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Sobibor - Holocaust Propaganda And Reality - Unity of Nobility ...

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194 J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR<br />

As early as 28 August 1933, the Reich ministry <strong>of</strong> economics concluded<br />

an agreement with the Jewish agency for Palestine which was to<br />

constitute the basis for the emigration <strong>of</strong> some 52,000 German Jews to<br />

Palestine over subsequent decade. 558 In a note <strong>of</strong> 19 March 1938, the<br />

ministry rescinded the agreement on the grounds that Germany was not<br />

interested in the emigration <strong>of</strong> rich Jews taking along their capital, but<br />

rather “in a mass emigration <strong>of</strong> Jews.” 559<br />

The Nuremberg Laws <strong>of</strong> 15 September 1935 would reaffirm in a<br />

legislative manner articles 4 and 5 <strong>of</strong> the Party’s program as elaborated<br />

in Munich on 24 February 1920. The aim <strong>of</strong> the law regarding Reich citizenship<br />

and <strong>of</strong> that concerning Germanic blood and honor was to separate<br />

and isolate the alien Jewish body from the German host with a<br />

view towards its pending expulsion. Gerald Reitlinger comments: “The<br />

Jews were meant to leave the Reich for good.” 560<br />

At the end <strong>of</strong> 1936, a “Jewish section” was set up within the Sicherheitsdienst<br />

(Security Service), the main objective <strong>of</strong> which, according to<br />

Léon Poliakov, was “the examination <strong>of</strong> all problems in the preparatory<br />

stages <strong>of</strong> a mass emigration <strong>of</strong> Jews.” 561<br />

A Zentralstelle für jüdische Auswanderung (central <strong>of</strong>fice for Jewish<br />

emigration) was established in Vienna on 26 August 1938 and was entrusted<br />

to Adolf Eichmann by Reinhardt Heydrich, the head <strong>of</strong> the Security<br />

Police.<br />

A few days after the so-called “Night <strong>of</strong> broken glass,” on 12 November<br />

1938, Hermann Göring called a council <strong>of</strong> ministers to discuss<br />

the difficult situation which had arisen. Heydrich stated that the exclusion<br />

<strong>of</strong> Jews from German economic life had “not really resolved” the<br />

basic problem, i.e. the removal <strong>of</strong> the Jews from Germany. Thanks to<br />

the Vienna “Judenauswanderungszentrale” (Center for Jewish Emigration),<br />

at least 50,000 Jews had already left Austria, whereas, over the<br />

same period, only 19,000 emigrated from the Altreich (Germany in the<br />

borders <strong>of</strong> late 1937). He therefore proposed to set up an emigration <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

in the Reich proper modeled on Vienna and to embark on a vast<br />

migration policy, to be carried out over the next eight to ten years.<br />

Finance minister Johann L. Graf Schwerin von Krosigk seconded Hey-<br />

558<br />

559<br />

560<br />

561<br />

R. Vogel, Ein Stempel hat gefehlt. Dokumente zur Emigration deutscher Juden, Droemer<br />

Knaur, Munich/Zürich 1977, p. 46 and 107-109.<br />

NG-1889.<br />

G. Reitlinger, The Final Solution. The Attempt to Exterminate the Jews <strong>of</strong> Europe 1939-<br />

1945, Vallentine, Mitchell & Co., London 1953, p. 8.<br />

L. Poliakov, op. cit. (note 97), p. 16.

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