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of
civilized nations had failed to condemn and outlaw involuntary servitude in its
every form.
It is submitted in behalf of the defendant that foreign
workers came to Germany of their own will. It is true that in the early stages
of the European conflict, Germany offered such inducements in foreign countries
as to persuade numbers of their subjects voluntarily to proceed to that country
for remunerative employment. In those first days of Blitzkrieg when nation
after nation fell helplessly under the invincible Nazi war machine, workers
accepted employment in Germany not only because of promises made, but because
exterior evidence to their bewildered minds seemed to portend that soon the
frontiers of Germany would be coterminous with the boundaries of Europe itself.
Thus, but small choice remained to them; whether they worked at home or in
Germany the master was destined to be the same.
However, when the
subjugated peoples perceived at Stalingrad that the unbeatable German army
could be beaten, when they heard the roar of American propellers in the sky and
the clank of British tanks returned once more to the battle, a light of hope
gleamed that it might not be true, as Hitler had said, that his rule and order
were to endure a thousand years, and then these people refused the coin and
currency of the German Reich. From then on the feet of foreign workers were not
turned willingly toward Germany. And in the face of this defiance, Sauckel,
German Plenipotentiary for Labor, declared, "Should we not succeed in obtaining
the necessary amount of labor on a voluntary basis, we must immediately
institute conscription or forced labor." (T-58.)¹
There is
no adding machine tape to which one can turn to determine the exact total
number of foreign workers impressed into German industry, but Fritz Sauckel,
Plenipotentiary General for Labor, declared, "Out of 5,000,000 workers who
arrived in Germany, not even 200,000 came voluntarily." (T-149.)
Heinrich Himmler placed the number of foreign workers at from 6,000,000 to
7,000,000. (IMT 243)² On 9 November 1941, Hitler declared in a
speech
"The territory which now works for us
contains more than 250,000,000 men, but the territory which works indirectly
for us includes now more than 350,000,000. In the measure in which it concerns
German territory, the domain which we have taken under our administration, it
is not doubtful that we shall succeed in harnessing the very last man to this
work." __________ ¹The
reference "T" is to the page of the mimeographed transcript. ²"IMT"
refers to Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military
Tribunal, Vol. I. Nuremberg, Germany, 1947.
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