Abstract
Himmler had pursued the goal of “upbreeding” the SS into a
racial-biological elite long before he assumed the lead role in defining
Nazi policy on race and population—a position he secured by being the
most radical spokesman for state-sponsored eugenics. Himmler not only
recruited “pure-blood” men for the SS, he also took complete control
over their family and reproductive plans. On December 31, 1931, he
issued the so-called Engagement and Marriage Order, which called on SS
members to protect their “racial potential” by marrying and producing
offspring with women of so-called equal value. The SS’s “Main Office for
Race and Settlement” (RuSHA) was established at the same time. It was
charged with conducting racial investigations into the backgrounds of
fiancées and wives of SS members, and if the results were
unsatisfactory, it could refuse to permit the marriage. SS members who
were married to women of “lesser value” were threatened with expulsion
from the organization. This photograph shows Heinrich Himmler (to the
right of the bride), Reich Peasant Leader and
SS-Obergruppenführer Richard Walther
Darré (to the left of the bride), and the head of Himmler’s personal
staff, SS-Brigadeführer Karl Wolff
(behind Darré). SS-Oberführer Harms,
head of the staff of the Main Office for Race and Settlement, can be
seen to the right of Darré.