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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The whole process of the exclusion of the Jews from the economy, which—
guided by the Four-Year Plan Office—served, on the one hand, to finance rearma-
ment, and, on the other, served the needs of a National Socialist clientele, proved
to be a wide gateway for state interventions in the economic sphere, the starting
point for the National Socialist command economy established during the war. By
excluding the Jews from qualified professions and using the same circle of people
for unskilled work in labour columns (like, for example, the detention of the
‘work-shy’ in concentration camps), the labour market was transformed into
‘labour deployment’ (Arbeitseinsatz), organized not least along racist lines; here
important foundations were laid for the slave labour of ‘those of alien race’ during
the war.
The strict prohibitions on everyday contact with Jews could only function with
the help of an extensive system of espionage which, in view of the relatively small
numbers in the Gestapo and the SD, depended upon the support of the population
and in fact functioned so effectively that it inevitably tended towards an abolition
of the private sphere. One other consequence of the gradual implementation of
anti-Jewish policies was that the open terror of the Party activists was finally
acknowledged and legitimized as an appropriate instrument for the implementa-
tion of a policy of exclusion.
In the wake of National Socialist Judenpolitik, between 1933 and 1939 a widely
ramified apparatus of persecution had been constructed. Apart from the special
departments of the Gestapo and the SD and the relevant Party offices (such as the
Office of Racial Policy or Rosenberg’s Institute for Research into the Jewish
Question), within the Reich ministries (as for example the Interior Ministry, the
Foreign Office or the Propaganda Ministry, special Jewish desks, for the purposes
of the ‘de-Judaization’ (Entjudung) of the economy) an extensive apparatus had
been set up, and local government had bureaucratically confirmed discrimination
against the Jews down to the bottom level of the administration.
The implementation of Judenpolitik occurred, as we have seen, in phases, with a
certain tension between the NS government, the state bureaucracy, police appar-
atus, and Party base, and frictions appeared concerning the pace and methods of
anti-Jewish policy: the leadership of the regime allowed a great deal of scope for
initiative on the part of the various institutions involved in Judenpolitik. If these
initiatives proved inadequate or if they went too far, the centre intervened
correctively. But concerning the bottom line of this policy, the gradual exclusion
of the Jews from German society, there was considerable consensus.
130
Racial Persecution, 1933–1939
With the total exclusion of the Jewish minority from German society Juden-
politik had, by the start of the war, reached a certain end point. A further
intensification of discrimination, a continuation of Entjudung was now no longer
possible; after six years of active Judenpolitik it was hardly the time from a
propaganda point of view to treat those Jews who had remained in the country
as dangerous adversaries.
The war, however, was to provide entirely new possibilities for a radicalizing
‘Jewish and racial policy’: in the context of the conquest and penetration of the
European continent, new functions within National Socialist policy fell to the
‘Jewish race in Europe’ and ‘world Jewry’ (so named by Hitler in his Reichstag
speech on 30 January 1939): the National Socialist idea of taking the Jews hostage
was now extended across the whole of the continent: the Jewish minorities in the
conquered countries became important objects of the German policy of occupa-
tion and alliance, and it was at their expense that the ‘new order’ of the ‘new
Lebensraum’ of the German Volk was primarily to be achieved. Where Juden-
politik had until 1939 been one of the most important instruments of the power-
political penetration of German society, the extension of persecution to the entire
European area and its gradual further radicalization performed in the eyes of the
NS regime a key function for the control of the ‘new Europe’.
PART II
THE PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS,
1939–1941
The Politics of Annihilation and the War
The beginning of the Second World War saw the inauguration of the National
Socialist regime’s systematic politics of racial annihilation. The start of the war
also marked the start of the physical annihilation of ‘alien races’ and the ‘racially
inferior’ on a vast scale. In 1939 the National Socialist regime set in train two
extensive programmes of mass murder, the so-called ‘euthanasia’ programme, or
the systematic murder of sick and disabled inmates of psychiatric institutions, and
the mass murder of members of the Polish elite, including many Jews. The
institution of a terrorist regime in Poland, organized on racist lines, established
a framework for further murder on a huge scale. This is the context, too, for the
extensive deportation programmes that were being developed from the autumn of
1939 onwards and which made provision for the ‘resettlement’ of all Jews under
German rule into a ‘reservation’ in Poland. In the long term, given the inadequate
conditions there, those transported to this ‘reservation’ were intended eventually
to die.
The radicalization of the politics of annihilation at the outset of the war is
linked to the key function that the war had within National Socialism: war was
synonymous with the opportunity to realize the National Socialist utopia of a
comprehensive new social order conceived on racial lines:
Attaining Lebensraum (living space) in the East would create the conditions for
a ‘biological revolution’, which could be achieved via a huge increase in the birth
rate amongst the ‘racially valuable’ sections of the population. It would also
comprise the permanent extirpation of racially undesirable elements within the
National Socialist sphere of influence.
Territorial expansion and the establishment of occupying regimes dominated
by the radical elements of the Party and the SS meant a further increase in
National Socialist power. By radicalizing policy on the fringes, German society
could be converted more rapidly into a racially homogeneous Volksgemeinschaft
(national community) and the principle of ‘selection’ (in the form of ‘extirpation’)
could be established as a permanent and all-embracing process.
From the point of view of the National Socialists war represented a means of
racial selection, a method for maintaining the ‘racially valuable’ and thus an
important instrument in the establishment of a social order that was able to
stand up for itself. The loss of ‘racially valuable’ individuals in the war also
legitimated the violent destruction of large numbers of ‘inferior specimens’ in
order to restore a
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