On this day, Nazi officials
meet to discuss the details of the "Final Solution" of the
"Jewish question."
In July 1941, Herman Goering,
writing under instructions from Hitler, had ordered Reinhard Heydrich, SS
general and Heinrich Himmler's number-two man, to submit "as soon as
possible a general plan of the administrative, material, and financial measures
necessary for carrying out the desired final solution of the Jewish
question."
Heydrich met with Adolf
Eichmann, chief of the Central Office of Jewish Emigration, and 15 other
officials from various Nazi ministries and organizations at Wannsee, a suburb
of Berlin. The agenda was simple and focused: to devise a plan that would
render a "final solution to the Jewish question" in Europe. Various gruesome
proposals were discussed, including mass sterilization and deportation to the
island of Madagascar. Heydrich proposed simply transporting Jews from every
corner Europe to concentration camps in Poland and working them to death.
Objections to this plan included the belief that this was simply too
time-consuming. What about the strong ones who took longer to die? What about
the millions of Jews who were already in Poland? Although the word
"extermination" was never uttered during the meeting, the implication
was clear: anyone who survived the egregious conditions of a work camp would be
"treated accordingly."
Months later, the "gas
vans" in Chelmno, Poland, which were killing 1,000 people a day, proved to
be the "solution" they were looking for--the most efficient means of
killing large groups of people at one time.
The minutes of this conference
were kept with meticulous care, which later provided key evidence during the
Nuremberg war crimes trials.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/the-wannsee-conference
[20.01.2015]
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