Source
Secret
Berlin 2. January 1941
The Chief of the Security Police and
the Security Service (SD)
To:
a. Reich security headquarters
b. All state police
headquarters
c. All commandants of the security police and
security service
For the information of:
d. All inspectors of the security
police and security service
e. The inspectors of the
concentration camps (with 15 copies for the camp
commandants)
f. The commanders of the security police and
security service in Krakow and Prague
Subject: Classification of the concentration camps
The Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German police has approved the division of the concentration camps into various categories which take into account the prisoner’s personal characteristics as well as the degree of danger he poses to the state. Accordingly, the concentration camps will be divided into the following categories:
Category I: For all prisoners against whom only slight accusations have been made and who are definitely capable of being reformed, also for special cases and solitary confinement, the camps:
Dachau
Sachsenhausen
Auschwitz I
(The latter also
applies in part to category II)
Category Ia: For all old prisoners and those only partially capable of work, who can still be used in the medicinal herb gardens, the camp: Dachau
Category II: For prisoners against whom strong accusations have been made, but who are still qualified for re-education and correction, the camps:
Buchenwald
Flossenburg
Auschwitz II
Category III: For prisoners against whom strong accusations have been made, particularly those who have criminal convictions at the same time and are asocial—i.e, virtually incapable of correction, the camp: Mauthausen.
Not to be included in category Ia are old prisoners who are not qualified for work and who are in need of medical treatment. They are to remain in the sections of their respective concentration camps that have been specially provided for this purpose. More serious cases are to be transferred to the hospital section of the concentration camp Sachsenhausen.
A regrouping of the prisoners within the camps according to the new classifications cannot be carried out right now in view of the current measures being taken with respect to prisoner employment. New dispositions will be made, however, in accordance with classification.
In the case of future requests for arrests and transfers to a concentration camp, I therefore ask that suggestions be made as to the category of the prisoner, taking into consideration his personality as well as the degree of danger he poses to the state.
I therefore order that a complete record of the political life, previous convictions for criminal offences, and conduct of the prisoner since the takeover of power be established, and that each and every request for assignment into category III be justified in detail.
This decree does not apply to the district and local police authorities.
[signed] Heydrich
Source of English translation: Letter from the Head of the Security Police and the SD, Reinhard Heydrich, on the Classification of Concentration Camps (January 2, 1941). In United States Chief Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Volume III. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1946, Document 1063-A-PS, pp. 775–76. English translation credited to Nuremberg staff; edited by GHI staff. Available online at: https://www.loc.gov/item/2011525363_NT_Nazi_Vol-III/
Source of original German text: Schreiben des Chefs der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD, Reinhard Heydrich, über die Einstufung der Konzentrationslager (2. Januar 1941). In International Militärgerichtshof Nürnberg, Der Nürnberger Prozess gegen die Hauptskriegsverbrecher vom 14. November 1945 bis 1. Oktober 1946: Urkunden und anderes Beweismaterial. Nuremberg, 1947. Munich: Delphin Verlag, 1989. Volume XXVI: Amtlicher Text – Deutsche Ausgabe, Nummer 405-PS bis Nummer 1063(d)-PS. Dokument 1063 (a-b)-PS [Geheimes Schreiben Heydrichs vom 2. Januar 1941 an das Reichssicherheitshauptamt und andere Polizeistellen über die Einstufung der Konzentrationslager (Beweisstück US-492)], pp. 695–97.