Abstract
Starting on June 26, 1935, all young men between 18 and 25 had to do
six months of community work in the Reich Labor Service
[Reichsarbeitsdienst or RAD]. For
young women, service as “work girls”
[Arbeitsmaiden] first became
obligatory when the war began. The RAD was part of the Reich Ministry of
the Interior. It aimed, on the one hand, to lower general unemployment
and to compensate for a drop in the number of agricultural laborers. On
the other hand, it also sought to give young men an opportunity to
continue the ideological and paramilitary training they had begun in the
Hitler Youth [Hitler-Jugend or HJ]
before joining the armed forces. RAD work-groups were used mainly in
agriculture and forestry. As seen in the photo, they sought to achieve
the goal of agrarian autarky by draining enormous moors and heathlands,
cultivating new farmland, and so on. After the war began, they were
increasingly employed in armaments production and in the construction of
facilities that were important for the war effort.