Abstract
The Allies (and the Americans, in particular) demanded that
denazification be carried out as thoroughly as possible. In practical
terms, however, the implementation of denazification required immense
bureaucratic effort. By March 1946, the American military government had
received back almost 1.4 million questionnaires it had sent out to
Germans, who were asked about their relationship with the NSDAP and its
various organizations. Reviewing the information included in these forms
was both expensive and time-consuming. Still more costly in terms of
time, money, and resources was the registration form introduced in the
American zone by the “Law on Liberation from National Socialism and
Militarism” of March 5, 1946. Roughly 13.4 million Germans over the age
of eighteen were required to fill out this form. Among them were
approximately 3.67 million former members of the NSDAP and other Nazi
organizations. The “liberation law” created special German courts
[Spruchkammern] to carry out
denazification, which reported their findings to military government
authorities. These courts were supposed to consist of qualified
individuals who had not been politically compromised and who, if
possible, had been trained as judges or for service in upper-level state
administration. But since so many lawyers and officials had had contact
with the Nazis and because the process became increasingly inconsistent
and thus maligned, it was difficult to fill these court positions. In
October 1946, to standardize the proceedings in the four occupation
zones, the Allied Control Council issued Directive no. 38. By 1950 more
than 950,000 denazification hearings had been carried out in the
American zone alone.