11 Dec.
45
These crimes were committed both before and after Nazi
Germany had launched her series of aggressions. They were committed
within Germany and in foreign countries as well. Although separated in
time and space, these crimes had, of course, an inter-relationship which
resulted from their having a common source in Nazi ideology; for we
shall show that within Germany the conspirators had made hatred and
destruction of the Jews an official philosophy and a public duty, that
they had preached the concept of the master race with its corollary of
slavery for others, that they had denied and destroyed the dignity and
the rights of the individual human being. They had organized force,
brutality, and terror into instruments of political power and had made
them commonplaces of daily existence. We propose to prove that they had
placed the concentration camp and a vast apparatus of force behind their
racial and political myths, their laws, and their policies. As every
German Cabinet minister or high official knew, behind the laws and
decrees in the Reichsgesetzblatt was not the agreement of the people or
their representatives but the terror of the concentration camps and the
police state. The conspirators had preached that war was a noble
activity and that force was the appropriate means of resolving
international differences; and having mobilized all aspects of German
life for war, they plunged Germany and the world into war.
We say this system of hatred, savagery, and denial of individual
rights, which the conspirators erected into a philosophy of government
within Germany or into what we may call the Nazi constitution, followed
the Nazi armies as they swept over Europe. For the Jews of the occupied
countries suffered the same fate as the Jews of Germany, and foreign
laborers became the serfs of the "master race," and they were
deported and enslaved by the million. Many of the deported and enslaved
laborers joined the victims of the concentration camps, where they were
literally worked to death in the course of the Nazi program of
extermination through work. We propose to show that this Nazi
combination of the assembly line, the torture chamber, and the
executioner's rack in a single institution has a horrible repugnance to
the twentieth century mind.
We say that it is plain that the program of the concentration camp, the
anti-Jewish program, and the forced labor program are all parts of a
larger pattern, and this will become even more plain as we examine the
evidence regarding these programs, and then test their legality by
applying the relevant principles of international law.
The evidence relating to the Nazi slave labor program has been
assembled in a document book bearing the letter "R"; and in
addition, there is an appendix to the document book consisting of
certain photographs contained in a manila folder. Your Honors will
observe that on some of the books we have placed some tabs, so