Abstract
The Nazi regime pursued a ruthless Germanization and resettlement
policy in the conquered Eastern European territories. The regime was
primarily concerned with the ethnic German population in Bessarabia,
Bukovina, and the Baltic states. The SS Ethnic German Liaison Office
[Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle]
organized a series of massive resettlement actions, during whose course
hundreds of thousands of ethnic Germans
[Volksdeutsche] were brought “home to
the Reich” – even against their own will. The people involved in these
actions were often interned for months in reception camps in the German
Reich. Racial-hygienic examinations were carried out in these camps, and
citizenship proceedings were also initiated there. Finally, the majority
of these ethnic Germans were resettled on confiscated Polish farms in
the Reichsgaue of Danzig-West Prussia and Wartheland and in the
territory of the General Government. Actions of this sort were supposed
to provide the starting point for a fundamental territorial and racial
re-organization of Eastern Europe. The Nazis’ “General Plan East” from
1941, for example, foresaw the annihilation or enslavement of so-called
lesser races and the “Germanization” of newly acquired “living space”
[Lebensraum] through the introduction
of massive settlements of Germans. In the Nazis’ end vision, 500-600
million “Aryans” and their slaves would occupy the entire expanse of
Eastern Europe up to the Ural Mountains.
The sign featured below
reads “Südbuchenland Resettlement: Budapest Rations Station. Have a Good
Voyage to the Reich! Heil Hitler.”