1941

Documents from 1941

Report dated December 7, 1941 on execution of Jews in Kerch Crimea
Contemporary Source

1941-12-07 / Wehrmacht Local HQ in Kerch, Crimea: “The execution of about 2,500 Jews was carried out”

A report submitted by the Wehrmacht’s Local Headquarters in Kerch, Crimea on 7 December 1941 recorded the extermination of the city’s Jewish population. It mentions that the “execution of about 2,500 Jews was carried out on 1, 2, and 3 December [1941]”. In the document, the word “execution” is crossed out in pencil and replaced with “resettlement,” the euphemism the Nazis used to conceal the murder of Jews. The report also noted that “additional executions are to be expected, since part of the Jewish population fled, went into hiding, and must first be apprehended”.

Detachment order of August 1, 1942 by Himmler to SS cavalry regiment
Contemporary Source

1941-08-01 / Disseminating Himmler’s Order to the SS Cavalry Regiment: “No male Jew is to remain alive, no remnant family is to remain in the localities”

This detachment order from SS Cavalry Regiment 1, issued on 1 August 1942, illustrates how Himmler’s earlier order that “all Jews must be shot. Jewish women are to be driven into the swamps” was integrated into daily field operations. The document notes that Himmler’s instruction “regarding the shooting of Jews is not to be taken as a reprimand, since up to now there have been no Jews” in the area. It underscores the directive to patrol leaders: “no male Jew is to remain alive; no remnant family is to remain in the localities.”

Radio signal dated August 1, 1941 Himmler order that Jewish women are to be driven into the swamps
Contemporary Source

1941-08-01 / Himmler’s Order to an SS Cavalry Regiment: “All Jews must be shot. Jewish women are to be driven into the swamps.”

An explicit directive issued by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler transmitted via radio signal to SS Cavalry Regiment 2 on August 1, 1941 set out how the unit was to deal with Jews in its operational area. The order stated that “all [male] Jews must be shot” and that “Jewish women are to be driven into the swamps”.

Report dated August 1, 1941 on cleansing operation in Volhynia
Contemporary Source

1941-08-01 / July 1941 “Cleansing Operation” in Volhynia: Early Mass Killing of Jews by 1st SS-Brigade RFSS

A report dated 1 August 1941 by Higher SS and Police Leader SS-Obergruppenführer Friedrich Jeckeln describes a three-day “cleansing operation” carried out by the 1st SS-Brigade RFSS across Volhynia. Framed as a military and anti-partisan sweep in the army’s rear, the documents records mass shootings of 73 Russian soldiers, 165 officials and civilians accused of supporting the Soviet regime and 1,658 Jews portrayed as “given significant support to the Bolshevik system and who had betrayed Ukrainians to the Bolshevik authorities”.

Stahlecker Report on extermination of Jews in the Baltics until October 15. 1941
Contemporary Source

1941-10-00 / The October 1941 Stahlecker Report: Genocide in the Baltics

The Stahlecker Report, submitted after October 15, 1941, offers an account of how Einsatzgruppe A, under the command of Walter Stahlecker, conducted mass killing operations across Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia during the early months of the Nazi occupation of the Baltics. The German authorities deliberately incited and staged “self-cleansing” pogroms. But the report also states that “it was expected that pogroms alone would not solve the Jewish problem in the Eastern territories,” and that as a result, “extensive executions were carried out by special commandos.” According to the report “the total number of Jews liquidated in Lithuania amounts to 71,105” and “in Latvia, a total of 30,000 Jews have been executed so far”. By mid-October 1941, the total number of people executed under Einsatzgruppe A stood at 135,567.

Manuscript for Speech on November 18, 1941 Rosenberg
Contemporary Source

1941-11-18 / Alfred Rosenberg’s November 1941 Speech: “…biological eradication of all Jewry in Europe.”

Manuscript of a speech delivered on November 18, 1941, by Alfred Rosenberg at his Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories. In the confidential speech before members of the press, Rosenberg declared that “about six million Jews still live in the East, and this question can only be resolved by means of the biological eradication of all Jewry in Europe.” He went further stating that “it is necessary to push them beyond the Urals – or otherwise eradicate them in some other way.”

Event Report USSR No. 101 on Babi Yar
Contemporary Source

1941-10-02 The Einsatzgruppen Event Report USSR No. 101: Execution of “33,771 Jews in Kiev on September 29 and 30, 1941”

On October 2, 1941, Office IV of the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) issued Event Report USSR No. 101 (Ereignismeldung UdSSR Nr. 101). Einsatzgruppe C reported on the massacre at the Babyn Yar (Babi Yar) near Kiev that Paul Blobel’s Sonderkommando 4a “executed 33,771 Jews in Kiev on September 29 and 30, 1941”. Meanwhile, Einsatzgruppe D stated that “between September 16 and 30, 22,467 Jews and Communists were executed, bringing the total to 35,782”.

Letter of October 23, 1941
Contemporary Source

1941-10-23 Head of Anti-Jewish World League Paul Wurm: “Much Will Be Destroyed of The Jewish Vermin Through Special Measures”

Paul Wurm, the Foreign Editor of the Nazi propaganda newspaper Der Stürmer and head of the so-called “Anti-Jewish World League,” wrote a letter on October 23, 1941, to Franz Rademacher, the Foreign Office’s expert on Jewish affairs. In this letter, Wurm mentioned a recent encounter with “an old party comrade” who was actively involved in implementing the “resolution of the Jewish Question” in the East. According to Wurm, this old party comrade disclosed that “much will be destroyed of the Jewish vermin through special measures”.

Letter by Himmler of September 18, 1941 on the deportation of German Jews to the Litzmannstadt Ghetto
Contemporary Source

1941-09-18 Clearing the Reich: Himmler’s Order for the Deportation of 60,000 German Jews to the Litzmannstadt (Łódź) Ghetto

On September 18, 1941, Heinrich Himmler sent a letter to Arthur Greiser, Gauleiter of the Warthegau, conveying Hitler’s request that the Old Reich and the Protectorate be “cleared and freed from Jews from west to east as soon as possible.” In line with this policy, Himmler ordered the deportation of 60,000 Jews from the Old Reich to the Litzmannstadt Ghetto in occupied Poland.

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