Sonderkommando Reinhard

Report dated April 7, 1942
Contemporary Source

1942-04-07 / Labor Office Report Lublin: “Of the 40,000 Jews in Lublin, all but 2,000 are being removed from the city”

A confidential report dated April 7, 1942, issued by the Lublin Labor Office, documents labor allocations for March 1942, including transfers of workers to the Reich, SS construction projects, and the reorganization of Jewish forced labor during the early phase of Operation Reinhard. The report explicitly records the onset of mass deportations in Lublin that “in mid-month a larger resettlement action of Jews was initiated by the SS and Police Leader, which is still ongoing and during which the ghetto was sealed off. Of the 40,000 Jews residing in Lublin, all but approximately 2,000 are being removed from the city. These 2,000 consist of approximately 800 skilled workers and their family members.” The document further states that “The resettlement action is also to be carried out in the towns of the rest of the district”.

Gerstein report
Contemporary Source

1945-05-04 / The Gerstein Report: SS Officers Account on the Machinery of Extermination

On 4 May 1945, Kurt Gerstein completed a report describing his curriculum vitae and his inspection trip as SS-to the Aktion Reinhard extermination camps of Belzec and Treblinka, which took place between 17 and 19 August 1942. In this report, Gerstein provided an account of the extermination process, including the operation of the gas chambers. According to his testimony, he was sent to the camps in his capacity as an expert in disinfestation, first to assist with the disinfection of textiles collected during Aktion Reinhard and, second, to convert the gas chambers from engine exhaust to prussic acid (hydrogen cyanide).

Report dated June 30, 1943 by Katzmann on the Final SOlution in Galicia
Contemporary Source

1943-06-30 / The Katzmann Report: “Solution of the Jewish Question in Galicia”

On June 30, 1943, the SS and Police Leader of Galicia in Lemberg (Lwiw) SS-Gruppenführer Fritz Katzmann submitted to the Higher SS and Police Leader East Friedrich Wilhelm Krüger, a top secret report on the “Solution of the Jewish Question in Galicia.” During the ghetto relocations of winter 1941/1942, the report states that “all work-shy and antisocial Jewish riffraff were identified during the screening and given special treatment” – a standard Nazi euphemism for extrajudicial killing.

Katzmann records that “resettlement from the District of Galicia began in April 1942 and was carried out continuously,” and that by November 1942 “254,989 Jews had already been resettled or relocated.” He goes on to explain that “the resettlement was carried out vigorously, so that as of 23 June 1943 all Jewish residential districts could be dissolved,” and added that the district was now “free of Jews, except for those who are in the camps under the control of the SS and Police Leader.” Jews who were “still occasionally apprehended are given special treatment”. By 27 June 1943, Katzmann reports “a total of 434,329 Jews had been resettled” with only 21,156 left in forced-labor camps.

Adressing the plunder of Jewish property, the report notes that “extraordinary valuables were secured and placed at the disposal of the ‘Reinhard’ special staff,” which refers to Operation Reinhard, the program responsible for the extermination of the Jews in the Generalgouvernement and the large-scale confiscation of their assets.

Short version of KOrherr report
Contemporary Source

1943-04-19 / The Short Version of the Korherr Report: “European Jewry has probably lost almost half of its total population”

On April 19, 1943, SS statistician Richard Korherr submitted a shortened version of his Korherr Report – the SS’s statistical account of the “Final Solution of the European Jewish Question” – to the personal staff of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, for presentation to Adolf Hitler. In the report, Korherr estimated that “the reduction of Jewry in Europe from 1937 to the beginning of 1943 is to be estimated at 4½ million” and noted that “only part of the deaths of Soviet-Russian Jews in the occupied eastern territories could be recorded, while those in the rest of European Russia and at the front are not included at all.” He concluded that “European Jewry since 1933 has probably lost almost half of its total population,” of which “only about half has flowed to other continents.”

Letter dated April 10, 1943
Contemporary Source

1943-04-10 / Himmler’s Order to Sanitize the Korherr Report: “At No Point Should There Be Any Mention of Special Treatment of the Jews”

In April 1943, Heinrich Himmler ordered changes to the Korherr Report, the SS’s statistical account of the “Final Solution” he considered as quite good “for camouflage purposes”. A letter dated April 19, 1943 instructed that the term “special treatment of the Jews” be removed from the report. The euphemism “passed through the camps in the General Government and the camps in the Warthegau” was to be used to denote the death toll from the extermination camps at Bełżec, Treblinka, Sobibór, and Kulmhof (Chełmno).

Letter dated April 9, 1943 Himmler letter on Korherr report
Contemporary Source

1943-04-09 / Himmler’s April 1943 Letter on the Korherr Report

A brief letter written by Heinrich Himmler, Reichsführer-SS, on April 9, 1943, to Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Chief of the Security Police and SD, makes direct reference to the so-called Korherr Report – a statistical analysis compiled by Richard Korherr, the SS’s chief statistician, on the progress of the “Final Solution”. In it, Himmler acknowledges the report’s value as “material for possible later times” and, above all, “for camouflage purposes”. At the same time, he orders that the report must not be published or circulated further. Himmler closes the letter by stressing his overriding concern that “what remains most important to me is that Jews are now being shipped off to the East as much as is at all humanly possible.”

Contemporary Source

1942-12-07 / The Hagen Letter to Hitler: “to deal with a third of the Poles … as with the Jews, that is, to kill them.”

On December 7, 1942, a German city medical officer named Dr. Wilhelm Hagen wrote an extraordinary letter addressed directly to Adolf Hitler. Hagen, who was the City Medical Officer of Warsaw, and claimed that during a government meeting on tuberculosis control, a senior official had revealed – as a “classified Reich matter” – that during the planned resettlement of 200,000 Poles to make way for German settlers, “to deal with a third of the Poles – with 70,000 old people and children under the age of 10, as with the Jews, that is, to kill them”. Hagen also wrote that “if this information had not come in an official capacity, I would dismiss it as mere fantasy.”

Cover Letter to Korherr report on Final Solution of the Jewish Question dated April 28, 1943
Contemporary Source

1943-04-28 / The Korherr Report: Nazi Statistics on the “Final Solution” Through Early 1943

This post reproduces the so called Korherr Report, a statistical report on the “Final Solution of the European Jewish Question” up to 1943 and its accompanying cover letter from April 1943. Authored by SS statistician Richard Korherr for Heinrich Himmler, the report presents – through a veneer of euphemism and bureaucratic precision – the numerical decline of European Jewry via excess of deaths over births, emigration, deportation and so-called “evacuations” and “special treatement”. The report concludes that “European Jewry since 1933 … likely lost nearly half of its population”. A substantial portion of this loss is attributed to 1,274,166 Jews “processed through camps in the General Government” (i.e. Belzec, Treblinka, Sobibor), 145,301 Jews “processed through camps in the Warthegau” and 633,300 Jews “evacuated in the Russian territories”.

Report dated March 19, 1942
Contemporary Source

1942-03-19 / German Report on “resettlement action” in Lviv, March 1942: “30,000 elderly and otherwise non-working Jews”

German military report from March 19, 1942 on the mood and conditions of the civilian population in Lemberg (now Lviv, Ukraine) located in the General Gouvernement during the Nazi occupation. The document mentions that “among the Jewish population of Lemberg, noticeable anxiety has arisen in connection with a resettlement action that has begun, by which approximately 30,000 elderly and otherwise non-working Jews of Lemberg are being gathered and, according to reports, transported to the Lublin area. To what extent this evacuation will amount to a decimation remains to be seen.” The deportations were the beginning of mass transports to the Bełżec extermination camp as part of Operation Reinhard.

Interrogation protocol & photograph of Georg Michalsen
Post-War Testimony

1961-01-24 / Testimony of SS Officer Georg Michalsen On the 1942 Warsaw Ghetto Clearing

On January 24, 1961, West German prosecutors interrogated Georg Michalsen, a former SS officer involved in Ghetto liquidations in the Generalgouvernement. In his testimony, Michalsen stated that he was deployed alongside Hermann Höfle as part of the so-called “resettlement staff” tasked with overseeing the clearing of the Warsaw Ghetto in the summer of 1942. He describes how Jews were rounded up, concentrated at the Umschlagplatz, and sent by train to their deaths. Though he claims he did not know the deportees were being killed “at the beginning,” he admits that he soon “found out during the operation”. He further stated that”other members of our unit and those involved in the resettlement also eventually learned what the real fate of the Jews was”.

Scroll to Top