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Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich

As part of the "Arbeitsscheu Reich" (work-shy Reich) in April and in June 1938 in two waves of arrests more than 10,000 men as so-called "black triangle anti-social elements" to concentration camps. During the so-called June-action were also arrested about 2,500 Jews who had received previous convictions for varied reasons.

Terminology edit

The term action, work-shy Reich can be traced back to official correspondence, which was conducted in conjunction with mass arrests. In the Buchenwald concentration camp, detainees were referred to initially as "Reich compulsory labor prisoners", later being referred to as "work shy Reich" (ASR).[1] This term was taken up by Hans Buchheim, originally used by Wolfgang Ayass for both arrest waves and became the standard term used. The "work shy" were those who were criminals, had refused to work, or fit other descriptions deemed socially undesirable.[2]

However, the contemporary term "June Special" for the second wave of arrests and convicted Jews was also used in addition.[3] It was used largely in 1938, however, by no means universally used. “June Special” was used as a connotation more for Jews, while “Work Shy” was used more for general arrests.[4]

Action in April 1938 edit

The arrest and deportation of "asocial individuals" goes back to the "basic decree on crime prevention by the police" issued by the Ministry of the Interior on December 14, 1937. The order called for a preventive detention of those deemed professional or habitual criminals, and later was extended to any who might "endanger society with asocial behavior."[5]

After Heinrich Himmler's plan of January 26, 1938, authorities began a "one-time, comprehensive and surprising seizure" done on the "work-shy". These were men of working age, who had twice refused a job offered to them or given up after a short time. After performing this action, the Gestapo then cooperated with the labor offices in dealing with these men.

The implementation of the action was scheduled for March, but was postponed due to the annexation of Austria.[6] The arrest operation was far-reaching all over the Reich in the period from April 21 to 30. Overall, there were between 1500 and 2000 male "work-shy" deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp.[7]

Actions in May and June 1938 edit

Those detained under the status of "Preventive Criminals" was not limited to the "work-shy", but used in arrests much more broadly. An implementing directive of the Reich Criminal code in April 1938 defined "asocial" as any person who showed continual misconduct or repeated violations of the law, who did not fit into the community and submit to the "self-evident order" the Nazi state desired. These particularly were vagrants, beggars, prostitutes, gypsies and alcoholics. Even people with untreated venereal diseases were included as well.[8]

On Hitler's personal orders Jews were included in the order.[9] Wolf Gruner quotes the statement made by Hitler in the last week of May 1938 in the following notation: "the completion of major earthworks throughout the Reich” would be completed by “anti-social and criminal Jews to be arrested."[10] When the order was passed orally, it was misunderstood, because the meaning of "anti-social" changed depending on the usage of uppercase or lowercase. In fact, the state police headquarters in Vienna took "flash" initiative and ordered that the district police stations on May 24, 1938 "immediately arrest unpleasant, especially criminally predisposed Jews and to bring them to the Dachau concentration camp." The first two transports of 31 May and June 3, included nearly 1,200 Jews and are referred to by Wolf Gruner as "Austrian Promotions".[11]

In the June deportations, it was predominantly "anti-social" persons who were arrested. Generally, for the second action, it was mostly Jews living within the Austrian kingdom, whose criminal record included convictions of more than four weeks, who were deemed "anti-social". This next wave of arrests known as the June action led to the arrests of about 9000 men by police from June 13–18.[12]

In the "June Special" Jews were disproportionately detained with about 2,300 men in total. Criminal history was often not based on normal delinquency alone, but based largely on tracking back several offenses far from the past, including minor infringements such as traffic violations.[9][13]

211 Jewish prisoners were admitted to the Dachau concentration camp.[14] 1,256 Jewish men were admitted to the Buchenwald concentration camp and 824 to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where they were subjected to harassment.[9]

Classification edit

The focus of security police activity to combat political enemies had shifted to the rejection of "anti-social" behavior, which tended to be socially harmful conduct supposedly due to hereditary predisposition.[15] Heydrich justified the action in a quick letter to the criminal police control centers, stating anti-social behaviour would not be tolerated beyond the ability to work, so as to have no set backs to the Four Year infrastructure plan.[16][17]

Wolfgang Ayass suggests that workers were often not chosen based on the alleged dangerousness of the individual or his "asocial" behaviour, but his work ability was often the decisive arrest criterion. In many concentration camps, these men were marked with a black inmate insignia and formed groups of "asocial" workers until the outbreak of the larger war. Martin Broszat noted that at this time the SS began increasing material production for its armaments and buildings and in concentration camps, larger prisoner quotas were needed.[18] The "Work-shy" workers were often used as a deterrent to other "slackers" in the labour force, since they often had more difficult tasks.[19]

The "June Special" was also the first carried out by the security police on their own discretion, in which a large number of German Jews were deported to concentration camps.[20] Their inclusion in the June action goes back to Hitler's personal orders from June 1, 1938, to have them included.[9][21] Christian Dirks suggests a connection with anti-Semitic attacks in Berlin, which, starting in May, escalated from June 13–16, 1938 with boycotts of Jewish shops, marking shops, raids on cafes and arrests.[22] Christian Faludi noted a connection between Joseph Goebbels and Wolf-Heinrich Graf von Helldorf in staging "anti-Semitic street riots" in Berlin and advancing the goal of a "totally centralized state solution” by the intelligence apparatus of Reinhard Heydrich and Heinrich Himmler.[23]

Wolfgang Ayass believed numbers in the "work-shy Empire" deteriorated, considering that they were mostly freed in 1939 in the amnesty on occasion of Hitler's fiftieth birthday.[24] Comparable mass arrests for these groups were never repeated. However, up to 1945, there were still continuous "asocial" and "work-shy" prisoners sent to concentration camps. Himmler himself estimated in 1943 that the total number of "antisocial" and "professional criminal" detainees to be around 70,000 people.[25]

Julia Hoerath points out that the "general racial prevention" orders were often conflicting between local and central authorities. SS and Gestapo leadership did not immediately establish authority on the issue.[26]

Literature edit

  • Wolfgang Ayass: "A bid of the national labor discipline". The "action indolence Empire" in 1938, in: Contributions to the National Socialist Health and Social Policy, Vol 6, Berlin 1988, p 43-74..
  • Wolfgang Ayass: "asocial" in National Socialism. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7.
  • Wolfgang Ayass: "community aliens". Sources to pursue "asocial" 1933-1945, Koblenz 1998th
  • Christian Dierks: The June-action 'in Berlin in 1938. In: Beate Meyer, Hermann Simon: Jews in Berlin from 1938 to 1945. (Companion volume to the exhibition at the Foundation "New Synagogue Berlin – Centrum Judaicum"), Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-8257-0168-9.
  • Jens Kolata: The social disciplining and "racial hygiene". The pursuit of "antisocial", "work-shy", "Swing Youth" and Sinti, in: Ingrid Bauz, Sigrid Brüggemann, Roland Maier (eds.): The Secret State Police in Württemberg and Hohenzollern, Stuttgart 2013, ISBN 3-89657-138- 9, pp 321–337 (not seen)
  • Stefanie Schüler Springorum: mass detainment in concentration camps. Action "work-shy Empire", November pogrom, action "Storm". In: Wolfgang Benz (Eds.): The place of terror. History of the Nazi concentration camp. Munich 2005, ISBN 3-406-52961-5, vol. 1, pp 156–164.
  • Christian Faludi (Eds.): The "June Special" 1938 A documentation of the radicalization of the persecution of the Jews. Campus, Frankfurt a. M. / New York, 2013, ISBN 978-3-593-39823-5

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 165.
  2. ^ Hans-Dieter Schmid: Die Aktion ‚Arbeitsscheu Reich‘ 1938. In: Herbert Diercks (Red.): Ausgegrenzt. ‘Asoziale und Kriminelle‘ im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem, Bremen 2009, ISBN 978-3-8378-4005-6, S. 33.
  3. ^ Z.B. Erlaß Heydrichs an die Kriminalpolizeileitstellen vom 18.6.1940, abgedruckt bei Wolfgang Ayaß, „Gemeinschaftsfremde“. Quellen zur Verfolgung von „Asozialen“, Koblenz 1998, Nr. 102.
  4. ^ Das Stichwort fehlt bei Wolfgang Benz u. a. (Hrsg.): Enzyklopädie des Nationalsozialismus. München 1997, ISBN 3-423-33007-4 und Israel Gutman u. a. (Hrsg.): Enzyklopädie des Holocaust.München und Zürich 1995, ISBN 3-492-22700-7.; dort in Bd. IV S. 1679 unter Datum erwähnt als „Asozialen-Aktion“.
  5. ^ Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 139.
  6. ^ Christian Faludi (Hrsg.): Die „Juni-Aktion“ 1938. Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung. Campus, Frankfurt a. M./New York 2013, ISBN 978-3-593-39823-5, S. 34.
  7. ^ Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager. Aktion „Arbeitsscheu Reich“, Novemberpogrom, Aktion „Gewitter“. In: Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.): Der Ort des Terrors. Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager. München 2005, ISBN 3-406-52961-5,Bd. 1, S. 158.
  8. ^ Zitiert nach Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 147/148.
  9. ^ a b c d Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager.... In: Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.): Der Ort des Terrors... München 2005, ISBN 3-406-52961-5,Bd. 1, S. 159.
  10. ^ Wolf Gruner: Zwangsarbeit und Verfolgung – Österreichische Juden im NS-Staat 1938-1945, Innsbruck u.a. 2000, ISBN 3-7065-1396-X, S. 33.
  11. ^ Zitiert nach Wolf Gruner: Zwangsarbeit und Verfolgung..., Innsbruck u.a. 2000, ISBN 3-7065-1396-X, S. 34.
  12. ^ Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager.... In: Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.): Der Ort des Terrors... München 2005, ISBN 3-406-52961-5,Bd. 1, S. 156 / Genaue Zahl 9497 angegeben bei Hans-Dieter Schmid: Die Aktion ‚Arbeitsscheu Reich‘ 1938. In: Herbert Diercks (Red.): Ausgegrenzt. ‘Asoziale und Kriminelle‘ im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem, Bremen 2009, ISBN 978-3-8378-4005-6, S. 36.
  13. ^ Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933–1945 (Quellensammlung) Band 2: Deutsches Reich 1938 – August 1939 (hrsg. von Susanne Heim), München 2009, ISBN 978-3-486-58523-0, S. 188.
  14. ^ Hans-Dieter Schmid: Die Aktion ‚Arbeitsscheu Reich‘ 1938. In: Herbert Diercks (Red.): Ausgegrenzt. ‘Asoziale und Kriminelle‘ im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem, Bremen 2009, ISBN 978-3-8378-4005-6, S. 37.
  15. ^ Ulrich Herbert: Von der Gegnerbekämpfung zur „rassischen Generalprävention“. In: Ulrich Herbert u. a. (Hrsg.): Die nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager.Frankfurt/M. 2002, ISBN 3-596-15516-9, Bd. 1, S. 81.
  16. ^ Dokument VEJ 2/39 = Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933-1945 (Quellensammlung) Band 2: Deutsches Reich 1938 – August 1939 (hrsg. von Susanne Heim), München 2009, ISBN 978-3-486-58523-0, S. 160f.
  17. ^ zitiert nach Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 149.
  18. ^ Martin Broszat: Nationalsozialistische Konzentrationslager 1933-1945. In: Anatomie des SS-Staates. München 1967, Bd. 2, S. 77.
  19. ^ Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 164.
  20. ^ Christian Dierks: Die ‚Juni-Aktion‘ 1938 in Berlin. In: Beate Meyer, Hermann Simon: Juden in Berlin 1938–1945. (Begleitband zur gleichnamigen Ausstellung in der Stiftung „Neue Synagoge Berlin – Centrum Judaicum“) Berlin 2000, S. 34.
  21. ^ Dokument 33 bei Christian Faludi (Hrsg.): Die „Juni-Aktion“ 1938. Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung. Campus, Frankfurt a. M./New York 2013, ISBN 978-3-593-39823-5, S. 201.
  22. ^ Christian Dierks: Die ‚Juni-Aktion‘ 1938 in Berlin. In: Beate Meyer, Hermann Simon: Juden in Berlin 1938–1945, Berlin 2000, S. 34–41 / Saul Friedländer:Das Dritte Reich und die Juden: Bd. 1., Die Jahre der Verfolgung: 1933–1939, durchgeseh. Sonderausgabe München 2007, ISBN 978-3-406-56681-3, S. 282–284.
  23. ^ Christian Faludi (Hrsg.): Die „Juni-Aktion“ 1938. Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung. Campus, Frankfurt a. M./New York 2013, ISBN 978-3-593-39823-5, S. 9.
  24. ^ Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 170–172.
  25. ^ Wolfgang Ayaß: „Asoziale“ im Nationalsozialismus. Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-608-91704-7, S. 172.
  26. ^ Julia Hörath: Terrorinstrument der „Volksgemeinschaft“. KZ-Haft für „Asoziale“ und „Berufsverbrecher“ 1933 bis 1937/38. In: Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft 60(2012), H. 6., S. 532.

aktion, arbeitsscheu, reich, part, arbeitsscheu, reich, work, reich, april, june, 1938, waves, arrests, more, than, called, black, triangle, anti, social, elements, concentration, camps, during, called, june, action, were, also, arrested, about, jews, received. As part of the Arbeitsscheu Reich work shy Reich in April and in June 1938 in two waves of arrests more than 10 000 men as so called black triangle anti social elements to concentration camps During the so called June action were also arrested about 2 500 Jews who had received previous convictions for varied reasons Contents 1 Terminology 2 Action in April 1938 3 Actions in May and June 1938 4 Classification 5 Literature 6 See also 7 ReferencesTerminology editThe term action work shy Reich can be traced back to official correspondence which was conducted in conjunction with mass arrests In the Buchenwald concentration camp detainees were referred to initially as Reich compulsory labor prisoners later being referred to as work shy Reich ASR 1 This term was taken up by Hans Buchheim originally used by Wolfgang Ayass for both arrest waves and became the standard term used The work shy were those who were criminals had refused to work or fit other descriptions deemed socially undesirable 2 However the contemporary term June Special for the second wave of arrests and convicted Jews was also used in addition 3 It was used largely in 1938 however by no means universally used June Special was used as a connotation more for Jews while Work Shy was used more for general arrests 4 Action in April 1938 editThe arrest and deportation of asocial individuals goes back to the basic decree on crime prevention by the police issued by the Ministry of the Interior on December 14 1937 The order called for a preventive detention of those deemed professional or habitual criminals and later was extended to any who might endanger society with asocial behavior 5 After Heinrich Himmler s plan of January 26 1938 authorities began a one time comprehensive and surprising seizure done on the work shy These were men of working age who had twice refused a job offered to them or given up after a short time After performing this action the Gestapo then cooperated with the labor offices in dealing with these men The implementation of the action was scheduled for March but was postponed due to the annexation of Austria 6 The arrest operation was far reaching all over the Reich in the period from April 21 to 30 Overall there were between 1500 and 2000 male work shy deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp 7 Actions in May and June 1938 editThose detained under the status of Preventive Criminals was not limited to the work shy but used in arrests much more broadly An implementing directive of the Reich Criminal code in April 1938 defined asocial as any person who showed continual misconduct or repeated violations of the law who did not fit into the community and submit to the self evident order the Nazi state desired These particularly were vagrants beggars prostitutes gypsies and alcoholics Even people with untreated venereal diseases were included as well 8 On Hitler s personal orders Jews were included in the order 9 Wolf Gruner quotes the statement made by Hitler in the last week of May 1938 in the following notation the completion of major earthworks throughout the Reich would be completed by anti social and criminal Jews to be arrested 10 When the order was passed orally it was misunderstood because the meaning of anti social changed depending on the usage of uppercase or lowercase In fact the state police headquarters in Vienna took flash initiative and ordered that the district police stations on May 24 1938 immediately arrest unpleasant especially criminally predisposed Jews and to bring them to the Dachau concentration camp The first two transports of 31 May and June 3 included nearly 1 200 Jews and are referred to by Wolf Gruner as Austrian Promotions 11 In the June deportations it was predominantly anti social persons who were arrested Generally for the second action it was mostly Jews living within the Austrian kingdom whose criminal record included convictions of more than four weeks who were deemed anti social This next wave of arrests known as the June action led to the arrests of about 9000 men by police from June 13 18 12 In the June Special Jews were disproportionately detained with about 2 300 men in total Criminal history was often not based on normal delinquency alone but based largely on tracking back several offenses far from the past including minor infringements such as traffic violations 9 13 211 Jewish prisoners were admitted to the Dachau concentration camp 14 1 256 Jewish men were admitted to the Buchenwald concentration camp and 824 to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp where they were subjected to harassment 9 Classification editThe focus of security police activity to combat political enemies had shifted to the rejection of anti social behavior which tended to be socially harmful conduct supposedly due to hereditary predisposition 15 Heydrich justified the action in a quick letter to the criminal police control centers stating anti social behaviour would not be tolerated beyond the ability to work so as to have no set backs to the Four Year infrastructure plan 16 17 Wolfgang Ayass suggests that workers were often not chosen based on the alleged dangerousness of the individual or his asocial behaviour but his work ability was often the decisive arrest criterion In many concentration camps these men were marked with a black inmate insignia and formed groups of asocial workers until the outbreak of the larger war Martin Broszat noted that at this time the SS began increasing material production for its armaments and buildings and in concentration camps larger prisoner quotas were needed 18 The Work shy workers were often used as a deterrent to other slackers in the labour force since they often had more difficult tasks 19 The June Special was also the first carried out by the security police on their own discretion in which a large number of German Jews were deported to concentration camps 20 Their inclusion in the June action goes back to Hitler s personal orders from June 1 1938 to have them included 9 21 Christian Dirks suggests a connection with anti Semitic attacks in Berlin which starting in May escalated from June 13 16 1938 with boycotts of Jewish shops marking shops raids on cafes and arrests 22 Christian Faludi noted a connection between Joseph Goebbels and Wolf Heinrich Graf von Helldorf in staging anti Semitic street riots in Berlin and advancing the goal of a totally centralized state solution by the intelligence apparatus of Reinhard Heydrich and Heinrich Himmler 23 Wolfgang Ayass believed numbers in the work shy Empire deteriorated considering that they were mostly freed in 1939 in the amnesty on occasion of Hitler s fiftieth birthday 24 Comparable mass arrests for these groups were never repeated However up to 1945 there were still continuous asocial and work shy prisoners sent to concentration camps Himmler himself estimated in 1943 that the total number of antisocial and professional criminal detainees to be around 70 000 people 25 Julia Hoerath points out that the general racial prevention orders were often conflicting between local and central authorities SS and Gestapo leadership did not immediately establish authority on the issue 26 Literature editWolfgang Ayass A bid of the national labor discipline The action indolence Empire in 1938 in Contributions to the National Socialist Health and Social Policy Vol 6 Berlin 1988 p 43 74 Wolfgang Ayass asocial in National Socialism Klett Cotta Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 Wolfgang Ayass community aliens Sources to pursue asocial 1933 1945 Koblenz 1998th Christian Dierks The June action in Berlin in 1938 In Beate Meyer Hermann Simon Jews in Berlin from 1938 to 1945 Companion volume to the exhibition at the Foundation New Synagogue Berlin Centrum Judaicum Berlin 2000 ISBN 3 8257 0168 9 Jens Kolata The social disciplining and racial hygiene The pursuit of antisocial work shy Swing Youth and Sinti in Ingrid Bauz Sigrid Bruggemann Roland Maier eds The Secret State Police in Wurttemberg and Hohenzollern Stuttgart 2013 ISBN 3 89657 138 9 pp 321 337 not seen Stefanie Schuler Springorum mass detainment in concentration camps Action work shy Empire November pogrom action Storm In Wolfgang Benz Eds The place of terror History of the Nazi concentration camp Munich 2005 ISBN 3 406 52961 5 vol 1 pp 156 164 Christian Faludi Eds The June Special 1938 A documentation of the radicalization of the persecution of the Jews Campus Frankfurt a M New York 2013 ISBN 978 3 593 39823 5See also editAktion T4 Critique of work Refusal of workReferences edit Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Klett Cotta Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 165 Hans Dieter Schmid Die Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich 1938 In Herbert Diercks Red Ausgegrenzt Asoziale und Kriminelle im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem Bremen 2009 ISBN 978 3 8378 4005 6 S 33 Z B Erlass Heydrichs an die Kriminalpolizeileitstellen vom 18 6 1940 abgedruckt bei Wolfgang Ayass Gemeinschaftsfremde Quellen zur Verfolgung von Asozialen Koblenz 1998 Nr 102 Das Stichwort fehlt bei Wolfgang Benz u a Hrsg Enzyklopadie des Nationalsozialismus Munchen 1997 ISBN 3 423 33007 4 und Israel Gutman u a Hrsg Enzyklopadie des Holocaust Munchen und Zurich 1995 ISBN 3 492 22700 7 dort in Bd IV S 1679 unter Datum erwahnt als Asozialen Aktion Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Klett Cotta Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 139 Christian Faludi Hrsg Die Juni Aktion 1938 Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung Campus Frankfurt a M New York 2013 ISBN 978 3 593 39823 5 S 34 Stefanie Schuler Springorum Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich Novemberpogrom Aktion Gewitter In Wolfgang Benz Hrsg Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Munchen 2005 ISBN 3 406 52961 5 Bd 1 S 158 Zitiert nach Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Klett Cotta Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 147 148 a b c d Stefanie Schuler Springorum Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager In Wolfgang Benz Hrsg Der Ort des Terrors Munchen 2005 ISBN 3 406 52961 5 Bd 1 S 159 Wolf Gruner Zwangsarbeit und Verfolgung Osterreichische Juden im NS Staat 1938 1945 Innsbruck u a 2000 ISBN 3 7065 1396 X S 33 Zitiert nach Wolf Gruner Zwangsarbeit und Verfolgung Innsbruck u a 2000 ISBN 3 7065 1396 X S 34 Stefanie Schuler Springorum Masseneinweisungen in Konzentrationslager In Wolfgang Benz Hrsg Der Ort des Terrors Munchen 2005 ISBN 3 406 52961 5 Bd 1 S 156 Genaue Zahl 9497 angegeben bei Hans Dieter Schmid Die Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich 1938 In Herbert Diercks Red Ausgegrenzt Asoziale und Kriminelle im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem Bremen 2009 ISBN 978 3 8378 4005 6 S 36 Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europaischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933 1945 Quellensammlung Band 2 Deutsches Reich 1938 August 1939 hrsg von Susanne Heim Munchen 2009 ISBN 978 3 486 58523 0 S 188 Hans Dieter Schmid Die Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich 1938 In Herbert Diercks Red Ausgegrenzt Asoziale und Kriminelle im nationalsozialistischen Lagersystem Bremen 2009 ISBN 978 3 8378 4005 6 S 37 Ulrich Herbert Von der Gegnerbekampfung zur rassischen Generalpravention In Ulrich Herbert u a Hrsg Die nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Frankfurt M 2002 ISBN 3 596 15516 9 Bd 1 S 81 Dokument VEJ 2 39 Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europaischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933 1945 Quellensammlung Band 2 Deutsches Reich 1938 August 1939 hrsg von Susanne Heim Munchen 2009 ISBN 978 3 486 58523 0 S 160f zitiert nach Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 149 Martin Broszat Nationalsozialistische Konzentrationslager 1933 1945 In Anatomie des SS Staates Munchen 1967 Bd 2 S 77 Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 164 Christian Dierks Die Juni Aktion 1938 in Berlin In Beate Meyer Hermann Simon Juden in Berlin 1938 1945 Begleitband zur gleichnamigen Ausstellung in der Stiftung Neue Synagoge Berlin Centrum Judaicum Berlin 2000 S 34 Dokument 33 bei Christian Faludi Hrsg Die Juni Aktion 1938 Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung Campus Frankfurt a M New York 2013 ISBN 978 3 593 39823 5 S 201 Christian Dierks Die Juni Aktion 1938 in Berlin In Beate Meyer Hermann Simon Juden in Berlin 1938 1945 Berlin 2000 S 34 41 Saul Friedlander Das Dritte Reich und die Juden Bd 1 Die Jahre der Verfolgung 1933 1939 durchgeseh Sonderausgabe Munchen 2007 ISBN 978 3 406 56681 3 S 282 284 Christian Faludi Hrsg Die Juni Aktion 1938 Eine Dokumentation zur Radikalisierung der Judenverfolgung Campus Frankfurt a M New York 2013 ISBN 978 3 593 39823 5 S 9 Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 170 172 Wolfgang Ayass Asoziale im Nationalsozialismus Stuttgart 1995 ISBN 3 608 91704 7 S 172 Julia Horath Terrorinstrument der Volksgemeinschaft KZ Haft fur Asoziale und Berufsverbrecher 1933 bis 1937 38 In Zeitschrift fur Geschichtswissenschaft 60 2012 H 6 S 532 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich amp oldid 1156369343, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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