250
HITLER’S HANGMAN
including a number of prominent Prague-based academics such as Karl
Valentin Müller and Hans Joachim Beyer.136 Müller, a social anthropolo-
gist with expertise in eugenics and excellent connections in the RSHA,
had a particularly strong influence on Heydrich’s perception of the
Germanization problem in the Protectorate. Shortly after Heydrich’s
arrival in Bohemia and Moravia, on 6 November 1941, Müller was
appointed to a newly created chair of social anthropology in Prague where
he devoted most of his time to the pursuit of questions of ‘ethnic re-
engineering [
Umvolkung
]’ and Germanization, the results of which were
of ‘greatest interest to the Reich Protector’.137
Müller maintained that a substantial proportion of the Czech popula-
tion were originally of German origin, but that their blood had been
mixed with and contaminated by Slavic influences. To regain and cultivate
this German blood, Müller argued, was imperative for the overall
Germanization process.138 He expanded on this line of thought in two
memoranda which he submitted to the head of the Prague SD, Horst
Böhme, in the autumn of 1941, arguing that roughly 50 per cent of the
Czech population contained valuable German blood – a figure that
Heydrich immediately picked up from the report.139
Hans Joachim Beyer was the second demographer to have a major
impact on Heydrich’s thinking. Born near Hamburg in 1908, Beyer had
studied history, law and anthropology and joined the SA, in timely
fashion, in July 1933. By 1935, he had published his first book, in which
he argued that Bohemia had traditionally been an area of German settle-
ment. Only after the devastations brought about by the early fifteenth-
century Bohemian Wars against and among the followers of Jan Hus had
the Czechs begun to outnumber the German settlers. To revise that
historical aberration, Beyer suggested, was of critical importance.140
Over the following years, Beyer continued to work on his dual concept
of ‘depopulation’ and ‘repopulation’, arguing among other things that
ethnic Germans should disassimilate themselves from their Slavic neigh-
bours, that racially mixed marriages should be entered into only with
partners of ‘related’ blood, and that the peoples of Eastern Europe should
be ranked according to their degree of German genetic influences.141 The
Czechs, he insisted, had the largest proportion of German blood which
needed to be ‘regained’.142 Such radical ideas quickly captured the atten-
tion of SS population planners and in 1938 Beyer was recruited into
the SD. His memoranda also kick-started his academic career. In 1940,
at the age of thirty-two, he was given a prestigious chair at Berlin’s
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, although he continued to work simulta-
neously for Heydrich’s RSHA. In 1941, as an ethno-political advisor to SS
Einsatzgruppe
C, he marched into Lemberg, where Polish intellectuals
R E I C H P R OT E C TO R
251
whose names had been added to an arrest list compiled by Beyer himself
were murdered. His own experiences and impressions of Galicia formed
the empirical basis of his next academic publications in which he described
the Polish leadership, ‘contaminated’ by Jewish blood, as a group of people
outside the margins of European society, who should never be allowed to
play a part in the continent’s history again.143
After a brief stint at the Reich University in Posen in September 1941,
Heydrich insisted on Beyer’s transfer to the German University in Prague
where he acted as Heydrich’s chief demographic adviser and director of
the Institute for European Anthropology and Peoples’ Psychology within
the newly founded Reinhard Heydrich Foundation, an umbrella organiza-
tion for all academic institutions in Prague with a focus on the anthropo-
logical and demographic study of Eastern and South-eastern Europe.144
Armed with the pseudo-scientific knowledge gathered in Müller’s and
Beyer’s memoranda as well as in Meyer’s General Plan East, Heydrich
confidently talked about racial hierarchies in the newly conquered territo-
ries, hierarchies in which the Poles, East Ukrainians and Belorussians,
who had been ‘contaminated’ by mixing with various Soviet peoples and
Bolshevik ideas, assumed the lowest positions. Some of the neighbouring
Baltic peoples were racially less inferior than others. ‘The best racial
elements are found among the Estonians,’ Heydrich stated with absolute
certainty, ‘because of the Swedish influence, then come the Latvians with
the Lithuanians being the worst of them all.’145
For the Protectorate, too, Heydrich imagined categories into which indi-
viduals might be placed. ‘Racial y good’ and ‘wel -intentioned’ Czechs, he
announced, would certainly become Germans. ‘Racial y bad’ and ‘il -
intentioned’ Czechs would be ‘removed’ to the ‘wide spaces’ of the East.
Racial y inferior Czechs with good intentions would be sterilized and then
resettled in the Old Reich where they would be exploited as slave labourers.
‘Il -intentioned’ but ‘racial y good’ Czechs, the ‘most dangerous of them al ’,
would be ‘put up against the wal ’. Two-thirds of the population would
immediately fal into one category or another. The remaining, less easily
label ed people in the middle would be sorted out in a few years’ time.146
Here again, Heydrich drew on racial categories and policies that had
first been implemented in Nazi-occupied Poland in 1939 and 1940.
Confronted with the mind-boggling ethnic complexity of East-Central
Europe, Himmler and the race experts of the RuSHA had created four
categories of racial value corresponding to those that had previously been
applied to SS candidates: the categories were ‘racially top’, ‘good or average’,
‘borderline cases’ and ‘racially unfit and alien blood’. This categorization of
persons as ‘desirable’ or ‘undesirable’ was to guide Nazi population policy
and the entire ethnic reconstruction of Europe.147
252
HITLER’S HANGMAN
In addition, on 30 September 1941, Himmler had decreed that ‘border-
line case’ candidates who had previously acquired German citizenship
through a place on the so-called People’s List (the
Volksliste
, first intro-
duced by Arthur Greiser, the Gauleiter of Wartheland, as a means of regis-
tering German citizens in his fiefdom) on the grounds of ‘political merit’,
social qualities or language skills were to be re-examined according to racial
criteria. All persons with ‘uncertain’ German roots – totalling more than
1 million people – were to be screened from late 1941 onwards, and
the results were to be entered on the individual’s racial identity card
(
Kennkarte
).148 Heydrich, whose RSHA oversaw the activities of both the
Central Office for Emigration (UWZ), responsible for expulsion and the
collection of racial data, and the Central Office for Immigration (EWZ),
in charge of naturalizing ethnic Germans from formerly non-German
territories, was familiar with the underlying issues of ‘ethnic engineering’.149
In early February 1942, encouraged by a meeting with Hitler less than a
week before, Heydrich once again pointed to Germanization as the overall
aim of Nazi rule in the Protectorate:150
I would like to underline clearly as our internal principle that
Germanization is intended, but only for those who are genuinely
Germanizable. This requires that we shall now covertly proceed to
undertake a racial inventory. It is entirely clear: if I want to Germanize,
I have to know first who is Germanizable. I still reckon with a figure
between forty and sixty per cent. This racial inventory will now proceed
by means of an identity card . . . By using identity-card checks, we will
probably be able to sift out around a third of those who are not
Germanizable to begin with, and perhaps we can identify another third
of those whom we consider to be superficially Germanizable. That will
leave roughly one-third of the population who will still have to be tested
in a first brief examination. This means that we can reduce the time
needed for the racial inventory from three years to one, which is both
practical and desirable.151
Heydrich did not specify exactly how racial experts would place
Czechs into one of these racial categories. Unlike the labelling of Jews
and Gypsies, comparatively small minorities after all, testing for
Germanizability involved the entire Czech population. The matter was
further complicated by the fact that there was no unambiguous definition
of what constituted a Slav or a German.152 Heydrich argued that real or
potential Germans could be spotted by their blue eyes, pleasing bodies,
height and well-shaped heads. Yet he was also surprisingly open to a
non-biological understanding of Germanness: often, he argued, it was
R E I C H P R OT E C TO R
253
non-physical characteristics that betrayed a German heritage. Clean
houses, virility, sexual morality and social behaviour were criteria for
membership. The most willing Germans among the Czechs, those
‘unprincipled scoundrels’ and ‘rubbish’, were the least suitable candidates.
Ironically, Heydrich felt that it was the Czech patriots dedicated to their
cause, healthy and independent, who would make the best Germans.153
As Heydrich pointed out on various occasions, the situation in the
Protectorate was particularly complicated since al of the most prominent
Czechs had some German blood. The mother of Alois Eliáš, he told Hitler,
seemed from her outward appearance to be a German.154 Jaroslav Krejćí’s
‘beautiful blue eyes’, Heydrich decided, meant that the newly appointed
Czech Minister of Justice certainly had a German background. Hácha, on the
other hand, was considered ‘incapable of Germanization’ by Heydrich because
he ‘is always sick, arrives with a trembling voice and attempts to evoke a pity
that demands our mercy’. As Heydrich made clear, behaviour, mental disposi-
tion, and physiognomy, could be key indicators of someone’s ‘racial core’.155
As the only leading SS officer occupying key positions at both the
centre of the Nazi Empire and its territorial periphery, Heydrich’s ability
to drive and contour Nazi Germanization policies was unparalleled in
Europe. No other administration in Nazi-controlled Europe – with the
possible exception of Greiser’s Warthegau – ever attempted so ambitious
a policy of racial classification and separation in so short a time. Under
Heydrich’s rule in Prague, the testing and registration process intensified
dramatically. In the autumn of 1941, his office announced plans to have
experts from the Race and Settlement Office examine Czech women who
had married Germans before the occupation. Also to be examined were
children born out of wedlock to Czech–German partners. In May
Heydrich reported to Bormann that Race and Settlement Office experts
had fanned out across the Protectorate. Their aim was to produce a racially
ordered cross-section of society, all done under the cover of a
Protectorate-wide campaign against tuberculosis.156
Although aimed at facilitating the distant goal of Germanization,
Heydrich’s testing and registration schemes had immediate consequences
for Protectorate inhabitants. A ‘racially unsuitable’ Czech man who had
had sexual intercourse with a German woman was sent to a concentration
camp. If a marriage was approved, the male candidate was identified as a
German, in the eyes of both his compatriots and the state, and was there-
fore treated differently. Czech mothers married to Germans were required
to raise their children as Germans. Failure to do so meant having their
children put up for adoption. Anyone not carrying a new identity card, the
Kennkarte
, was immediately arrested, allowing police authorities more
easily to track down parachutists, partisans, and Jews in hiding.157
254
HITLER’S HANGMAN
Another important tool of Heydrich’s Germanization policies in the
Protectorate was the so-called Land Office (
Bodenamt
), an SS-controlled
property administration in charge of identifying and confiscating Czech
property targeted for Germanization.158 Already on 17 October 1941
Heydrich had announced to senior members of his staff in Prague that
the Land Office was ‘the only appropriate agency’ for the ‘gradual
Germanization of the East’.159 His idea to create ‘islands of Germandom’
in densely populated Slavic areas through the confiscation of Czech prop-
erty provided an inspiration for the extensive settlement projects imple-