Read Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas and Responses Online
Authors: Francis R. Nicosia,David Scrase
Nonetheless, otto Dov kulka considers the Reichsvereinigung to have been primarily a closed, pluralistic-democratic community that preserved elements of former Jewish life, such as education and social welfare activities in the midst of a totalitarian terror state.
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kulka’s perspective on the Reichsvereinigung, however, hardly takes into account the extent of its cooperation with the Nazis in preparing the deportations, the work of German-Jewish functionaries in Theresienstadt, and the activities of the Jewish
Vertrauensmänner
from 1943 to 1945.
why did the Jewish functionaries take on these dangerous positions that cost most of them their lives? out of a highly developed sense of responsibility and an exaggerated level of self-confidence and because they were coerced into doing so—that is the answer supplied earlier. with what means could they confront the implementation of the “fi-nal solution”? Many high-level Jewish functionaries were lawyers and economists who had held upper-echelon positions in government administration before the Nazis came to power. The Reichsvereinigung’s apparatus, with its many departments and sections, its predetermined areas of competence, its rigid structures and regulations, and its “chain of command,” closely paralleled the government administration. when eppstein was ordered to report to the RSHA, his “higher authority,” he regularly took minutes of the meetings. Ignoring the humiliating forms of communication, he recorded the orders given, his own sugges-tions for implementing them, and the reactions of the other side. All of this was written in a language that was demonstratively matter-of-fact and bureaucratic. The complete version of these minutes went to the RSHA and the executive board of the Reichsvereinigung. Certain sections were sent as memos to the appropriate department heads or staff members. Apparently, the aim was to record in writing anything that pertained in the broadest sense to the deportations, and to deal with these matters in a manner that was transparent, comprehensible, consistent, and independent of the persons involved.
Administrative authorities normally work dependably and in accordance with the law. The Jewish functionaries followed the principles of this type of “old-style administration.” They expected that such bureaucratic rules would act as a counterweight to arbitrariness, violence, and murder. That such bureaucratic rules and mass murder by no means precluded one another but might, on the contrary, form a tight bond, contradicted the personal experience of these Jewish functionaries. The National Socialists, in contrast, propagated the ideal of a “fighting administration” that was not bound by norms and the law. The RSHA was the prototypical model. Michael wildt has referred to this kind of authority as a “new type of institution” because of its structure, which went unchecked by regulations and laws and its directors who alternatively organized the process of deportations and mass murder in the “killing fields” in the east.
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The Reichsvereinigung’s functionaries interpreted their “old-style administration” as a bulwark against the corruption, exploitation, arbitrariness, and inhumanity all around them. even in Theresienstadt, they persevered and created an oversized
administrative apparatus. The commission that compiled the deportation lists there, for example, consisted of forty-three people, all of whom held positions entitling them to participate in these decisions. But preserving an administration that functioned methodically and followed the rules proved to be a pitifully helpless strategy for averting what Dan Diner has termed the “rupture of civilization.” Survivor erich Simon later summarized his position and that of his murdered companions as follows: “Horrible, when one thinks back today, but it [the cooperation with the Nazis] happened in the interest of our people, from the perspective of the time; we believed that by cooperating we had accompanied them into a foreign situation in an orderly manner.”
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Notes
(Munich: oldenbourg Verlag, 1995).
zur deutsch-jüdischen Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts
(Hamburg: Christians Verlag, 1998), 141–165.
64–74; Yfaat weiss,
Deutsche und polnische Juden vor dem Holocaust. Jüdische Identität zwischen Staatsbürgerschaft und Ethnizität 1933–1940
(Munich: oldenbourg, 2000), 211–217.
Story of Fourteen of the Hidden and the Hunted of Nazi Germany
, ed. eric H. Boehm (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1949), 288.