Judenberater

The Judenberater or Judenreferent (German plural: Judenberater; Judenreferenten), variously translated as Jewish advisers or Jewish experts, were Nazi SS officials who supervised anti-Jewish legislation and the deportations of Jews in the countries under their responsibility. Key architects of the Holocaust, most of them were under the direct command of Adolf Eichmann.[1][2]

Role

The Judenreferent was not an "adviser" in the literal sense of the term, as he was deployed exclusively in allied or defeated states to promote anti-Jewish measures and their deportations, and was a direct participant in anti-Jewish activities before and during World War II.[1][3]

In France and several other countries defeated by Germany, the Jewish advisers were subject to the disciplinary command of the Sicherheitspolizei. In allied countries such as Bulgaria and Romania, they were subordinate to the police attaché (Polizeiattaché) or the German ambassador.[4] The "Jewish advisers" of the SS received their instructions exclusively from the Eichmannreferat, who kept himself up to date through "regular activity reports and briefings on their actions".[3]

According to Claudia Steur, the Judenberater can be divided into two groups: those like Dannecker, Wisliceny, Brunner, Boßhammer and Abromeit were close confidants of Adolf Eichmann and served as role models for the other "Jewish advisors". The remaining ones were initiated relatively late in the Final Solution, and their "striving for power, prestige and social advancement" was an important motive for their later participation in the Holocaust.[5]

German policy was to involve allied governments in the persecution of Jews in order to make them complicit in the Holocaust.[6]

List

Perpetrators

Most of the perpetrators, who later rose to become "Judenberater" (advisers to the Jews), were born between 1905 and 1913, had joined the NSDAP before 1933, did not find a secure position until they joined the SS, and quickly advanced to positions of power.

According to Claudia Steur, the "Judenberaters" can be divided into two groups. The group with Dannecker, Wisliceny, Brunner, and also Bosshammer and Abromeit as close confidants of Eichmann also served as models for the other "Judenberaters".[10] The others were initiated relatively late into the plans for the annihilation of European Jewry. Their "striving for power, prestige, and social advancement" had been an important motive for their later participation in the Holocaust.[11] They "slowly grew into a role that became increasingly brutal, which they then, without doubting the appropriateness of the orders given to them, carried out diligently and consistently until the end of the war."[11]

Works cited

  • Steuer, Claudia (2000). "Eichmanns Emissäre. Die Judenberater in Hitlers Europa". In Paul, Gerhard; Mallmann, Klaus-Michael (eds.). Die Gestapo im Zweiten Weltkrieg: "Heimatfront" und besetztes Europa. Darmstadt: Primus. p. 403. ISBN 978-3-534-14477-8. OCLC 45542716.

References

  1. Herbert F. Ziegler, A review to the book by Theodor Dannecker: Ein Funktionär der 'Endlösung' , Central European History, Vol. 32, No. 4, 1999. JSTOR 4546920
  2. Steuer 2000, p. 403-436.
  3. Steuer 2000, p. 404.
  4. Steur, Claudia (1997). Theodor Dannecker.: Ein Funktionär der 'Endlösung' (in German). Klartext Verlagsges. Mbh. p. 43. ISBN 9783884745458.
  5. Steuer 2000, p. 432–34.
  6. Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 399. ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5.
  7. Lieven Saerens: Rachel, Jacob, Paul et les autres : une histoire des Juifs à bruxelles. Trad. du néerlandais par Serge Govaert. Brüssel : Mardaga, 2014 ISBN 978-2-8047-0210-6
  8. Roland Ray, Annäherung an Frankreich im Dienste Hitlers?: Otto Abetz und die deutsche Frankreichpolitik 1930–1942, 2000, ISBN 3486596098, Chapter 10, Section 4: "Motor der 'Endlosung' in FrankReich: Judenreferent Carltheo Zeitschel"
  9. Max Williams, Reinhard Heydrich: The Biography: Volume 1 (2001), p 61.
  10. Steuer 2000, p. 432.
  11. Steuer 2000, p. 434.
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