| Joseph "Joe" Leber Story |
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| Joseph Leber, 1952 |
On the sunny morning of
January 6, 1942, Joseph “Joe” Leber was arrested at the Guatemala City
Tennis Club by Guatemalan police agents. Joe had left Germany in 1920
for the USA. He lived in New York for some six years before he moved to
Latin America to work for US companies involved in export. He settled
in Guatemala around 1929, where he continued to represent US and
British export companies. In addition, he bought into a shoe factory
owned by another German. He later bought out his partner and became the
sole owner of the factory.
This property apparently had been on a list of assets to be confiscated
in the event of deportation of their “enemy alien” owners. Three days
after Joe’s arrest and deportation, the “Diario de Centro America,” a
newspaper published a list of so-called “Blocked National Assets”,
meaning former German properties, ranging from properties of “Deutsche
Lufthansa” to “Leber, Joseph (Leber & Cia).”
Christmas Day, the 6th of January in Latin America, apparently was
considered a handy time for a roundup of aliens, since it was difficult
for the arrested to contact anybody for support, help or even
information. The arrested persons were given a couple of hours to pack
as many personal effects as they could carry.
As a bachelor living alone, he could only leave a message for his
housekeeper who believed when she read his note that he would return
after a couple of months. Carrying two suitcases, he joined other
rounded up fellow Germans from Guatemala. That same evening, the group
was taken by train to Puerto Barrios on the north western coast of
Guatemala. To pick up prisoners from Central America, the US Army had
diverted the troop carrier Kent to Puerto Barrios. The Guatemalan
Germans boarded this ship after spending the night from the 6th to the
7th of January 1942 sleeping on banana leaves on the railroad platform.
From there, the prisoners were deported to the USA, probably to New
Orleans. From there, they were taken to the US Army’s Camp Blanding in
Stark, Florida, parts of which had been converted into a temporary
internment camp.
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| Camp Blanding Map Courtesy Bernd
Leber |
While in Camp Blanding, the deportees were given a chance to meet the
Swiss consul to arrange things back home in Guatemala (property
regulations, information to families etc.). The internees of Camp
Blanding were then used as a kind of exchange commodity for the US, in
a deal to release US citizens and other elements of interest to the US
from German dominated territories, and were—against their will—taken to
Germany, an operation for which the International Red Cross was used
(or rather misused).
Joseph Leber’s deportation voyage from New Orleans in the United States
to Göteborg/Sweden, and then onward to war-time Nazi Germany
started on 24 July
1942 in New Orleans where he boarded the SS “Drottningholm”, along with
116 other Germans from Guatemala. On a facsimile list of signatures of
the 117 deportees published in Regina Wagner’s book “Los Ale manes en
Guatemala”, I could identify the signature of my father, which quite a
touching moment.
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Copy of signatures of Guatemalan
deportees, 1942. From S.S. Drottningholm, a Swedish ship used in
exchanges of Latin
American civilians to Germany (Joe Leber’s signature in yellow) — Los
alemanes en Guatemala, 1828-1944, by Regina Wagner, Guatemala, 1996.
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The event of the deportation of the ex-Guatemalan Germans was reported
in the Guatemalan daily “Nuestro Diario” of 29 July 1942, probably to
assure those who had profited from the expropriations of real estate,
farms, companies and assets that the deportees had to leave behind.
During the passage, the deportees were asked to sign the following
declaration: I bind myself under obligation of oath not to bear arms
for the duration of the present war“. A similar declaration was made by
the American exchange internees to the German authorities; both sides
respected the declarations, and abstained from drafting the exchanged
returnees into their respective armies.
Joseph Leber, after his return to Germany and until the end of the war,
was conscripted into a civilian “war relevant” assignment, as a manager
in an aluminium plant. After the war, he returned to his little home
town in the Black forest (Tiengen, on the Swiss border), which he had
left in 1920, and stood as an independent candidate for the post of the
Mayor in the first democratic communal elections after Nazi
dictatorship. However, the Military Government of the French Zone,
which was in charge at the time, looked with a suspicious eye on this
“American”--- the communists thought him to be too capitalistic, and
the conservatives and the church considered him to be too
American-liberal. I personally think that in attitude and appearance he
was probably more shaped by his 6 or so years in the US, then by the 15
years in Latin America. Anyway, the returning son of a family with
ancient roots in this town was considered a stranger and not as welcome
as he had expected.
He was recognized as a refugee (just as those Germans deported from the
lost German territories ceded to Poland and to the Soviet Union), but
he was never compensated for his losses in real estate, his factory and
business, or for his personal effects. Until his death (in 1965) he
tried to fight for a compensation for his losses – in vain, as I found
out when inheriting his documents and assets after the death of my
mother, some time back. As long as he lived, after his deportation, he
longed for Guatemala, which he always referred to as the country of
eternal spring.
Story written by his son, Bernd Leber
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