2
GERMAN POLICY TOWARD THE JEWS
AFTER THE OUTBREAK OF WAR
With the coming of the war, the
situation regarding the Jews altered drastically. It is not widely known
that world Jewry declared itself to be a belligerent party in the Second
World War, and there was therefore ample basis under international law
for the Germans to intern the Jewish population as a hostile force. On
September 5, 1939 Chaim Weizmann, the principle Zionist leader, had declared
war against Germany on behalf of the world's Jews, stating that "the Jews
stand by Great Britain and will fight on the side of the democracies .
. . The Jewish Agency is ready to enter into immediate arrangements for
utilizing Jewish manpower, technical ability, resources etc . . ." (Jewish
Chronicle, September 8, 1939).
DETENTION OF ENEMY ALIENS
All Jews had thus been declared
agents willing to prosecute a war against the German Reich, and as a consequence,
Himmler and Heydrich were eventually to begin the policy of internment.
It is worth noting that the United States and Canada had already interned
all Japanese aliens and citizens of Japanese descent in detention camps
before the Germans applied the same security measures against the Jews
of Europe. Moreover, there had been no such evidence or declaration of
disloyalty by these Japanese Americans as had been given by Weizmann. The
British, too, during the Boer War, interned all the women and children
of the population, and thousands had died as a result, yet in no sense
could the British be charged with wanting to exterminate the Boers. The
detention of Jews in the occupied territories of Europe served two essential
purposes from the German viewpoint. The first was to prevent unrest and
subversion; Himmler had informed Mussolini on October 11th, 1942, that
German policy towards the Jews had altered during wartime entirely for
reasons of military security. He complained that thousands of Jews in the
occupied regions were conducting partisan warfare, sabotage and espionage,
a view confirmed by official Soviet information given to Raymond Arthur
Davis diat no less than 35,000 European Jews were waging partisan war under
Tito in Yugoslavia. As a result, Jews were to be transported to restricted
areas and detention camps, both in Germany, and especially after March
1942, in the Government- General of Poland. As the war proceeded, the policy
developed of using Jewish detainees for labour in the war-effort. The question
of labour is fundamental when considering the alleged plan of genocide
against the Jews, for on grounds of logic alone the latter would entail
the most senseless waste of manpower, time and energy while prosecuting
a war of survival on two fronts. Certainly after the attack on Russia,
the idea of compulsory labour had taken precedence over German plans for
Jewisb emigation. The protocol of a conversation between Hitler and the
Hungarian regent Horthy on April 17th, 1943, reveals that the German leader
personally requested Horthy to release 100,000 Hungarian Jews for work
in the "pursuit-plane programme" of the Luftwaffe at a time when the aerial
bombardment of Germany was increasing (Reitlinger, Die Endlösung,
Berlin, 1956, p. 478). This took place at a time when, supposedly, the
Germans were already seeking to exterminate the Jews, but Hitler's request
clearly demonstrates the priority aim of expanding his labour force. In
harmony with this programme, concentration camps became, in fact, industrial
complexes. At every camp where Jews and other nationalities were detained,
there were.large industrial plants and factories supplying material for
the German war-effort - the Buna rubber factory at Bergen-Belsen, for example,
Buna and I. G. Farben Industrie at Auschwitz and the electrical firm of
Siemens at Ravensbruck. In many cases, special concentration camp money
notes were issued as payment for labour, enabling prisoners to buy extra
rations from camp shops. The Germans were determined to obtain the maximum
economic return from the concentration camp system, an object wholly at
variance with any plan to exterminate millions of people in them. It was
the function of the S.S. Economy and Administration Office, headed by Oswald
Pohl, to see that the concentration camps became major industrial producers.
EMIGRATION STILL FAVOURED
It is a remarkable fact, however,
that well into the war period, the Germans continued to implement the policy
of Jewish emigration. The fall of France in 1940 enabled the German Government
to open serious negotiations with the French for the transfer of European
Jews to Madagascar. A memorandum of August, 1942 from Luther, Secretary-of-State
in the German Foreign Office, reveals that he had conducted these negotiations
between July and December 1940, when they were terminated by the French.
A circular from Luther's department dated August 15th, 1940 shows that
the details of the German plan had been worked out by Eichmann, for it
is signed by his assistant, Dannecker. Eichmann had in fact been commissioned
in August to draw up a detailed Madagascar Plan, and Dannecker was employed
in research on Madagascar at the French Colonial Office (Reitlinger, The
Final ,Solution, p. 77). The proposals of August 15th were that an inter-European
bank was to finance the emigration of four million Jews throughout a phased
programme. Luther's 1942 memorandum shows that Heydrich had obtained Himmler's
approval of this plan before the end of August and had also submitted it
to Goering. It certainly met with Hitler's approval, for as early as June
17th his interpreter, Schmidt, recalls Hitler observing to Mussolini that
"One could found a State of Israel in Madagascar" (Schmidt, Hitler's lnterpreter,
London,1951, p.178). Although the French terminated the Madagascar negotiations
in December, 1940, Poliakov, the director of the Centre of Jewish Documentation
in Paris, admits that the Germans nevertheless pursued the scheme, and
that Eichmann was still busy with it throughout 1941. Eventually, however,
it was rendered impractical by the progress of the war, in particular by
the situation after the invasion of Russia, and on February 10th, 1942,
the Foreign Office was informed that the plan had been temporarily shelved.
This ruling, sent to the Foreign Office by Luther's assistant, Rademacher,
is of great importance, because it demonstrates conclusively that the term
"Final Solution" meant only the emigration of Jews, and also that transportation
to the eastern ghettos and concentration camps such as Auschwitz constituted
nothing but an alternative plan of evacuation. The directive reads: "The
war with the Soviet Union has in the meantime created the possibility of
disposing of other territories for the Final Solution. In consequence the
Führer has decided that the Jews should be evacuated not to Madagascar
but to the East. Madagascar need no longer therefore be considered in connection
with the Final Solution" (Reitlinger, ibid. p. 79). The details of this
evacuation had been discussed a month earlier at the Wannsee Conference
in Berlin, which we shall examine below. Reitlinger and Poliakov both make
the entirely unfounded supposition that because the Madagascar Plan had
been shelved, the Germans must necessarily have been thinking of "extermination".
Only a month later, however, on March 7th, 1942, Goebbels wrote a memorandum
in favour of the Madagascar Plan as a "final solution" of the Jewish question
(Manvell and Frankl, Dr. Goebbels, London, 1960, p. 165). In the meantime
he approved of the Jews being "concentrated in the East". Later Goebbels
memoranda also stress deportation to the East (i.e. the Government-General
of Poland) and lay emphasis on the need for compulsory labour there; once
the policy of evacuation to the East had been inaugurated, the use of Jewish
labour became a fundamental part of the operation. It is perfecdy clear
from the foregoing that the term "Final Solution" was applied both to Madagascar
and to the Eastern territories, and that therefore it meant only the deportation
of the Jews. Even as late as May 1944, the Germans were prepared to allow
the emigration of one million European Jews from Europe. An account of
this proposal is given by Alexander Weissberg, a prominent Soviet Jewish
scientist deported during the Stalin purges, in his book Die Geschichte
von Joel Brand (Cologne, 1956). Weissberg, who spent the war in Cracow
though he expected the Germans to intern him in a concentration camp, explains
that on the personal authorisation of Himmler, Eichmann had sent the Budapest
Jewish leader Joel Brand to Istanbul with an offer to the Allies to permit
the transfer of one million European Jews in the midst of the war. (If
the 'extermination' writers are to be believed, there were scarcely one
million Jews left by May, 1944). The Gestapo admitted that the transportation
involved would greatly inconvenience the German war-effort, but were prepared
to allow it in exchange for 10,000 trucks to be used exclusively on the
Russian front. Unfortunately, the plan came to nothing; the British concluded
that Brand must be a dangerous Nazi agent and immediately imprisoned him
in Cairo, while the Press denounced the offer as a Nazi trick. Winston
Churchill, though orating to the effect that the treatment of the Hungarian
Jews was probably "the biggest and most horrible crime ever committed in
the whole history of the world", never- theless told Chaim Weizmann that
acceptance of the Brand offer was impossible, since it would be a betrayal
of his Russian Allies. Although the plan was fruitless, it well illustrates
that no one allegedly carrying out "thorough" extermination would permit
the emigration of a million Jews, and it demonstrates, too, the prime importance
placed by the Germans on the war-effort. |