Read Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews Online
Authors: Peter Longerich
national culture and its education system,
36
by plundering its economy and enslaving its workers,
37
by an arbitrary system of terrorization,
38
and finally via a ‘Germanization’ of those Poles who appeared appropriately receptive accompanied by the expulsion, displacement, and long-term decimation of the majority
of the population.
39
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The Persecution of the Jews, 1939–1941
‘Poland policy’ inaugurated a radicalization of National Socialist ‘race policy’.
The fact that in occupied Poland a regime maintained above all by Party and SS
functionaries could exercise arbitrary power on the basis of racist precepts made
the implementation of further radical measures easier in other areas of National
Socialist ‘race policy’.
Poland as the Object of German Judenpolitik
German ‘Jewish policy’ in Poland went through four phases between September
1939 and summer 1941. Initially ‘Jewish policy’ in Poland in September and
October 1939 was determined by plans and preparations for a ‘Jewish reservation’
(Judenreservat). A second phase, between autumn 1939 and spring 1940 saw the
first deportations of Central European Jews into the ‘reservation’, whilst funda-
mental anti-Jewish regulations were put in place by the occupying powers. In a
third phase, between the onset of war in the West and autumn 1940, the author-
ities in the General Government—in the context of the ‘Madagascar Project’—
made plans for deporting the Jews under German rule to an African colony. From
the end of 1940, ‘Jewish policy’ in the occupied areas was dominated by prepar-
ations for the war against the Soviet Union; deportations of Jews ‘to the East’
seemed therefore to have become a realistic possibility.
Early Plans for a ‘Jewish Reservation’ in Poland
The basis for Germany’s policy regarding the 1.7 million Polish Jews that were now
under its rule was evidently only put in place after the start of the war in
September and October 1939
.40
From mid-September initial consideration was being given by the German leadership to a huge ‘resettlement programme’ that
was to encompass the Jews of Poland as well as those in the areas of the German
Reich.
On 14 September Heydrich reported to a meeting of departmental heads of
the Security Police that ‘with regard to the Jewish problem in Poland . . . the
Reichsführer [Himmler] was presenting [Hitler] with suggestions that only the
Führer could decide upon since they had important foreign-policy ramifications’.
41
A week later, on 21 September, Heydrich told them that ‘the deportation of the Jews
(Juden-Deportation) into the foreign-language Reichsgau’ and ‘deportation
(Abschiebung) over the demarcation line’ had been authorized by Hitler. However,
this process was to be spread over a whole year: ‘Jews are to be collected together
into ghettos in the cities in order to permit greater control over them and later
better opportunities for getting rid of them.’ This ‘campaign’ was to be ‘carried out
within the next 3 to 4 weeks’. Heydrich summarized his instructions in the
following key phrases:
Occupation and Persecution of Jews in Poland, 1939–40/41 149
‘Jews into the cities as quickly as possible,
Jews out of the Reich into Poland,
the rest of the 30,000 Gypsies also into Poland,
systematic expulsion of the Jews from German areas in goods trains.’
42
On the same day Heydrich sent an express letter to the chiefs of the Security
Police Einsatzgruppen headed ‘Re: Jewish Question in the occupied areas’.
43
In this, one of the key documents of Germany’s Judenpolitik, Heydrich first drew the
attention of the Einsatzgruppen chiefs to the need to distinguish the ‘final goal
(which will take a long time)’ and ‘the stages by which this final goal will be
reached (which can be undertaken in shorter periods of time)’. The ‘overall
measures planned (in other words the final goal)’ was to be kept ‘strictly secret’.
The ‘instructions and guidelines’ that followed in Heydrich’s document contain
no direct references to the substance of the ‘final goal’, but instead merely
suggestions for the short-term measures to be taken in order to ‘encourage the
heads of the Einsatzgruppen to consider the practicalities’.
Heydrich’s ‘first prerequisite for the final goal’ was the instruction to concen-
trate ‘the Jews from the countryside into the larger towns and cities’. The terri-
tories annexed by the Reich would be the first to be ‘cleared of Jews’. A ‘council of
elders’ was to be established in all Jewish communities which was to be ‘made fully
responsible’ for the ‘precise and punctual implementation of all instructions that
have been or will be issued’. The fact that the places in which the Jews were to be
concentrated mostly lay near railway lines, and Heydrich’s further instruction to
the effect that these guidelines should not operate in the district for which
Einsatzgruppe 1 was responsible (the area east of Cracow) are important indica-
tions of the stage that RSHA planning had reached. Thereafter it was intended to
deport the Polish Jews into an area on the eastern border of occupied Poland,
where a ‘Jewish state under German administration’ was planned, as Heydrich
confirmed to Brauchitsch a day later.
44
The ‘final goal’ classed as ‘strictly secret’
will have involved the more extensive plan that Heydrich had explained to his
department heads on 21 September: the deportation of the Jews from the whole of
the area of the Greater German Reich into the ‘Jewish reservation’ and the
possibility of their being deported into the eastern Polish area occupied by the
Soviet Union, a plan that Hitler was to come back to several times in the days that
followed.
After the Soviet Union and Germany had reached agreement on 28 September
on the definitive demarcation line separating their zones of influence, and the area
between the Vistula and the Bug (later the district of Lublin in the General
Government) had been made a German area, the planned ‘reservation’ was to
be situated in this area. This ‘nature reserve’ or ‘Reich ghetto’, as Heydrich called
it, would not only take Jews but also ‘undesirable’ Poles from the eastern areas that
had been incorporated into the Reich.
45
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The Persecution of the Jews, 1939–1941
On 29 September Hitler told Rosenberg that he wanted the newly conquered
Polish territories to be divided into three strips: the area between the Vistula and
the Bug was for settling the Jews from the whole of the Reich and ‘all other
elements that are in any respect unreliable’; there was to be an ‘Eastern Wall’
erected along the Vistula, and on the old German–Polish border a ‘broad belt
of Germanization and colonization’, and between them a Polish ‘statehood’
(Staatlichkeit).
46
The idea of a ‘Jewish reservation’ was discussed relatively openly by the National Socialist leadership in the following weeks: Hitler mentioned it to
the Swedish manufacturer Dahlerus on 26 September,
47
whilst on 1 October he explained the idea of an ‘ethnic cleansing’ (volkliche Flurbereinigung) in the East
to the Italian Foreign Minister.
48
The German press was told of these plans in confidence and immediately speculation on the ‘reservation’ appeared in the
international press.
49
On 6 October Hitler explained in his speech to the Reichstag that the ‘most important task’ after the ‘collapse of the Polish state’ was ‘a new
order of ethnographic relations, which is to say a resettlement of nationalities’; in
the course of this ‘new order’ an attempt would be made ‘at ordering and
regulating the Jewish problem’.
50
On the following day, 7 October 1939, Hitler issued the decree for the ‘Strength-
ening of the German Nation’ and thereby gave Himmler the double task of, on the
one hand, ‘collecting and settling’ into the Reich ‘German people who have had to
live abroad, and, on the other, ‘arranging the settlement of the ethnic groups
within its sphere of interest so as to improve the lines of demarcation between
them’. Himmler was specifically to take responsibility: first, for the ‘repatriation’
(Rückführung) of Reich and ethnic Germans, second for the ‘exclusion of the
detrimental influence of those elements of the population who are ethnically alien
and represent a danger to the Reich and the community of Germans’ (for which
purpose, it went on to say, he would be allowed to assign the elements in question
particular areas to live in), and third for the ‘formation of new German settlement
areas through population transfer and resettlement’. The Reichsführer-SS was
instructed to make use of the ‘existing authorities and institutions’ in order to
implement these tasks.
51
Within the framework of these new responsibilities Himmler concentrated
first and foremost on organizing the ‘repatriation’ (Heimführung) of the ethnic
Germans from the Soviet Union and the Baltic states into the annexed areas of
Poland, which had been agreed on 28 September and over-hastily put into
practice, and at the same time set in train the large-scale ‘resettlement’ of Jews
and Poles.
Deportations Phase I: The Nisko–Lublin Plan
of October 1939
The so-called Nisko Project was the first concrete programme for deportation that
the SS organized in the context of the authority they had been given to ‘eliminate
the harmful influence of . . . elements of the population distinct from the German
people’ and to place them in ‘designated areas of settlement’.
On the day before the Decree for the Strengthening of the German Nation was
issued, on 6 October 1939, Heinrich Müller (the Head of the Gestapo) instructed
Adolf Eichmann (who was at that time Director of the Central Office for Jewish
Emigration (Zentralstelle für jüdische Auswanderung) in Prague) to prepare
for the deportation of some 70,000–80,000 Jews from the region of Katowice
(Kattowitz), which had recently been formed from the annexed Polish areas. The
order also made provision for the deportation of Jews from Ostrava in Moravia
(Mährisch-Ostrau).
1
Both expulsion campaigns had already been initiated or planned by either the army or the Gestapo in the Protectorate (German-occupied
Czech territory) by the middle of September.
2
It was also on 6 October that Eichmann ordered the compilation in Berlin of a comprehensive list of all Jews,
who had hitherto been listed under the particular congregations of which they had
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The Persecution of the Jews, 1939–1941
been members. This suggests that a much more comprehensive ‘resettlement
campaign’ was being planned.
3
In the days immediately afterwards Eichmann devoted great energy to the
organization of deportations not only from Ostrava and Katowice but from
Vienna, too. It is clear from a note sent by Eichmann to the Gauleiter of Silesia
that the former’s original instructions had in the meantime been extended.
Eichmann said that after the first four transports the ‘Head of the Security Police,
and the RFSS and Head of the German Police had to be presented with a progress
report which would then in all probability be passed on to the Führer. They should
then wait until the general removal of all Jews was ordered. The Führer has
initially directed that 300,000 Jews be transferred out of the Old Reich and the
Ostmark.’
4
Eichmann also mentioned this ‘order of the Führer’s’ on his visit to Becker, the Special Representative for Jewish Questions on Bürckel’s staff, noting
that those Jews still living in Vienna would be driven out in less than nine
months.
5
On 16 October, on a further visit to Vienna, Eichmann envisaged ‘2 transports
per week, each with 1,000 Jews’; on the same day he informed the Director of the
Reich Criminal Investigation Department, Artur Nebe, that the deportations
from the Old Reich would begin in three to four weeks.
6
Between 12 and 15
October, Dr Franz-Walther Stahlecker, the commander of the Security Police in
the Protectorate and Eichmann decided upon Nisko on the San as the target
station for these deportations and as the location for a ‘transit camp’. This camp,
situated right on the border with the district of Lublin, was evidently intended
to serve as a kind of filter through which the deportees would be moved to
the ‘Jewish reservation’. The transportees were promised accommodation in
barracks, for which plans were in fact originally made,
7
but these plans were now consciously abandoned.
8
The deportations were also to include Gypsies. When asked by Nebe as Head of
the Reich Criminal Investigation Department ‘when he could send the Berlin
Gypsies’, Eichmann responded that he intended to ‘add a few wagons of Gypsies’
to the transports from the district of Katowice and the Protectorate. He told Nebe
that the deportation of Gypsies from the remainder of the Reich would be initiated
some three to four weeks later.
9
Between 20 and 28 October 4,700 Jews were transported to Nisko from Vienna,