity of his work. Noting that he is working for Òa privat enterprise, the Standard
Oil Company,Ó he asserts, Òthe Army is takeing an unfair atvanage of us
soilders.Ó He is also angry that
though his pay is Òsixty dollarÕs a month,Ó there are ÒItilian workerÕs which
recive from $175 to $300 amonth.Ó
The irony of making far less than Òpeople who just a year ago were our
enemyÓ does not escape him.
There
are many questions that the letter brings up. How long was Cornacchia in the service? Was he told he would be discharged at
the end of hostilities? What class
background did he come from? What
does he think of the Standard Oil Company? The reader also wonders what was happening in the Arabian
Peninsula at the time, and how was the decision made to use the military to
assist a private company? What was
going on with British Petroleum at the time? Did the Soviets know what was going on? What did local Arabians think about
these machinations?
I
thought a lot about Professor BarrettÕs presentation as I read this
document. Professor Barrett
invited us to think about whose interests were helped by the war and how did
people of different class backgrounds experience the war. He persuasively argued that in many
ways the war had a powerful unifying and leveling effect on US society, and
that many of these leveling effects have been rolled back. This letter is illustrative of the
unity of purpose experienced by those in the war—as Cornacchia says, Òto
go out an fight for the country we all know is the greatestÓ—but also of
the fragmenting of purpose once the fighting ended.
I
think this would be a great document to use with students. As I pointed out earlier, there are
several contemporary connections that students could pursue related to this
letter. I can think of several
topic areas that students could do further reading and research on: troop
morale during and after WWII, treatment of veterans during the war, current
veteran issues, current issues with troop tours of duty, oil and US foreign
policy, the rise of the Saudi Arabian government, private contractors, WWII and
the modern Middle East.