GERMAN INFLUENCE ON THE NORTHERN NEUTRALS
Just as I had the opportunity to study
conditions in Austria, so also I came in contact with
the politics and diplomacy of the nations contiguous
to Germany on the north.
My grandfather, Benjamin F. Angel,
was American Minister to Sweden and Norway and on
leaving received from the King the Order of St. Olaf.
I have always taken a deep interest in Scandinavian
affairs and it behooves the American people to regard
closely what is happening nowadays in Norway, Sweden
and Denmark.
The outbreak of the European War in
1914 served to bring the three northern nations close
together. Their Kings met in conference and a
peace monument was erected on the boundary of Norway
and Sweden as if to proclaim to the world that in spite
of their recent separation, Norway and Sweden were
sister countries.
The people of these three countries
are of the same blood and their languages are somewhat
similar. Norwegian and Danish written are practically
the same. But there is quite a difference in
pronunciation. Swedish is more like German and
the pronunciation is not as difficult to learn as
that of Norwegian and Danish. In Norway, there
are older dialects, differing from Danish, and there
has lately been a great movement in favour of a more
national language. Many Norwegians regard the
official Danish-Norwegian as a reminder of old subjection
to Denmark and not at all fitted for the new independent
Norwegian kingdom. The new national language
is called “Landsmaal.”
Sweden and Norway were both under
one king from 1814 to 1905. In that year after
a peaceful secession, Prince Charles of Denmark, the
son of the King of Denmark, was made the King of Norway,
with the title of Haakon VII. Although both have
kings, Denmark and Norway may be termed democratic
countries.
Copenhagen is lively since the war.
The population of Denmark is only 2,500,000 and the
whole country is only 14,829 square miles, which means
an area about the size of Maryland. The country
was once larger but in 1864 Prussia went to war with
Denmark and, finally, after the war with Austria in
1866, added to the Crown of Prussia the two Danish
duchies of Schleswig and Holstein. As the city
and port of Kiel were included in this territory annexed,
it is easy to see why the Germans engaged in this
enterprise against Denmark.
Denmark possesses the Faro Islands
which lie far to north of Scotland, the great island
of Iceland and Greenland, relics of the times when
the Viking ships brought such terror to the other
countries of Europe, that the Litany used to read:
“From plague, pestilence and famine, from battle
and murder, from sudden death and from the fury of
the Northmen, good Lord deliver us.”
In Christiania we saw on our
trip out two graceful Viking ships dug out of the
clay shores of the coast in a state of fair preservation one
of them a Princess’s ship on which it was easy
to imagine some blonde princess of the North, her long
braids of golden hair flying in the wind, urging on
her Scandinavian oarsmen.
The Danes are a sturdy race, the women
more independent than those of other countries.
On the Frederick VIII, when we sailed from
Denmark, September 28, 1916, for the United States,
were two handsome girls, nineteen and twenty-one years
of age, the daughters of the proprietor of the largest
department store in Copenhagen. They were going
to America to find employment in department stores
in the different cities of the country, travelling
entirely alone, and expected to return to Denmark
after a year’s experience in America with many
new ideas of management and advertising for their
father in Copenhagen. These girls were wonderfully
educated, speaking in addition to Danish, French,
German and English with hardly a trace of accent.
They lived a short distance out of Copenhagen and
told me that every morning of the year they jumped
into the sea at six-thirty in the morning, something
that I should not care to do even in August in that
cold northern land.
Danish farmers learned early that
in order to be prosperous they must practise intensive
farming. I believe that Denmark, which even before
the war enjoyed a high degree of prosperity, is the
only country in the world where there are pig sties
steam-heated and electric lighted while the farmer
himself does not have these luxuries.
Our farmers have much to learn from
the farmers of Denmark both in agricultural methods
and in co-operation for the marketing of products.
The reclamation of the Danish moors in Jutland has
made surprising progress: it is in Jutland that
a park has been preserved in its primeval state the
Danish-American Park, bought with money subscribed
by Danish emigrants to America who prospered in their
adopted land.
Ever since the conquest of Denmark
by Germany, there has been a deep hatred of all things
German in Denmark on account of the treatment of those
Danes, numbering between one hundred and two hundred
thousand, who were living in Schleswig and Holstein
and were unfortunate enough to be turned over as property
to the King of Prussia.
I found the Danes agreeable people.
Of the same race as the Germans, living like them
in the dark North, this difference in behaviour is
perhaps accounted for by the fact that the Danes are
free, while the Germans are oppressed by the weight
of an ever present autocracy.
While the Danish people hate the Germans,
officially Denmark is careful to conceal this hate
and even, apparently, to lean towards the German side,
through fear of the German troops, which could easily
overrun Denmark in thirty hours.
Denmark, during the war, received
oil cake from America, which was fed to cattle later
sold to Germany. A great tonnage of fish has
also been sent from Denmark to Germany while salt and
potash have been imported. There is no question
but that supplies of all kinds and in great quantities
have found their way across the Danish border.
And the Danes have prospered enormously
since the war. Many people have become millionaires
through the sale of food and other supplies to the
Germans. A great deal of this food supply was
sent in the form of canned meat, popularly known as
goulash, and so to-day whenever an automobile passes
on a Danish road, the small boys call out “goulash
Baron,” in the belief that the occupant is a
new-made millionaire, enriched by trade with Germany.
It is hard for us to realise how far
north the Scandinavian countries lie. Christiania,
the capital of Norway and in its southern part, is
in the same latitude as the south point of Greenland;
and is it not difficult to imagine a modern city situated
in Greenland?
In Christiania it is not fairly
daylight in December until ten in the morning and
dark early in the afternoon. The ample water
power of Norway and Sweden furnishes electric light,
a godsend in the short dreary winter days.
Norway, in many respects, is one of
the most advanced countries in the world. Having
been ruled by Denmark for four hundred years, it was
united to Sweden by the Treaty of Kiel, in 1814, with
the approval of all the Powers, but against the inclinations
of the Norwegians, who knew that they were given to
Sweden to compensate that country for the loss of
Finland, annexed to Russia.
The ambitious Bernadotte arranged
to govern Norway as king of that country, which was
theoretically to retain its independence and be united
to Sweden only through the personal rule of the one
monarch.
At this time, the Norwegian Constitution
provided that no more personal privileges should be
granted and since then the progress of Norway towards
a real democracy has been rapid. It was the conflict
over the right demanded by the Norwegians to establish
a separate consular service that led to the dissolution
of the union between Norway and Sweden in 1905, Norway
voting for separation 368,211 to 184.
There are now no nobles in Norway.
Shortly after the union it was decided that those
who had titles of nobility could hold them for life,
but that their descendants could not inherit.
Legislation for the protection of
child workers, women, for insurance, etc., is
of an advanced character. For instance, no child
under fourteen is permitted to work and no woman for
six weeks after her confinement women receiving
full sick benefit pay during this period. Many
of the railways are state owned.
Norway is a land of little farms,
the shipping and fishing industries occupy many men,
but with the exception of the water power driven nitrate
plants, on the coast, and the wood-pulp factories,
there is little manufacturing.
The mass of the people are with the
Allies. Last winter, when it was proposed that
a German concert troupe should play and sing in Christiania,
the people threatened to burn the theatre if the performance
was permitted.
But, as in Sweden, the German propagandists
are at work in Norway. Here again, unless we
present our case, the people may be turned from the
Allies.
King Gustavus V, who occupies to-day
the throne of Sweden, has a German wife. All
the sympathies of the court, which copies the little
courts of Germany, of the aristocracy and of the army
are strongly with Germany.
In Sweden, although the king has not
much more power than the kings of Denmark and Norway,
there is an aristocracy which inclines to imitate
the manners of the German aristocracy and to seize,
if possible, the privileges enjoyed by that body.
The officers in the army in Sweden are devoted to
German ideals and, since the war, great bodies of
them have been invited to Germany, where there has
been much ado over them.
The people, however, do not sympathise
with Germany, knowing what the triumph of Germany
means for them and how the court and the army and
the aristocracy would be thereby encouraged to put
the Swedish people in what the Germans would call
“their place.”
The Swedes fear the domination of
Germany and the domination of an aristocracy and army
imbued with German ideas. They know that if Germany
wins, the king business will take on a new lease of
life. The ground was ripe for the Allies but the
German propaganda, cleverly managed, spending money
without stint, is gradually bringing the people to
a point where, if the blockade is tightened, they
may consent to Sweden’s entering the war as an
ally of the Central empires.
In spite of the dislike of the people
for the German cause, I think that the aristocracy
and the court and the army would have forced Sweden
into the war but for one thing. After some months
of war, an arrangement was made whereby the so-called
“heavily wounded” were exchanged with
prisoners between Russia and Germany. The German
who was a prisoner of the Russians and had lost an
arm or a leg, was sent home. These wounded prisoners
on their way to their home countries, were compelled
to travel the whole length of Sweden and it was the
sight of these poor stumps of humanity, as the trains
stopped at the various stations in Sweden, that kept
the Swedish people out of war. Many pictures of
them printed in the Swedish papers caused profound
dismay in Sweden and developed an inexpressible abhorrence
of war.
Since hostilities commenced, on the
other hand, the Government, army and aristocracy of
Sweden not only have been consistently opposed to
the Allies, but of the utmost service to Germany.
Swedish iron ore goes into German
cannon and makes the best steel for aeroplane engines,
and the imports into Sweden from America of foods
and fats from America increased one thousand per cent
almost immediately. These imports, with great
quantities of copper and other supplies, found their
way to Germany to the great profit incidentally of
Swedish business men. For the plain people of
Sweden the cost of living increased without a corresponding
increase in salaries and wages, so that the new prosperity
was confined to the “goulash barons.”
There is no question but that, just
as in Argentina, the Swedish diplomatic pouch was
in all countries at the service of Germany, and that
the orders to the German spies in Russia were sent
by this means. In fact, it is believed German
prisoners in Russia found their way to Petrograd,
there to participate in revolution and counter-revolution
under orders sent through the Swedish officials.
Smuggling is winked at and at Lullia
on the Swedish coast near the head of the Gulf of
Bothnia great quantities of rubber, block tin and
oil arrive from Russian Uleaborg across the gulf.
The French wanted to send a consul
to Lullia, but their request was refused, doubtless
because the Swedish authorities did not care to have
any official foreigners see this traffic.
Cleverest of all has been the work
of the German financial agents. Warburg, the
Hamburg banker, is attached to the German legation
in Stockholm. So skilfully has he managed his
task, that Swedish firms and Swedish banks have been
induced to take German paper money, commercial paper
and securities instead of gold, in return for copper,
rubber, tin, food, fats, wool and supplies and in
this way the Swedish business men, by the touch of
self-interest, have been made to favour Germany.
I confess that it is hard to bring
about, but as each nation has the right to choose
with whom its citizens shall do business, we must
mercilessly blacklist those firms which assist Germany
by accepting, in lieu of the gold which would thus
be drained from Germany, what amounts to the promise
of Germany to pay if successful in war.
The Queen of Sweden, herself a German
and an admirer of the German Emperor, has great influence
over her husband and the Court.
At a time when she was visiting her
family in Karlsruhe (for she is a Princess of Baden)
a reprisal attack made by Allied aeroplanes narrowly
missed the royal palace and, consequently, the Queen.
This has added to her prejudice against the Allies.
The Crown Princess of Sweden was a Princess of Connaught,
the sister of “Princess Pat,” but she
does not dare take any stand against the anti-ally
propaganda.
I am sure that President Wilson appreciates
the gravity of the situation and that means are being
taken to place our position not only before the Swedish
people but those of Swedish birth and descent in the
United States whose influence should be brought to
bear on their friends and relatives in the old country.
The crew of every Swedish ship that
lands here should be given our viewpoint; every Swede
who returns to Sweden should go as a missionary we
must not permit Sweden, whose people are bound to
us by ties of blood and friendship, by the hospitality
which we offered to every Swedish immigrant, to be
ranged among our enemies by the German-admiring aristocrats
of Sweden who by birth, training and education are
opposed to democracy, who hope, if Germany wins, to
gain as great an ascendancy in the government as the
Prussian Junkers possess in Germany.
The Finns who occupy that part of
Russia nearest to Sweden have quite a sympathy for
the Swedes, Finland having been at one time a part
of Sweden. The races, however, are not the same.
The Finns are a Mongolian race and certain similarities
of language make it plain that the Finns and the Hungarians
came from the same mysterious place of origin somewhere
in the great mountains and highlands of Central Asia.
Three languages, three influences,
fight for mastery in Finland. The official Russian,
the language of the government; Finnish, now receiving
a new lease of life; and Swedish, the language of
those who once conquered and held Finland, and who
so imposed their civilisation on the more ignorant
Finns, that to-day Swedish is the language of the
more prosperous classes and of most of the business
men.
The women of Finland received the
suffrage in 1906, all voting who are over twenty-four
and who have been for five years citizens of Finland.
Many women thereafter were elected to the Finnish
parliament.
In two Scandinavian countries the
women vote. Norway was the first sovereign state
of Europe to give full citizenship rights to women.
In 1913, all Norwegian women of twenty-five and citizens
for five years were put on a voting equality with men,
and the only positions under the national government
for which women are not eligible are in the army and
navy, the diplomatic and consular service and the
Supreme Court.
The Danish women received the full
franchise in 1915, but in aristocratic Sweden only
the women paying income taxes have rights in the communal
councils.
In 1908, in Norway, a law was passed
providing that women doing the work of men shall receive
equal pay.
Military service in all three northern
nations is universal and compulsory.
Possibly on a “tip” from
Berlin to a fellow autocrat, there occurred in February,
1914, an extraordinary political event, arranged and
“accelerated” by the Government, when thirty
thousand farmers, meeting in Stockholm for the purpose,
marched in procession to the Royal Castle to address
the King and tell him that they were ready to bear
any extra taxes imposed for the purpose of providing
for national defence.
Russia was the power particularly
feared by Sweden who thought she desired to annex
a part of Northern Sweden and Norway in order to get
an outlet to the sea on the Norwegian coast.
But recent events in Russia have ended
this fear and the only question for the Swedes is
the same, one with which the whole world is faced Kaiserism
or Democracy.
Sven Hedin, the explorer, who
was the leader in this movement for national defence,
has appeared as a German propagandist so violent as
to have become popular with the Germans. It is
hard to understand why so intelligent a man should
range himself on the side of autocracy. Now that
the Russian danger, if danger there was, is past it
is to be hoped that this celebrated man will be found
in the ranks of those opposed to the autocracy which
ordered the murders of many Swedish seamen.
Norway, although it has often met
the submarine of the Kaiser, which, defying all law,
has sent to death so many Norwegian sailors and fishermen,
suffers also from German propaganda and a certain
self interest because of the forty-five million krönen
sale of fish this last year to German buyers.
Germany works, too, in Denmark with
the Socialists and deliveries of coal are used to
obtain food from that country.
The jolly, free, brave Scandinavians
are naturally opposed to all that Pan-Germanism and
German rule means. It is necessary for us, especially
our citizens of Scandinavian descent, not to lose this
initial advantage.