Nazi Conspiracy & Aggression After a demand for concentration camp labor had been
created, and a mechanism set up by Speer for exploiting this
labor in armament factories, measures were evolved for
increasing the supply of victims for extermination through
work. A steady flow was assured by the agreement between
Himmler and the Minister of Justice mentioned above. This
was implemented by such programs as the following, expressed
in Sauckel's letter of 126 January 1942 to Presidents of
Landes Employment Offices regarding the program for the
evacuation of Poles from the Lublin district:
[Page 918]
"The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this
measure will be put into concentration camps and put to
work where they are criminal or asocial elements." (L-61)
General measures were supplemented by special drives
far persons who would not otherwise have been sent to
concentration camps. For example, for "reasons of war
necessity" Himmler ordered on 17 December 1942 that at
least 35,000 prisoners qualified for work should be
transferred immediately to concentration camps, (106-D-PS). The order provided that:
"For reasons of war necessity not to be discussed
further here, the Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of the
German Police on 114 February 1942 has ordered that
until the end of January 1943, at least 35,000
prisoners qualified for work, are to be sent to the
concentration camps. In order to reach this number, the
following measures are required:
"1. As of now (so far until 1 February 1943) all
eastern workers or such foreign workers who have been
fugitives, or who have broken contracts, and who do not
belong to allied, friendly or neutral States are to be
brought by the quickest means to the nearest
concentration camps ***.
"2. The commanders and the commandants of the security
police and the security service, and the chiefs of the
State Police Headquarters will check immediately on the
basis of a close and strict ruling
a. the prisons
b. the labor reformatory camps
"All prisoners qualified for work, if it is essentially
and humanly possible, will be committed at once to the
nearest concentration camp, according to the following
instructions, for instance also if penal procedures
were to be established in the near future. Only such
prisoners who in the interest of investigation
procedures are to remain absolutely in solitary
confinement can be left there.
"Every single laborer counts!" (1063-D-PS)
Measures were also adopted to insure that extermination
through work was practiced with maximum efficiency.
Subsidiary concentration camps were established near
important war plants. Speer has admitted that he personally
toured Upper Austria and selected sites for concentration
camps near various munitions factories in the area. This
admission appears in the transcript of an interrogation of
Speer under oath on 18 October 1945, in which Speer stated:
"The fact that we were anxious to use workers from
concentration camps in factories and to establish small
concentration camps near the factories in order to use
the manpower that was available there was a general
fact. But it did not only come up in connection with
this trip." [i.e. Speer's trip to Austria]. (3720-PS)
Goering endorsed this use of concentration camp labor and
asked for more. In a teletype which Goering sent to Himmler
on 14 February 1944, he stated:
"At the same time I ask you to put at my disposal as
great a number of concentration camp (KZ) convicts as
possible for air armament, as this kind of manpower
proved to be very useful according to previous
experience. The situation of the air war makes
subterranean transfer of industry necessary. For work
of this kind concentration camp (KZ) convicts can be
especially well concentrated at work and in the camp."
(1584-I-PS)
Speer subsequently assumed responsibility for this program,
and Hitler promised Speer that if the necessary labor for
the program could not be obtained, a hundred thousand
Hungarian Jews would be brought in by the SS. Speer's record
of conferences with Hitler on 6 April 1944 and 7 April 1944,
contain the following quotation:
"*** Suggested to the Fuehrer that, due to lack of
builders and equipment, the second big building project
should not be set up in German territory, but in close
vicinity to the border on suitable soil (preferable on
gravel base and with transport facilities) on French,
Belgian or Dutch territory. The Fuehrer agrees to this
suggestion if the works could be set up behind a
fortified zone. For the suggestion of setting this
plant up in French territory speaks mainly the fact
that it would be much easier to procure the necessary
workers. Nevertheless, the Fuehrer asks an attempt be
made to set up the second works in a safer area, namely
in the Protectorate. If it should prove impossible
there, too, to get hold of the necessary workers, the
Fuehrer himself will contact the Reichsfuehrer SS and
will give an order that the required 100,000 men are to
be made available by bringing in Jews from Hungary.
Stressing the fact that the building organization of
the Industriegemeinschaft Schlesien Silesia was a
failure, the Fuehrer demands that these works must be
built by the O.T. exclusively and that the workers
should be made available by the Reichsfuehrer SS. He
wants to hold a meeting shortly in order to discuss
details with all the men concerned." (R-124)
[Page 920]
The character of the treatment inflicted on Allied nationals
and other victims of concentration camp while they were
being worked to death is described in an official report
prepared by a US Congressional Committee which inspected the
liberated camps at the request of General Eisenhower (159).
The report states in part:
"*** The treatment accorded to these prisoners in the
concentration camps was generally as follows: They were
herded together in some wooden barracks not large
enough for one-tenth of their number. They were forced
to sleep on wooden frames covered with wooden boards in
tiers of two, three and even four, sometimes with no
covering, sometimes with a bundle of dirty rags serving
both as pallet and coverlet.
"Their food consisted generally of about one-half of a
pound of black bread per day and a bowl of watery soup
for noon and night, and not always that. Owing to the
great numbers crowded into a small space and to the
lack of adequate sustenance, lice and vermin
multiplied, disease became rampant, and those who did
not soon die of disease or torture began the long, slow
process of starvation. Notwithstanding the deliberate
starvation program inflicted upon these prisoners by
lack of adequate food, we found no evidence that the
people of Germany as a whole were suffering from any
lack of sufficient food or clothing. The contrast was
so striking that the only conclusion which we could
reach was that the starvation of the inmates of these
camps was deliberate.
"Upon entrance into these camps, newcomers were forced
to work either at an adjoining war factory or were
placed 'in commando' on various jobs in the vicinity,
being returned each night to their stall in the
barracks. Generally a German criminal was placed in
charge of each 'block' or shed in which the prisoners
slept. Periodically he would choose the one prisoner of
his block who seemed the most alert or intelligent or
showed the most leadership qualities. These would
report to the guards' room and would never be heard
from again. The generally-accepted belief of the
prisoners was that these were shot or gassed or hanged
and then cremated. A refusal to work or an infraction
of the rules usually meant flogging and other types of
torture, such as having the fingernails pulled out, and
in each case usually ended in death after extensive
suffering. The policies herein described con-
[Page 921]
stituted a calculated and diabolical program of planned
torture and extermination on the part of those who were
in control of the German Government ***."
"On the whole, we found this camp to have been operated and administered much in the same manner as Buchenwald had been operated and managed. When the efficiency of the workers decreased as a result of the conditions under which they were required to live, their rations were decreased as punishment. This brought about a vicious circle in which the weak became weaker and were ultimately exterminated." (159)
Such was the cycle of work, torture, starvation and death
for concentration camp labor -- labor which Goering, while
requesting that more of it be placed at his disposal, said
had proved very useful; labor which Speer was "anxious" to
use in the factories under his control.
The
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Volume
I Chapter X
Use of Slave Labor in German War Industries
(Part 2 of 2)