| Source: Nazi Conspiracy and Aggresion. Vol. II.
    USGPO, Washington, 1946,pp.624-653 [Note: The
    characters in brackets, eg, (2233-N-PS) refer to the official document numbers included in
    the series Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression.  A list of legal references and documents
    relating to Hans Frank appears on pages 649-653.  For information on the referencing of Internet
    sources see Chapter 4 of S D Stein Learning, Teaching and Researching on the Internet.
    Addison Wesley Longman 1999-published Nov.1998] 
    Error Submission Form 
    Individual Responsibility of
    Defendants  
    Hans Frank  
    A. Position of Leadership 
    B. Role in Seizure of Power 
    C. War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity 
    D. Criminal Plan of Conspiracy 
    E. Extermination of Jews 
    F. Reign of Terror, Impoverishment and Starvation 
    
      Undernourishment of the Polish
      Population 
      Resettlement Projects 
      Encroachments and Confiscations 
      Principle of Collective
      Responisibility 
      Recruitment of Workers 
      Closing of Schools 
     
    G. Conclusion. 
    A. FRANK HELD A POSITION OF
    LEADERSHIP IN THE NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHE DEUTSCHE ARBEITERPARTEI (NSDAP) AND IN THE
    GERMAN GOVERNMENT.  
    Frank held the following positions in the NSDAP and the German Government: 
    
      (1) Member of NSDAP, 1928-1945.  
      (2) Member of the Reichstag, 1930-1945.  
      (3) Reich Minister Without Portfolio, 1934-1945.  
      (4) Reich Commissar for the Coordination of the State Administration of Justice and for
      Reformation of the Law (Reichskommisar fuer die Gleichschaltung der Justiz in der
      Landern und fuer Erneuerung der Rechsordnung), April 1933-December
      1934, in the Ministry of Justice.  
      (5) President, International Chamber of Law, 194142.  
      (6) President, Academy of German Law (Praesident der Akademie fuer Deutsches Recht),
      1933-1942.  
      (7) Governor-General of the Occupied Polish Territories (General Gouverneur fuer die
      besetzten polnischen Gebiete), October 1939-1945.  
      (8) Bavarian State Minister of Justice, March 1933-December 1934.  
      (9) Reichsleiter of NSDAP, 1933-1942.  
      (10) Leader of the National Socialist Lawyers League (Bund
      Nationalsozialistischer deutscher Juristen), 1933-1942. 
      (11) Editor or author of the following between 1930 and 1942: 
      
         
        (a ) "Deutsches Recht" (Magazine of National Socialist Jurist League)  
        (b) Magazine of the Academy of German Law.  
        (c) National Socialist Handbook for Law and Legislation. (2979-PS)  
       
     
    B. FRANK PROMOTED THE SEIZURE OF POWER
    BY THE NAZI CONSPIRATORS. AS THE LEADING NAZI JURIST, HE FURTHERED THE REALIZATION OF THE
    CONSPIRATORS PROGRAM IN THE FIELD OF LAW.  
    Frank himself described his role in the Nazi struggle for power in the following words
    in August 1942:  
    
      "I have since 1920 continually dedicated my work to the NSDAP. * * * As National
      Socialist I was a participant in the events of November 1923, for which I received the Blutorden.
      After the resurrection of the movement in the year 1926, my real greater activity in
      the movement began, which made me, first gradually, later almost exclusively, the legal
      advisor of the Fuehrer and of the Reich leadership of the NSDAP. I thus was the
      representative of legal interests of the growing Third Reich in a legal ideological as
      well as practical legal way. * * * The culmination of this work I see in the big Leipzig
      Army Trial in which I succeeded in having the Fuehrer admitted to the famous oath of
      legality, a circumstance which gave the Movement the legal grounds to expand generously.
      The Fuehrer indeed recognized this achievement and in 1926 made me leader of the National
      Socialist Lawyers League; in 1929 Reich Leader of the Reich Legal Office of the NSDAP; in
      1933 Bavarian Minister of Justice ; in the same year Reich Commissioner of Justice ; in
      1934 President of the Academy of German Law founded by me; in December 1934 Reich Minister
      Without Portfolio ; and in 1939 I was finally appointed to Governor General for the
      occupied Polish territories.  
      "So I was, am and will remain the representative jurist of the struggle period of
      National Socialism. * * *  
      "I profess myself now, and always, as a National Socialist and a faithful follower of
      the Fuehrer Adolf Hitler, whom I have now served since 1919." (2333- X-PS)  
     
    Frank's Diary, from which this quotation is taken, to which frequent reference is made
    in this section, is the official journal, kept at Frank's direction, of his administration
    in the General Government. It consists of 38 volumes in which are recorded the
    official texts of speeches, transcripts of conferences, minutes of cabinet sessions, etc.
    The volumes are divided into several concurrent series (Tagebuch,
    Abteilungsleitersitxungen etc.) which cover the several aspects of the official
    business of the administration.  
    As the "representative jurist of the struggle period of National Socialism"
    and in the various juridical capacities listed in the preceding section, Frank was between
    1933 and 1939 the most prominent policy-maker in the field of German legal theory.  
    In 1934 Frank founded the Academy of German Law, of which he was president until 1942.
    The statute defining the functions of the Academy conferred on it wide power to coordinate
    juridical policies: 
    
      "It is the task of the Academy for German Law to further the rejuvenation of the
      Law in Germany. Closely connected with the agencies competent for legislation, it shall
      further the realization of the National Socialist Program in the realm of Law. This task
      shall be carried out through well-fixed scientific methods.  
      "The Academy's task shall cover primarily: " 
      1. The composition, the initiation, judging and preparing of drafts of law.  
      "2. The collaboration in rejuvenating and unifying the training in jurisprudence and
      political science.  
      "3. The editing and supporting of scientific publications.  
      "4. The financial assistance for research and work in specific fields of Law and
      Political Economy.  
      "5. The organization of scientific meetings and the organization of courses. 
      "6. The cultivation of connections to similar institutions in foreign
      countries". (1391-PS)  
     
    What Frank as policy-maker in the field of law conceived as his task he explained in a
    radio address on 20 March 1934:  
    
      "The first task was that of establishing a unified German State. It was an
      outstanding historical and juristic-political accomplishment on the part of our Fuehrer
      that he reached boldly into the development of history and thereby eliminated the
      sovereignty of the various German states. . . .  
      "The second fundamental law of the Hitler Reich is racial legislation. The National
      Socialists were the first ones in the entire history of human law to elevate the concept
      of race to the status of a legal term. The German nation, unified racially and nationally,
      will in the future be legally protected against any further disintegration of the German
      race stock. . . .  
      "The sixth fundamental law was the legal elimination of those political organizations
      which within the state, during the period of the reconstruction of the people and the
      Reich, were once able to place their selfish aims ahead of the common good of the nation.
      This elimination has taken place entirely legally. It is not the coming to the fore of
      despotic tendencies but it was the necessary legal consequence of a clear political
      result, of the 14 years' struggle of the NSDAP. " 
      In accordance with these unified legal aims in all spheres, particular efforts have for
      months now been made as regards the work of the great reform of the entire field of German
      law. * **" (2536-PS)  
     
    Frank concluded his remarks by pointing out that the outward forms of legality could be
    preserved in building the Nazi state:  
    
      "As a leader of the German Jurists I am convinced that together with all strata of
      the German people, we shall be able to construct the legal state of Adolf Hitler in every
      respect and to such an extent that no one in the world will at any time be able to attack
      this legal state as regards its laws". (2536-PS)  
     
    In his speech at the Congress of the Reich Group of University Professors of the
    National Socialist Jurists' League on 3 October 1936, Frank explained the necessity for
    excluding Jews from the legal field:  
    
      "* * * this topic embraces all that which in our opinion will contribute to
      establishing National Socialism in the field of jurisprudence, thus eliminating any alien
      racial spirit therefrom. * * *  
      "We National Socialists have started with. anti-Semitism in our fight to free the
      German people, to reestablish a German Reich and to build our entire German spiritual,
      cultural and social life on the indestructible foundation of our race. We started a
      gigantic battle in 1919 * * * It took all the self-confidence of German manhood to
      withstand and to triumph -in this fight to substitute the German spirit for Jewish
      corruption over the concerted attacks of powerful world groups of which Jewry is a
      representative. "Particularly we National Socialist Jurists have a mission of our own
      to accomplish in this battle. We construct German law on the foundations of old and vital
      elements of the German people. * * *  
      "It is so obvious that it hardly needs mentioning that any participation whatsoever
      of the Jew in German law-be it in a creative, interpretative, educational or critical
      capacity-is impossible. The elimination of the Jews from German jurisprudence is in no way
      due to hatred or envy but to the understanding that the influence of the Jew on German
      life is essentially a pernicious and harmful one and that in the interests of the German
      people and to protect its future an unequivocal boundary must be drawn between us and the
      Jews." (2536-PS)  
     
    As the leading Nazi jurist, Frank accepted and promoted the system of concentration
    camps and of arrest without warrant. In an article on "Legislation and Judiciary in
    the Third Reich" published in the Journal of the Academy of German Law in 1936, Frank
    explained :  
    
      "To the world we are blamed again and again because of the concentration camps. We
      are asked, 'Why do you arrest without a warrant of arrest? ' I say, put yourselves into
      the position of our nation. Don't forget that the very great and still untouched world of
      Bolshevism cannot forget that we have made final victory for them impossible in Europe,
      right here on German soil." (2533-PS) 
     
     Just as the other conspirators mobilized the military, economic, and diplomatic
    resources of Germany for war, Frank, in the field of legal policy, geared the German
    juridical machine for a war of aggression, which, as he explained in 1942 to the NSDAP
    District Standortsfuehrung Galicia at a mass meeting in, Lemberg, had for its
    purpose:  
    
      "* * * to expand the living space for our people in a natural manner".
      (2233-S-PS)  
     
    Frank was proud of this accomplishment. In a speech before the Academy of German Law in
    November 1939, he stated:  
    
      "Today we are proud to have formulated our legal principles from the very
      beginning in such a way that they need not be changed in the case of war. For the rule,
      that right is that which is useful to the nation, and wrong is that which harms it, which
      stood at the beginning of our legal work, and which established this collective term of
      nation as the only standard of value of the law-this rule dominates also the law of these
      times." (3445-PS)  
     
    C. THROUGH USE OF HIS OFFICE AS GOVERNOR GENERAL, FRANK PARTICIPATED
    IN THE CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAZNST
    HUMANITY IN THE TERRITORY OF THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT OF POLAND.  
    Certain of the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Nazi
    conspirators, and in particular by Frank in the General Government of Poland are discussed
    in Chapter X on the Slave Labor Program, Chapter XI on Concentration Camps, Chapter XII on
    Persecution of the Jews, and Chapter XIII on Germanization and Spoliation. This section
    will attempt to trace Frank's special responsibility, as Governor General, for the
    policies underlying the crimes committed in the General Government during the period of
    his administration.  
    Frank was appointed Governor General of the Occupied Polish Territories by a 'Hitler
    decree dated 12 October 1939. The scope of his executive power was defined as follows:  
    
      "Section 1. The territories occupied by German troops shall be subject to the
      authority of the Governor General of the occupied Polish territories, except insofar as
      they are incorporated within the German Reich.  
      "Section 2. (1) I appoint Reich Minister Dr. Frank as Governor General of the
      occupied Polish territories. (2) As Deputy Governor General I appoint Reich Minister Dr.
      Seyss-Inquart. 
      "Section 3. (1) The Governor General shall be directly responsible to me. (2) All
      branches of the administration shall be directed by the Governor General * * *."
      (2537-PS)  
     
    The jurisdiction and functions of Frank in the General Government are described by him
    in several passages of his diary. For example at a meeting of Department Heads of the
    General Government on 8 March 1940 in the Bergakademie, Frank clarified his status as
    follows:  
    
      "One thing is certain. The authority of General Government as the representative
      of the Fuehrer and the will of the Reich in this territory is certainly strong, and I have
      always emphasized that I would not tolerate the misuse of this authority. I have allowed
      this to be known anew at every office in Berlin, especially after Herr Field Marshall
      Goering on 12.2.1940 from Karin-hall had forbidden all Administrative Offices of the
      Reich, including the Police and even the Wehrmacht, to interfere in administrative
      matters of the General Government * * *  
      "There is no authority here in the General Government which is higher as to rank,
      influence, and authority than that of  the Governor General. Even the Wehrmacht has
      no governmental or official functions of any kind in this connection ; it has only
      security functions and general military duties-it has no political power whatsoever. The
      same applies here to the Police and SS. There is here no state within a state but we are
      the representatives of the Fuehrer and of the Reich. In final conclusion, this applies
      also to the Party which has here no farreaching influence except for the fact that very
      old members of the National Socialist Party and loyal veterans of the Fuehrer take care of
      general matters." (2233- M-PS)  
     
    At a conference of the District Standartenfuehrer of the NSDAP in Cracow on 18
    March 1942, Frank explained the relationship between his administration and Himmler:
     
    
      "As you know I am a fanatic as to unity in administration. * * * It is therefore
      clear that the Higher SS and Police Officer is subordinated to me, that the Police is a
      component of the government, that the SS and Police Officer in the district is
      subordinated to the Governor, and that the Kreis [district] chief has the authority of
      command over the gendarmerie in his Kreis [district]. This the Reichsfuehrer SS has
      recognized; in the written agreement all these points are mentioned word for word and
      signed. It is also self-evident that we cannot set up a closed shop here which can be
      treated in the traditional manner of small states. It would, for instance, be ridiculous
      if we would build up here a security policy of our own against our Poles in the country,
      while knowing that the Polacks in West Prussia, in Posen, in Wartheland and in Silesia
      have one and the same movement of resistance. The Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of the German
      Police thus must be able to carry out with the aid of his agencies his police measures
      concerning the interests of the Reich as a whole. This, however, will be done in such a
      way that the measures to be adopted will first be submitted to me and carried out only
      when I give my consent. In the General Government, the Police is the Armed Forces. As a
      result of this, the leader of the Police system will be called by me into the government
      of the General Government; he is subordinate to me, or to my deputy, as a State Secretary
      for the Security Systems." (2233-R-PS)  
     
    D. THE PROTOCOL UNDER WHICH THE PURPOSES OF FRANK'S ADMINISTRATION OF THE
    GENERAL GOVERNMENT WERE DEFINED CONSTITUTES IN ITSELF A CRIMINAL
    PLAN OR CONSPIRACY.  
    The protocol of the conversation between Keitel and Hitler, which was dated 20 October
    1939 and initialed by General Warlimont, regarding "The Future Shape of Polish
    Relations with Germany" provided in part as follows:  
    
      " (1) The Armed Forces will welcome it if they can dispose of Administrative
      questions in Poland. "On principle there cannot be two administrations." * * * *
      * * *  
      "( 3) It is not the task of the Administration to make Poland into a model province
      or a model state of the German order or to put her economically or financially on a sound
      basis. "The Polish intelligentsia must be prevented from forming a ruling class. The
      standard of living in the country is to remain low; we only want to draw labor forces from
      there. Poles are also to be used for the administration of the country. However the
      forming of national political groups may not be allowed.  
      "( 4) The administration has to work on its own responsibility and must not be
      dependent on Berlin. We don't want to do there what we do in the Reich. The responsibility
      does not rest with the Berlin Ministries since there is no German administrative unit
      concerned. "The accomplishment of this task will involve a hard racial struggle [Volkstumskampf]
      which will not allow any legal restrictions. The methods will be incompatible with the
      principles otherwise adhered to by us. "The Governor General is to give the Polish
      nation only bare living conditions and is to maintain the basis for military
      security." * * * * * * *  
      "( 6) * * * Any tendencies towards the consolidation of conditions in Poland are to
      be suppressed. The 'Polish muddle' [polnische Wirtschaft] must be allowed to
      develop. The government of the territory must make it possible for us to purify the Reich
      territory from Jews and Polacks, too. Collaboration with new Reich provinces (Posen
      and West Prussia) only for resettlements (Compare Mission Himmler). "Purpose:
      Shrewdness and severity must be the maxims in this racial struggle in order to spare
      us from going to battle on account of this country again." (864-PS)  
     
    Frank's own statements regarding the purposes of his administration in Poland should be
    considered in connection with the foregoing document. The economic and political
    responsibilities which had been conferred on Frank by Hitler, and according to which he "intended
    to administer Poland", were explained by Frank as follows in an interview that
    took place on 3 October 1939:  
    
      "Poland can only be administered by utilizing the country through means of
      ruthless exploitation, deportation of all supplies, raw materials, machines, factory
      installations, etc., which are important for the German war economy, availability of all
      workers for work within Germany, reduction of the entire Polish economy to absolute
      minimum necessary for bare existence of the population, closing of all educational
      institutions, especially technical schools and colleges in order to prevent the growth of
      the new Polish intelligentsia. 'Poland shall be treated as a colony ; the Poles shall be
      the slaves of the Greater German World Empire. ' " (EC-344-16 & 17)  
     
    The Hitler-Keitel protocol should also be construed in the light of various passages in
    Frank's diary relating to German policy in Poland. Illegality had been made in effect a
    canon of administration by the protocol, which provided that Frank's task involved "a
    hard racial struggle which will not allow any legal restrictions." Frank emphasized
    this point to his Department Heads at a conference on 19 December 1940: 
    
       "* * * In this country the force of a determined leadership must rule. The Pole
      must feel here that we are not building him a legal state, but that for him there is only
      one duty, namely, to work and to behave himself. It is clear that this leads sometimes to
      difficulties, but you must, in your own interest, see that all measures are ruthlessly
      carried out in order to become master of the situation. You can rely on me absolutely in
      this." (2233-0-PS)  
     
    It was the German purpose from the beginning to administer the General Government as
    colonial territory in total disregard of the duties imposed by International Law on an
    occupying power, and Frank's administrative policies were shaped in accordance with this
    policy. At the first conference with Department Heads of the General Government on 2
    December 1939, Frank stated:  
    
      "Decisive in the administrative activities of the General Government is the will
      of the Fuehrer that this area shall be the first colonial territory of the German
      nation." (2233-K-PS)  
     
    The "hard racial struggle" which Keitel and Hitler agreed could be solved
    only if attacked without "legal restrictions," developed into the struggle which
    had as its ultimate purpose the Germanization of the General Government. 
    Frank's adherence to the conspirators' Germanization policy was clearly expressed by
    him at an official meeting of political leaders of the NSDAP in Cracow on 5 August 1942.
    Frank explained on that occasion:  
    
      "The situation in regard to Poland is unique insofar as on the one hand-1 speak
      quite openly-we must expand Germanism in such a manner that the area of the General
      Government becomes pure German colonized land at some decades to come; and, on the other
      hand under the present war conditions we have to allow forgign racial groups to perform
      here the work which must be carried out in the service of Greater Germany."
      (2233-V-PS)  
     
    Expediency, and expediency only, tempered Frank's treatment of the nonGerman population
    of the General Government in the "hard racial struggle" he was charged with
    administering. The General Government was destined to become "pure German colonized
    land", the valley of the Vistula to be as "German as the valley of the
    Rhine." (2233-H-PS)  
    As for the Poles and Ukrainians, Frank's attitude was clear. They were to be permitted
    to work for the German economy as long as the war emergency continued. Once the war was
    won, he told the District Standortfuehrung and Political Leaders at a conference at
    Cracow on 14 January '1944 :  
    
      "* * * then, for all I care, mincemeat [Hackfleisch] can be made of the
      Poles and the Ukrainians and all the others who run around here-it does not matter what
      happens." (2233-BB-PS)  
     
    E. FRANK ADVOCATED AND ADMINISTERED A PROGRAM OF EXTERMINATING JEWS OF POLISH NATIONALITY WITHIN THE GENERAL
    GOVERNMENT.  
    Frank's diary makes it clear that the complete annihilation of Jews, in accordance with
    the racial program of the Nazi conspirators, was one of the objectives of his
    administration as Governor General. In the fall of 1940 Frank urged German soldiers to
    reassure their families in Germany with regard to the hardships of life in the General
    Government:  
    
      "In all theseweeks, they [i. e., your families] will be thinking of you, saying to
      themselves: My God, there he sits in Poland where there are so many lice and Jews, perhaps
      he is hungry and cold, perhaps he is afraid to write. * * * It would not be a bad idea
      then to send our dear ones back home a picture, and tell them: well now, there are not so
      many lice and Jews any more, and conditions here in the Government General have changed
      and improved somewhat already. Of course, I could not eliminate all lice and Jews in only
      one year's time (public amused). But in the course of time, and above all, if you help me,
      this end will be attained. After all, it is not necessary for us to accomplish everything
      within a year and right away, for what would otherwise be left for those who follow us to
      do?" (2233- C-PS).  
     
    A year later at a Cabinet Session of 16 December 1941 Frank restated the official
    policy of his administration with respect to Jews :  
    
      "As far as the Jews are concerned, I want to tell you quite frankly, that they
      must be done away with in one way or another. The Fuehrer said once: should united Jewry
      again succeed in provoking a world war, the blood of not only the nations which have been
      forced into the war by them, will be shed, but the Jew will have found his end in Europe *
      * *  
      "Gentlemen, I must ask you to rid yourselves of all feeling of pity. We must
      annihilate the Jews, wherever we find them and wherever it is possible, in order to
      maintain here the structure of the Reich as a whole. This will, naturally, be achieved by
      other methods than those pointed out by Bureau Chief Dr. Hummel. Nor can the judges of the
      Special Courts be made responsible for it, because of the limitations of the framework of
      the legal procedure. Such outdated views cannot be applied to such gigantic and unique
      events. We must find at any rate, a way which leads to the goal, and my thoughts are
      working in that direction.  
      "The Jews represent for us also extraordinarily malignant gluttons. We have now
      approximately 2,500,000 of them in the General Government, perhaps with the Jewish
      mixtures and everything that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews. We cannot shoot or poison those
      3,500,000 Jews, but we shall nevertheless be able to take measures, which will lead,
      somehow, to their annihilation, and this in connection with the gigantic measures to be
      determined in discussions from the Reich. The General Government must become free of Jews,
      the same as the Reich. Where and how this is to be achieved is a matter for the offices
      which we must appoint and create here. Their activities will be brought to your attention
      in due course." (2233- D-PS)  
     
    An earlier passage in the report of this session of the Cabinet explains the references
    to Dr. Hummel. Hummel had complained that legal formalities were obstructing the process
    of liquidation:  
    
      "In Warsaw, in spite of the setting up of a third court chamber, we have been able
      to decree only 45 death sentences, only 8 of which have been carried out, since in each
      individual case, the Pardon Commission [Gnadenkommission] in Cracow has to make the
      final decision. A further 600 sentences were demanded and are under consideration. An
      effective isolation of the ghetto is not possible by way of the Special Court Procedure.
      The procedure to be followed up to the liquidation takes too much time; it is burdened
      with too many formalities and must be simplified." (2233-Q-PS)  
     
    Frank himself ordered that every Jew seen outside the Ghetto should be executed:  
    
      "Severe measures must and will be adopted against Jews leaving the Ghettos. Death
      sentences pending against Jews for this reason must be carried out as quickly as possible.
      This order according to which every Jew found outside the Ghetto is to be executed, must
      be carried out without fail." (2233-Q-PS)  
     
    When ways and means of meeting the food deficit in the General Government created by
    the increase in quotas to be requisitioned for export to Germany were discussed in August
    1942, Frank approved a program which provided in part as follows:  
    
      "The feeding of a Jewish population, estimated heretofore at 1.5 million, drops
      off to an estimated total of 300,000 Jews, who still work for German interests as
      craftsmen or otherwise. For these the Jewish rations, including certain special allotments
      which have proved necessary for the maintenance of working capacity, will be retained. The
      other Jews, a total of 1.2 million, will no longer be provided with foodstuffs." (2233-E-PS)
       
     
    Frank's concurrence was expressed in the following terms:  
    
      "That we sentence 1.2 million Jews to die of hunger should be noted only
      marginally. It is a matter of course that should the Jews not starve it would, we hope,
      result in speeding up anti-Jewish measures." (2233-E-PS) 
     
    At an official meeting of the political leaders of the NSDAP on 5 August 1942, Frank
    made the following progress report:  
    
      "What a dirty people made up of Jews swaggered around here before 1939! And where
      are the Jews today? You scarcely see them. If you see them they are working."
      (2233-V-PS)  
     
    In December 1941, Frank had pointed out that his administration could not shoot or
    poison all the three and a half million Jews in the General Government. He had promised,
    however, that he would be able to devise measures which would lead to their annihilation.
    Two years later, at a special press conference in January 1944, he was able to report that
    his mission was almost accomplished.  
    "At the present time we have still in the General Government perhaps 100,000
    Jews." (2233~ F-PS)  
    F. FRANK IMPOSED UPON THE POPULATION OF THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT A REIGN OF TERROR, OPPRESSION, IMPOVERISHMENT, AND STARVATION.
     
    What had happened in the General Government in the first three and a half years of
    Frank's administration was summarized by Frank in a report to Hitler on the situation in
    Poland, dated 19 June 1943:  
    
      "In the course of time, a series of measures or of consequences of the German rule
      have led to a substantial deterioration of the attitude of the entire Polish people
      in the German Government. These measures have affected either individual professions or
      the entire population and frequently also-often with crushing severity-the fate of
      individuals. "Among these are in particular:  
      "l-The entirely insufficient nourishment of the population, mainly of the working
      classes in the cities, whose majority is working for German interests. "Until the war
      of 1939, its food supplies, though not varied, were sufficient and generally secure, due
      to the agrarian surplus of the former PoIish state and in spite of the negligence on the
      part of their former political leadership.  
      "2-The confiscation of a great part of the Polish estates and the expropriation
      without compensation and resettlement of Polish peasants from manoeuvre areas and from
      German settlements.  
      "3-Encroachments and confiscations in the industries, in commerce and trade and in
      the field of private property. 
      "4-Mass arrests and mass shootings by the German police who applied the system of
      collective responsibility.  
      "5-The rigorous methods of recruiting workers.  
      "6-The extensive paralyzation of cultural life.  
      "7-The closing of high schools, junior colleges, and universities. 
      "8-The limitation, indeed the complete elimination influence from all spheres of
      State administration. of Polish  
      "9-Curtailment of the influence of the Catholic Church, limiting its extensive
      influence -an undoubtedly necessary move-and, in addition, until quite recently, the
      closing and confiscation of monasteries, schools and charitable institutions."
      (437-PS)  
     
    In order to illustrate how completely Frank as Governor General is identified with the
    criminal policies whose execution is reported in the foregoing document, and the extent to
    which they were the official policies of his administration, it is proposed to annotate
    several of the items with passages from Frank's own diary.  
    (1) Undernourishment of Polish
    population. The extent of the undernourishment of the Polish population was
    reported to Frank in September 1941 by Obermedizinalrat Dr. Walbaum:  
    
      "Obermedizinalrat Dr. Walbaum expresses his opinion of the health
      condition of the Polish population. Investigations which were carried out by
      his department proved that the majority of Poles eat only about 600 calories, whereas the
      normal requirement for a human being is 2,200 calories. The Polish population was
      enfeebled to such an extent that it would fall an easy prey to spotted fever. The
      number of diseased Poles amounted today already to 40 %. During the last week alone 1000
      new spotted fever cases have been officially r e c o r d e d. * * * If the food rations
      were to be diminished again, an enormous increase of the number of illnesses could be
      predicted." (2233-P-PS)  
     
    It was clear from this report that starvation was prevalent in the General Government.
    Nevertheless, in August 1942, Frank approved a new plan which called for much larger
    contributions of foodstuffs to Germany at the expense of the nonGerman population of the
    General Government. Methods of meeting the new quotas out of the already grossly
    inadequate rations of the General Government, and the impact of the new quotas on the
    economy of the country were discussed at a Cabinet meeting of the General Government on 18
    August 1942 in terms which leave no doubt that not only was the proposed requisition far
    beyond the resources of the country, but its impact was to be distributed on a
    discriminatory basis.  
    Frank's opening remarks at this meeting defined the scope of the problem and its
    solution:  
    "Before the German people are to experience starvation, the occupied territories
    and their people shall be exposed to starvation. In this moment therefore we here in the
    General Government must also have the iron determination to help the Great German people,
    our Fatherland. . . . The General Government therefore must do the following: The General
    Government has taken on the obligation to send 500,000 tons bread grains to the Fatherland
    in addition to the foodstuffs already being delivered for the relief of Germany or
    consumed here by troops of the armed forces, Police or SS. If you compare this with our
    contributions of last year you can see that this means a six fold increase over that of
    last year's contribution of the General Government. The new demand will be fulfilled
    exclusively at the expense of the foreign population. It must be done
    cold-bloodedly and without pity; * * * " (2233-E-PS) .  
    President of the Main Department for Food and Agriculture Naumann (apparently an
    official of the General Government) then described how the reduced quantity of food
    available for feeding the population of the General Government should be distributed:  
    
      "The feeding of a Jewish population, estimated heretofore at 1.5 million,
      drops off to an estimated total of 300,000 Jews, who still work for German interests as
      craftsmen or otherwise. For these the Jewish rations, including certain special allotments
      which have proved necessary for the maintenance of working capacity, will be retained. The
      other Jews, a total of 1.2 miilion, will no longer be provided with foodstuffs.  
      "Non-German normal consumers will receive, from 1 January 1943 to 1
      March 1943, instead of 4.2 kg. bread per month, 2.8 kg; from 1 March 1943 to 30 July 1943
      the total bread ration for these non-German normal consumers will be cancelled.  
      "Those entitled to be supplied [ Versorgungsberechtigten] are
      composed as follows. We estimate that 3 million persons come into consideration as war
      workers, the A-and B-card holders and their kin, and that somewhat more than 3 mil lion
      persons are non-German normal consumers, who do not work directly or indirectly in the
      interests of Germany. The war workers, A-and B-card holders and their families, about 3
      million persons, will however continue to be supplied, up to the harvest of 1943, at the
      prevailing rates." (2233-E-PS)  
     
    Naumann goes on to discuss the difficulties that may be encountered in the process of
    requisition:  
    
      "T h e securing of all depots and food processing plants,
      as well as their transport facilities must be assured, as otherwise irreplaceable
      losses result which mean a further burdening of the food budget. I have had maps made of
      all districts [Kreise] on which the depots have all been drawn in. I request that the
      necessary measures be taken on the part of the police and these depots, which are in the
      eye of the hungering masses, above all at times when the restrictions are carried out,
      should be strictly guarded, so that the meager supplies which we have until the new
      harvest should not be destroyed by sabotage or arson. . . . Finally it must be determined
      at the beginning of November whether the martial law for the harvest period, which
      has been proclaimed up to 30 November, must be extended to 30 December. Martial law for
      the harvest period has been extended to all products which are to be seized. The planned
      quota increase and reduction of ration quantities must be kept secret under all
      circumstances and may be published only at that time which the Main Department for Food
      and Agriculture considers proper. Should the reduction of ration quantities and the
      increase of quotas become known earlier, extremely noticeable disturbances in the seizure
      would take place. The mass of the Polish population would then go to the land and would
      become a supplementary competitor of our requisitioning agencies." (2233-E-PS)  
     
    Frank's concluding remarks summarized the position as follows: 
    
      "I must point out that some sectors of the administration will feel this very
      keenly. In the first place the police will feel this, for it will have to deal,
      if I may say so, with an increased activity of the black market and a neglect of food
      customs. I will gladly give the police extraordinary powers so that they can overcome
      these difficulties.  
      "The economy will feel it. The decrease of work rendered will become felt in all
      sectors, branches and regions. I also assume that our transport system will
      feel it too. In view of the worsening living conditions an extraordinary hardship will set
      in for railroad workers and other categories; as the previous quantities of food were
      already not enough. The monopolies will feel it through a decrease of their incomes, as
      the amounts of potatoes available for the production of vodka will be less.  
      "The Germans in this area shall not feel it. We wish in spite of this new plan
      to see to it that the supplies for Germans will be maintained. Also the Wehrmacht and
      other encamped units in this area shall not feel it. We hope that it will be possible for
      us to keep up the whole quotas here. "To help in this necessity there is a
      corresponding measure, namely that the supervision of persons traveling from the General
      Government to the Reich, above all of military personnel, in order to see whether they are
      taking food out of the General Government, should be suspended. This means that in
      addition to all that which we must now extract from the land economically, there must take
      place a complete removal of control over that which is dragged out of the land by
      thousands upon thousands-doubtless illegally and against our government measures." (2233-E-PS) 
     
    The extent of the General Government's food contribution to the Reich, and its
    significance in terms of rations within Germany were described by Frank at a meeting of
    political leaders of the NSDAP in December 1942 at Cracow:  
    
      "I will endeavor to get out of the reservoir of this territory everything that is
      yet to be got out of it. When you consider that it was possible for me to deliver to the
      Reich 600,000 tons of bread grain, and in addition 180,000 tons to the Armed Forces
      stationed here; further an abundance amounting to many thousands of tons of other
      commodities such as seed, fats, vegetables, besides the delivery to the Reich of 300
      million eggs, etc.-you can estimate the significance of the consignment from the General
      Government of 600,000 tons of bread grain; you are referred to the fact that the General
      Government by this achievement alone covers the raising of the bread ration in the Greater
      German Reich by two-thirds during the present rationing period. This enormous achievement
      can rightfully be claimed by us." (2233-Z-PS)  
     
    (2) Resettlement projects. Although Himmler
    was given general authority in connection with the conspirators' program to resettle
    various districts in the conquered Eastern territories with racial Germans, projects
    relating to resettling districts in the  General Government were submitted to and
    approved by Frank. On 4 August 1942, for example, the plan to resettle Zamosc and Lublin
    was reported to him by State Secretary Krueger:  
    
      "State Secretary Krueger then continues, saying that the Reichsfuehrer's next
      immediate plan until the end of the following year would be to settle the following German
      racial groups in the two districts (Zamosc and Lublin) : 1000 peasant settlements (1
      settlement per family of about 6) for Bosnian Germans ; 1200 other kinds of settlements;
      1000 settlements for Bessarabian Germans ; 200 for Serbian Germans ; 2000 for Leningrad
      Germans ; 4000 for Baltic Germans ; 500 for Wolhynia Germans ; and 200 settlements for
      Flemish, Danish and Dutch Germans : in all 10,000 settlements for 50,000 persons"
      (2233-T-PS).  
     
    Frank directed that : 
    
       "'* * * the resettlement plan is to be discussed cooperatively by the
      competent authorities and declared his willingness to approve the final plan by the end of
      September after satisfactory arrangements had been made concerning all the questions
      appertaining thereto (in particular the guaranteeing of peace and order) so that by the
      middle of November, as the most favorable time, the resettlement can begin."
      (2233-T-PS)  
     
    The way in which the resettlement at Zamosc was carried out was described to Frank at a
    meeting at Warsaw on 25 January 1943 by State Secretary Krueger:  
    
      "When we settled about the first 4000 in Kreis Zamosc shortly before Christmas I
      had an opportunity to speak to these people. * * * It is understandable that in resettling
      this area . . .we did not make friends of the Poles. * * * In colonizing this territory
      with racial Germans, we are forced to chase out the Poles. * * * We are removing those who
      constitute a burden in this new colonization territory. Actually, they are the asocial and
      inferior elements. They are being deported, first brought to a concentration camp, and
      then sent as labor to the Reich. From a Polish propaganda standpoint this entire first
      action has had an unfavorable effect. For the Poles say: After the Jews have been
      destroyed then they will employ the same methods to get the Poles out of this territory
      and liquidate them just like the Jews." (2233-AA-PS)  
     
    Although the illegality of this dispossession of Poles to make room for German settlers
    was clear, and although the fact that the Poles were not only being dispossessed but taken
    off to concentration camps was drawn to Frank's attention at this time, he merely directed
    that individual cases of resettlement should in future be discussed in the same manner as
    in the case of Zamosc. (2233-AA-PS)  
    (3). Encroachments and confiscations
    in the industries and in the field of private property. Frank explained his policy in
    respect to Polish property to his Department Heads in the following terms in December
    1939:  
    
      "Principally it can be said regarding the administration of the General
      Government: This territory in its entirety is booty of the German Reich, and it thus
      cannot be permitted that this territory shall be exploited in its individual parts but
      that the territory in its entirety shall be economically used and its entire economic
      worth redound to the benefit of the German people." (2233- K-PS)  
     
    Whatever encroachments there were on private property rights in the General Government
    fell squarely within the policy which Frank in an interview on 3 October 1939 stated he
    intended to administer as General Governor: 
    
       "Poland can only be administered by utilizing the country through means of
      ruthless exploitation, deportation of all supplies, raw materials, machines, factory
      installations etc. which are important for the German war economy. * * * [It was Frank's
      opinion] that the war would be a short one and that it was most important now to make
      available as soon as possible raw materials, machines and workers to the German industry,
      which was short in all of these. Most important, however, in Frank's opinion, was the fact
      that by destroying Polish industry, its subsequent reconstruction after the war would
      become more difficult, if not impossible, so that Poland would be reduced to its proper
      position as an agrarian country which would have to depend upon Germany for importation of
      industrial products." (EC-344-16 & 17)  
     
    The basic decree under which property in the General Government was sequestered was
    promulgated by Frank on 24 January 1940. This decree authorized sequestration in
    connection with the "performance of tasks serving the public interest," the
    seizure of "abandoned property," and the liquidation of "anti-social or
    financially unremunerative property." It permitted the Higher S. S. and Police Chief
    to order sequestrations "with the object of increasing the striking power of the
    units of the uniformed police and armed S. S." No legal recourse was granted for
    losses arising from the enforcement of the decree, compensation being solely in the
    discretion of an official of the General Government. It is clear that the undefined
    criteria of this decree empowered Nazi officials in the General Government to engage in
    wholesale seizure of property. (2540-PS)  
    (4) Principle of collective
    responsibility. It was no part of Frank's policy in administering the
    General Government that reprisals  
    should be commensurate with the gravity of the offense. Frank was, on the contrary, an
    advocate of drastic measures in dealing with the Polish people. At a conference of
    Department Heads of the General Government on 19 January 1940, he explained :  
    
      "My relationship with the Poles is like the relationship between ant and plant
      louse. When I treat the Poles in a helpful way, so to speak tickle them in a friendly
      manner, then I do it in the expectation that their work performance redounds to my
      benefit. This is not a political but a purely tactical-technical problem. * * * In cases
      where in spite of all these measures the performance does not increase, or where the
      slightest act gives me occasion to step in, I would not even hesitate to take the most
      draconic action." (2233-L-PS)  
     
    At a subsequent meeting of Department Heads on 8 March 1940 Frank became even more
    explicit:  
    
      "Whenever there is the least attempt by the Poles to start anything, an enormous
      campaign of destruction will follow. Then I would not mind starting a regime of terror, or
      fear its consequences." (2233-M-PS)  
     
    At a conference of District Standartenfuehrer at Cracow on 18 March 1942 Frank
    reiterated his policy:  
    
      "Incidentally, the struggle for the achievement of our aims will be pursued cold
      bloodedly. You see how the state agencies work. You see that we do not hesitate before
      anything, and stand whole dozens of people up against the wall. This is necessary because
      here simple consideration says that it cannot be our task at this period when the best
      German blood is being sacrificed, to show regard for the blood of another race. For out of
      this one of the greatest dangers may arise. One already hears today in Germany that
      prisoners-of-war, for instance with us in Bavaria or in Thuringia, are administering large
      estates entirely independently, while all the men in a village fit for service are at the
      front. If this state of affairs continues then a gradual  
      [Missing Pages 644-645] 
     
      
    (5) Rigorous methods of recruiting
    foreign workers.  
    Frank utilized starvation as a method of recruitment. At a conference on 20 November
    1942 the following plan was agreed:  
    
      "Starting 1 February 1942 the food ration cards should not be issued to the
      individual Pole or Ukrainian by the Nutrition Office [Ernaehrungsamt], but to the
      establishments working for the German interest. 2,000,000 people would thus be eliminated
      from the non-German, normal ration-consuming contingent. Now, if those ration cards are
      only distributed by the factories, part of those people will naturally rush into the
      factories. Labor could then be either procured for Germany from them or they could be used
      for the most 'important work in the factories of the General Government." (2233-Y-PS)
       
     
    On 18 August 1942 Frank informed Sauckel that the General Government had already
    supplied 800,000 laborers to Germany, and that a further 140,000 would be supplied by the
    end of the year. Regarding the quota for the next year he promised 
    
      "* * * you can, however, next year reckon upon a higher number of workers
      from the General Government, for we shall employ the Police to conscript them."
      (2233-W-PS)  
     
    Six months after Frank promised Sauckel to resort to police action to round up labor
    for deportation to Germany, the Chairman of the Ukrainian Main Committee reported to Frank
    that the program was being carried out as follows: 
    
       "The wild and ruthless manhunt carried on everywhere in towns and country, in
      streets, squares, stations, even in churches, at night in houses, 'has badly shaken the
      feeling of security of the inhabitants. Everybody is exposed to the danger of being seized
      anywhere and at any time by members of the police, suddenly and unexpectedly, and being
      brought into an assembly camp. None of his relatives knows what has happened to him, only
      weeks or months later, one or the other gives news of his fate by a postcard."(
      1526-PS)  
     
    (6) Closing of schools. The program outlined
    by Frank on 3 October 1939 as the program he intended to administer as Governor General
    included :  
    
      "closing of all educational institutions, especially technical schools and
      colleges in order to prevent the growth of the new Polish intelligentsia." (EC-344-16
      & 17)  
     
    This decision was taken by Frank before it was determined what schools, if any, might
    be closed because of failure of instructors to refrain from reference to politics, or
    refusal to submit to inspection by the occupying authorities. Moreover, the policy was
    determined, as indicated, in furtherance of the purpose of preventing the rise of an
    educated class in Poland.  
    (7) Other crimes. There were other grounds for
    uneasiness in Poland which Frank does not mention in his report to Hitler. He'does not
    mention the Concentration Camps-perhaps because, as the "representative jurist"
    of National Socialism, Frank had himself defended'the system in Germany. As Governor
    General Frank is responsible for all concentration camps within the boundaries of the
    General Government. As indicated above, he knew and approved that Poles were taken to
    concentration camps in connection with the resettlement projects. He had certain
    jurisdiction, as well, in relation to the notorious extermination camp Auschwitz, to which
    Poles from the General Government were committed by his administration, although the camp
    itself lay outside the boundaries of the General Government. In February 1944, Ambassador
    Counsellor Dr. Schumberg suggested a possible amnesty of Poles who had been taken to
    Auschwitz for trivial offenses and kept for several months. The report of the conference
    continues : 
    
       "The Governor General will take under consideration an amnesty probably for 1 May
      of this year. Nevertheless, one must not lose sight of the fact that the German leadership
      of the General Government must not now show any signs of weakness." (2233-BB-PS)
       
     
    G. CONCLUSION. As legal adviser
    of Hitler and the Ieadership corps of the NSDAP, Frank promoted the conspirators' rise to
    power. In his various juridical capacities, both in the NSDAP and in the German
    government, Frank advocated and promoted the political monopoly of the NSDAP, the racial
    program of the conspirators, and the terror system of the concentration camp and of arrest
    without warrant. His role in the common plan was to realize "the National Socialist
    Program in the realm of law", and to give the outward form of legality to this
    program of terror, persecution and oppression, which had as its ultimate purpose
    mobilization for aggressive war.  
    As a loyal adherent of HitIer and the NSDAP, Frank was appointed Governor General in
    October 1939 of that area of Poland known as the General Government, which became the
    testing ground for the conspirators' program of "Lebensraum." Frank had
    defined justice in the field of German law as that which benefited the German nation. His
    five year administration of the General Government illustrates the same principles applied
    in the field of International Law.  
    Frank took the office of Governor General under a program which constituted in itself a
    criminal plan or conspiracy, as Frank well knew and approved, to exploit the territory
    ruthlessly for the benefit of Nazi Germany, to conscript its nationals for labor in
    Germany, to close its schools and colleges to prevent the rise of a Polish intelligentsia,
    and to administer the territory as a colonial possession of the Third Reich in total
    disregard of the duties of an occupying power toward the inhabitants of occupied
    territory. Under Frank's administration this criminal plan was consummated. But the
    execution went even beyond the plan. Food contributions to Germany increased to the point
    where the bare subsistence reserved for the General Government under the plan was reduced
    to the level of mass starvation; a savage program of exterminating Jews was relentlessly
    executed ; resettlement projects were carried out with reckless disregard of the rights of
    the local population; the terror of the concentration camp followed in the wake of the
    Nazi invaders.  
    It has been shown that all of these crimes were committed in accordance with the
    official policies established and advocated by Frank. This summary of evidence has been
    compiled almost entirely from statements by Frank himself, from the admissions found in
    his diaries, official reports, records of his conferences with his colleagues and
    subordinates, and his speeches. It is therefore appropriate that a final passage from his
    diary should be quoted in conclusion. In January 1943, Frank told his colleagues in the
    General Government that their task would grow more difficult. Hitler, he said, could only
    help them as a kind of "administrative pillbox". They must depend on themselves. 
    
       "We are now duty bound to hold together [he continued] * * * We must remember
      that we who are gathered together here figure on Mr. Roosevelt's list of war criminals. I
      have the honor of being Number One. We have, so to speak, become accomplices in the world
      historic sense." (2233-AA-PS)  
     
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