Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews by Peter Longerich (booksvooks TXT) 📕
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- Author: Peter Longerich
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hundreds of Jews. But the Hungarian government made no arrangements to
extend this policy to Jews with Hungarian citizenship. 304
In July 1942, when the Hungarian military attaché in Berlin submitted his
government’s proposal that all Jews living in Hungary ‘illegally’ be resettled to
Transnistria, 305 Himmler decided that the evacuation from Hungary of Jews of non-Hungarian citizenship who had fled to the country should be delayed until
Hungary declared itself willing to include its own Jews in the planned measures. 306
Along very similar lines, Eichmann too declared on 25 September 1942 his lack
of interest in the deportation of foreign Jews from Hungary, as this would have
been only a ‘partial’ action that ‘according to experience’ required the same
expenditure of effort as the comprehensive deportation of all Jews living in a
country. One should therefore wait until Hungary was ready to include the
Hungarian Jews in the deportations as well. 307
At the beginning of 1941, the Bulgarian government had passed special laws
against the Jews living in the country (removal from public service, confiscation
of property) which, after the Balkan campaign in the spring of 1941, were
extended to the occupied Greek (Thracian and eastern Macedonian) or Yugo-
slavian (Macedonian) territories with their native Jews numbering between
4,000 and 7,000.308 If these measures were, from the German point of view, far from adequate preconditions for the deportation of Jews living in Bulgaria,
this situation changed very quickly in the course of the summer of 1942, plainly
still influenced by the preparations for the deportations from Croatia and
Romania.
On 26 August a Commissariat for Jewish Affairs was set up and the same decree
extended the term ‘Jew’ in a racist sense and laid the legal foundation for
deportations. 309 After these measures had been introduced, at the beginning of September the RSHA immediately urged the deportations from Bulgaria.
368
Extermination of the European Jew, 1942–1945
In September even Ribbentrop allowed himself to be persuaded to withdraw his
opposition to the inclusion of Bulgaria in the deportation programme. 310
Since the start of the preparations for the deportations in Croatia, the Foreign
Ministry and the RSHA had assumed that the deportation of the Jews from the
German-occupied zone would be followed at the end of August by the deportation
of the Jews from the Italian-occupied zone to Auschwitz. 311 The Croatian government had declared its agreement with this procedure, but Luther expected ‘certain
difficulties’ on the part of the Italians. 312 However, in response to a request that came via the German Embassy in Rome Mussolini initially decided, or so Luther
informed Ribbentrop on 11 September, ‘to treat the Jews in the Italian-occupied
parts of Croatia in the same way . . . as in the rest of Croatia’. 313
But since Ribbentrop, as we have shown, had instructed Luther on 25 August to
develop no further initiatives with regard to the Jews in the Italian-occupied zone
for the time being out of concern for the German-Italian alliance, he now proved
extremely displeased about the request made to the Italian government; they had
‘interfered in a Croatian-Italian question . . . which contradicted the principle of
not making ourselves spokesmen for Croatian interests where the Italians were
concerned, but giving Italy precedence in Croatia in every respect’. 314
With regard to Greece, too, the RSHA became active in July 1942, the time when
the initiative was being taken to set in motion the first wave of deportations from
South-Eastern Europe. But preparations for immediate deportation were not at
first made, as it was hoped above all that they would reach a uniform procedure in
both occupied zones. (In the Italian zone of occupation there were at this point
about 13,000 Jews, in the German zone of occupation about 55,000; there were also
around 4,000 Jews living in the north-east of the country, which was allocated to
Bulgaria.)315 As in Croatia the policy initially pursued here was to avoid a conflict with Rome at all costs.
In July 1942 the RSHA informed the Foreign Ministry of its desire to introduce
anti-Jewish measures, namely universal labelling and internment of Jews who had
fled Germany. But the Italians, who had been approached with this in mind, did
not approve of the labelling of the Jews in their zone of occupation. 316
Also in July 1942 the German military administration introduced forced labour
for Jewish men. Thousands were deployed on hard physical labour in very severe
working conditions; hundreds died and a mass flight to the Italian zone began.
The emphatic demand by the Germans that Jews throughout the whole of Greece
be compulsorily labelled could not be enforced because of the dilatory treatment
of the requests by the Italian government. 317
The German efforts to organize deportations in the summer of 1942 also
focused on another country. After the war, former Prime Minister Rangell
reported that in July 1942, on a visit to Finland, Himmler had addressed the
topic of ‘Finnish Jews’; he, Rangell, however, had brought the discussion to a close
Extermination on a European Scale, 1942
369
by pointing out that in Finland (where some 2,000 Jews lived) there was no ‘Jewish
question’. 318
These initiatives and negotiations on the part of the Germans with their allies
allow us to draw the conclusion that a fundamental decision had been made in
July in favour of a deportation from the allied states. At the same time, priorities
had been set, in which the state of anti-Semitic measures taken in the individual
countries was crucial. First of all, the Jews were to be deported from Croatia and
Romania; in Croatia, the Jewish population had already been largely interned,
while in Romania registration had been introduced and because of the mas-
sacres in the newly conquered territories there could be no doubt about the
radically anti-Semitic stance of this ally. The deportations from Hungary and
Bulgaria had, on the other hand, been postponed to a later time because of the
unsatisfactory state—from the German point of view—of Judenpolitik in those
countries, while the issue of the deportation of the Jews from the Italian-
occupied territories in Croatia and Greece remained shelved because of the
fundamental attitude of the Italian government towards the ‘Jewish question’.
Himmler’s unsuccessful foray into Finland in July 1942 produced the same
result.
Intensified Efforts to Extend the Deportations
in Autumn 1942
On 23 September 1942
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