Read Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews Online
Authors: Peter Longerich
population in the Warthegau should be ‘reduced’ by 100,000 ‘in compensation
for’ the reception of Jews from the Reich in Lodz, that is these people were to be
killed with gas vans. Further large-scale massacres were carried out until the end
of 1941 among the local Jewish population in the other sites destined to receive
Jews from the Reich, namely the ghettos of Minsk and Riga. When Einsatzkom-
mando 2 began shooting thousands of Jews deported from the Reich immediately
after their arrival in Riga or Kovno (Kaunas), the murder of the Reich German
Jews was suspended by a direct intervention from Himmler. Thus, a distinction
was still being made between the Eastern European and Central European Jews.
In the General Government too, particularly in the district of Lublin, prepar-
ations for a mass murder of the local Jewish population began in October 1941.
Previously, the government of the General Government had been informed that
they could not expect to deport any more Jews eastwards from that territory for
the foreseeable future. In October preparations began for the construction of the
first extermination camp at Belzec, and at, the same time, with the so-called
‘Schiessbefehl’ (order to shoot on sight) the death penalty was introduced for
leaving the ghetto. The goal of these measures was to murder the Jewish popula-
tion that were ‘unfit to work’, initially in the district of Lublin. These plans may
also have applied to the district of Galicia, which had only been part of the General
Government since 1 August and where, like the Einsatzgruppen in the other
occupied territories, the Security Police had been carrying out similar massacres
among the Jewish civilian population since October. References to the construc-
tion of an extermination camp in Lemberg (Lvov) are significant in this context.
However, the construction of an extermination camp in Belzec (and possible plans
for Lemberg) cannot be seen as specifically intended for the murder of the entire
Jewish population of the General Government. The occupying forces initially
concentrated on making preparations for those Jews who were ‘unfit for work’
in the district of Lublin, where a third wave of deportations was expected the
following spring. Thus, in autumn 1941 the murder of hundreds of thousands of
people had been planned, but not yet of millions. As far as the fate of the
remaining Polish and other European Jews was concerned, the older plan of a
mass deportation to the Soviet Union (with ultimately genocidal consequences)
428
Conclusion
had not yet been abandoned. At any rate a dynamic of mass murder had now been
set in motion, which could only have been halted by a radical change of direction
in the regime’s Judenpolitik.
In the autumn/winter of 1941 facilities for killing with gas were established not
only in Belzec (and possibly in Lemberg) as they had been in Chelmno. Further
possible locations have been identified through plans for the installation of such
facilities in Riga, and corresponding references to Mogilev (not far from Minsk).
There is also the offer that Himmler made to the Slovakian head of state on
20 October, to deport Slovakian Jews to a particularly remote area of the General
Government, possibly the basis for the construction of the second extermination
camp at Sobibor. The use of gas as a means of killing had thus initially begun in
the planned deportation zones. Parallel with this we should consider the events in
Serbia, where the Wehrmacht began systematically shooting Jewish men and
Gypsies in October. In November the military administration in France also
began deliberately to direct their retaliatory measures against Jews, who were to
be transported to the East as hostages. In October, November, and December
threatening statements by National Socialists also accumulated concerning the
deadly fate that awaited the Jews.
As confusing as the overall picture may seem at first sight, it does become clear
that, within the space of a few weeks in autumn 1941, German organizations in
various occupied territories began to react with remarkable similarity to the new
situation in Judenpolitik created by Hitler’s September decision to deport the
German and Czech Jews, by organizing mass shootings (Galicia, Serbia), deploy-
ing gas vans (Warthegau) or preparing the construction of extermination camps
(district of Lublin, Auschwitz, Riga, possibly Mogilev-Belarus).
If we see these activities in context, it becomes irrefutably clear that the German
power holders on the ‘periphery’ were always acting in the context of an overall
policy guided by the ‘centre’, meaning Hitler and the SS leadership. The centre was
always in a position to prevent an escalation of a policy which it found undesir-
able, as is demonstrated for example by Himmler putting a halt to the murders of
Reich German Jews in the Ostland in late November 1941.
However, the centre was only able to guide this process and set it in motion
because it knew that impulses issuing from the centre were picked up with great
independent initiative by the authorities in the ‘periphery’. Just as the extension of
the shootings to women and children in the Soviet Union from the summer of
1941 onwards was not simply ordered, the extension of the mass murders to
particular regions of occupied Europe in autumn 1941 also required a very
complicated interaction between the centre and the executive organizations,
involving orders and guidelines from the centre, as well as independent initiatives
and intuition on the part of the regional power holders, which were finally
channelled and coordinated by the centre, albeit at a much higher level of
radicalization.
Conclusion
429
The Wannsee Conference of 20 January 1942 provides an important insight into
the RSHA’s policy of consolidating the various approaches for an extension of the
murders and thereby designing a comprehensive programme for the impending
‘Final Solution’. While, on the one hand, the Germans continued to adhere to the
old programme of deporting all Jews to the occupied Eastern territories after the
end of the war, they were already engaging with the new prospect of implementing
ever larger stages of the ‘Final Solution’ even during the war, although the murder
method was not yet entirely clear. The idea of a gigantic forced labour programme
developed by Heydrich, with deadly consequences for those affected, may well in
fact have reflected ideas actually held within the RSHA.
From the autumn of 1941 the SS had also developed the perfidious system of
‘extermination through work’. Within this system, not only were many people
worked to death in a very short time, but it also meant that a hurdle had been
erected that those people who were no longer fit for work, or who were not capable
of being deployed, were unable to surmount. The perfidious nature of the system
of ‘extermination through work’ was also particularly apparent where there were
only a few forced labour projects for Jews, or none at all, as it provided a pretext
for marking out those Jews who were ‘non-deployable’ as ‘superfluous’. Jewish
‘work deployment’ formed an important complementary element in the early
phase of the ‘Final Solution’.
In the first months of 1942, the deportations were extended in accordance with
the declarations of intent made at the Wannsee Conference. In March 1942
Eichmann announced a third wave of deportations involving a total of 55,000
people from the territory of the ‘Greater German Reich’. This third wave actually
began on 20 March 1942 and lasted until the end of June. Its destination was
ghettos in the district of Lublin, the original ‘Jewish reservation’.
Now, at the beginning of March 1942, a decision must again have been made to
practice mass murder in the reception zone, in the district of Lublin. This decision
also applied to the adjacent district of Galicia. In the eyes of the Nazi leadership
Galicia represented something like an advance base for the planned New Order of
Lebensraum in the East and, since the autumn of the previous year, had been
already the scene of large-scale mass shootings.
The statement in Goebbels’s diaries that the intention was to murder 60 per
cent of the Jews living in the two districts is particularly important here. The
decision to implement mass murder in the two districts, made early in March, had
been prepared since October 1941 by SSPF Globocnik, who was responsible for
this mass murder in both districts. The measures taken in the district of Lublin
demonstrate important parallels with the mass murder of the Jews in the Warthe-
gau, which was also introduced in autumn 1941, although unlike Greiser Globoc-
nik used stationary gas chambers. As in the Warthegau, and as in Riga and Minsk,
the mass murder of the indigenous Jews in the district of Lublin was directly
linked to the deportations from the Reich.
430
Conclusion
With the start of the third wave of deportations to the district of Lublin and the
completion of the first extermination camp in the General Government the option
of a later resettlement to the East had been definitively abandoned. Most of the
people deported to the district of Lublin died miserably in the ghettos after a short
time, or were also deported to extermination camps. However the façade of a
programme of resettlement and work deployment was maintained. During this
third wave of deportations, which occurred between March and June, the RSHA
prepared a Europe-wide deportation programme conceived on a much larger
scale.
Between 25 March 1942 and the end of June, 50,000 Jews were deported from
Slovakia to Auschwitz concentration camp on the basis of the agreements with the
Slovakian government. The deportation of hostages from France to Auschwitz
also began in March 1942.
It is clear from a remark by Heydrich to Tuka on 10 April that these first
deportations from territories outside the ‘Greater German Reich’ were already
part of a Europe-wide programme. According to this, it was planned initially to
deport to the East half a million Jews from Slovakia, the Reich, the Protectorate,
The Netherlands, Belgium, and France.
This introduced the fourth stage of escalation in the transition to the ‘Final
Solution’. Now, in spring 1942, the previous scheme for the deportation of Central
European Jews to particular areas in which the indigenous Jews had first been
murdered was abandoned. In late April/early May the decision must evidently
have been made henceforth to murder Jews indiscriminately.
It can be assumed that in late April or May the Nazi regime made the decision
to extend the mass murder of the Jews, which was already in progress in the
districts of Lublin and Galicia, to the whole of the General Government. At the
same time, the decision must have been made to implement a mass murder
among the Jews of annexed Upper Silesia. The systematic mass murder of the
Jews in the General Government began in June, but was then interrupted for a few
weeks because of the transport ban. The transport ban, introduced because of the
offensive in the East, finally had a radicalizing effect on the extermination policy: it
accelerated the deportations from the Western territories, and, during this period,
the planners of the mass murder clearly had an opportunity to rethink and
consolidate their ideas so that the overall programme could resume in July with
much more devastating effect. It was during this phase that the SS took over
Jewish forced labour in the General Government and thus maintained control
over those prisoners who were ‘fit for work’ and so initially excluded from
extermination.
At around the same time as this fundamental decision regarding the Jews in the
General Government, at any rate before mid-May, significant decisions must have
been made as a result of which the operation of the extermination machinery was
further extended. On the one hand, it was decided that the deportations from the
Conclusion
431
territory of the ‘Greater German Reich’ should be intensified beyond the quota set
in March, and on the other the regime now set about murdering either all or
almost all of the Jews deported from Central Europe when the transports arrived
at their destinations in Eastern Europe. This happened to Jews deported from the
Reich in Minsk from mid-May, and from early June in Sobibor to the Jews
deported from Slovakia.
It can be assumed that on 17 April 1942 Himmler had already ordered the
murder of over 10,000 Central European Jews still living in the Lodz ghetto, who
had been deported there in October 1941 and survived the inhuman conditions in
the ghetto.
With these decisions, probably made in the second half of April or early May,
which came into effect in May/June, the Nazi regime definitively abandoned the
idea of a ‘reservation’ in the eastern area of the General Government or
the occupied Eastern territories which had increasingly become a fiction given
the mass murder that was already under way. The link between this renewed