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

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 335<br />

fresh roots anywhere. First they are sent to the General Gouvernement.<br />

Then the town in which they were settled is ‘purged.’ In their<br />

new place <strong>of</strong> residence a ghetto is established. But even the ghetto<br />

does not give the Jews the security <strong>of</strong> a permanent residence, and<br />

they are again removed further east.<br />

In many cases the immediate motive for expulsion or deportation<br />

was to make room for Germans. The first victims <strong>of</strong> expulsion on a<br />

grand scale were the Jews <strong>of</strong> the incorporated western Polish provinces,<br />

who were expelled along with the Polish inhabitants, in both<br />

cases to make room for the ‘repatriated’ Germans. Later, Jews were<br />

deported because, according to the <strong>of</strong>ficial statements, they owned<br />

apartments suitable for alien refugees from cities subject to airraids.<br />

[1024]<br />

At the same, however, another factor, perceptible since the end <strong>of</strong><br />

1940 and now assuming growing importance, is strongly operating<br />

in a contrary direction – namely, the needs <strong>of</strong> the German war<br />

economy. As a result, Germany’s Jewish policy may be described as<br />

a compromise between extermination <strong>of</strong> the Jews and their utilisation<br />

in the war economy.<br />

Early in 1941 a semi-<strong>of</strong>ficial German article described with satisfaction<br />

the exclusion <strong>of</strong> the Jews working population from economic<br />

life. Already in 1938 the Jews had been ‘released’ from productive<br />

work on a wide scale. ‘But,’ the article continues, ‘in consequence<br />

<strong>of</strong> the incipient strain on labour resources and <strong>of</strong> the necessity<br />

<strong>of</strong> harnessing all the available supply <strong>of</strong> manpower, a trend in<br />

the opposite direction soon became noticeable.’ At first the Jews<br />

were used for unskilled jobs, but later the ‘more efficient’ among<br />

them were given suitable higher grade work. Jews were not, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, reinstated in the pr<strong>of</strong>essional activities from which they had<br />

been expelled. They were conscripted as forced labour, at first to<br />

‘release German workers for urgent construction work for the<br />

Reich,’ but later also for direct employment in industries manufacturing<br />

army supplies. In a number <strong>of</strong> cases the Jews were not removed<br />

because they were needed as workers; in others, they were<br />

deliberately sent to places where they could be put to work. To some<br />

1024 The “Zusammenhang zwischen dem Wohnraummangel im Reich und den Judendeportationen”<br />

(relationship between housing shortage in the Reich and Jewish deportations), also<br />

in connection with “Wohnungen für Bombengeschädigte” (housing for victims <strong>of</strong><br />

bombing), has been illustrated by Peter Witte, op. cit. (note 595), pp. 43-46.

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