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Reich
Secret Document
Einsatzgruppe
A
General
Report up to October 15, 1941
...II
Cleansing [of Jews] and
securing the area of operation.
-
Encouragement
of Self-cleansing Aktionen
(Selbstreinigungs-aktionen)*
Basing
[oneself] on the consideration that the population of the
Baltic countries had suffered most severely under the rule of
Bolshevism and Jewry while they were incorporated into the
U.S.S.R., it was to be expected that after liberation from
this foreign rule they would themselves to a large extent
eliminate those of the enemy left behind after the retreat of
the Red Army. It was the task of the Security Police to set
these self-cleansing movements going and to direct them into
the right channels in order to achieve the aim of this
cleansing as rapidly as possible. It was no less important to
establish as unshakable and provable facts for the future that
it was the liberated population itself which took the most
severe measures, on its own initiative, against the Bolshevik
and Jewish enemy, without any German instructions being
evident.
In
Lithuania this was achieved for the first time by
activating the partisans** in Kovno. To our surprise it was
not easy at first to set any large-scale anti-Jewish pogrom in
motion there. Klimatis, the leader of the partisan group
referred to above, who was the first to be recruited for this
purpose, succeeded in starting a pogrom with the aid of
instructions given him by a small advance detachment operating
in Kovno, in such a way that no German orders or instructions
could be observed by outsiders. In the course of the first
pogrom during the night of June 25/26, the Lithuanian
partisans eliminated more than 1,500 Jews, set fire to several
synagogues or destroyed them by other means, and burned down
an area consisting of about sixty houses inhabited by Jews.
During the nights that followed, 2,300 Jews were eliminated in
the same way. In other parts of Lithuania similar Aktionen
followed the example set in Kovno, but on a smaller scale, and
including some Communists who had been left behind.
These
self-cleansing Aktionen ran smoothly because the
Wehrmacht authorities who had been informed showed
understanding for this procedure. At the same time it was
obvious from the beginning that only the first days after the
Occupation would offer the opportunity for carrying out
pogroms. After the disarmament of the partisans the
self-cleansing Aktionen necessarily ceased.
It
proved to be considerably more difficult to set in motion
similar cleansing Aktionen and pogroms in Latvia.
The main reason was that the entire national leadership,
especially in Riga, had been killed or deported by the
Soviets. Even in Riga it proved possible by means of
appropriate suggestions to the Latvian auxiliary police to get
an anti-Jewish pogrom going, in the course of which all the
synagogues were destroyed and about 400 Jews killed. As the
population on the whole quietened down very quickly in Riga,
it was not possible to arrange further pogroms.
Both
in Kovno and in Riga evidence was taken on film and by
photographs to establish, as far as possible, that the first
spontaneous executions of Jews and Communists were carried out
by Lithuanians and Latvians.
In
Estonia there was no opportunity of instigating pogroms
owing to the relatively small number of Jews. The Estonian
self-defense units only eliminated some individual Communists,
who were particularly hated, but in general limited themselves
to carrying out arrests....
3)
The Fight against Jewry
It
was to be expected from the beginning that the Jewish problem
in the Ostland could not be solved by pogroms alone. At
the same time the Security Police had basic, general orders
for cleansing operations aimed at a maximum elimination of the
Jews. Large-scale executions were therefore carried out in the
cities and the countryside by Sonderkommandos (Special
Units), which were assisted by selected units -- partisan
groups in Lithuania, and parties of the Latvian Auxiliary
Police in Latvia. The work of the execution units was carried
out smoothly. Where Lithuanian and Latvian forces were
attached to the execution units, the first to be chosen were
those who had had members of their families and relatives
killed or deported by the Russians.
Particularly
severe and extensive measures became necessary in Lithuania.
In some places -- especially in Kovno -- the Jews had armed
themselves and took an active part in sniping and arson. In
addition, the Jews of Lithuania cooperated most closely with
the Soviets.
The
total number of Jews liquidated in Lithuania is 71,105.
During
the pogrom 3,800 Jews were eliminated in Kovno and about 1,200
in the smaller cities.
In
Latvia, too, Jews took part in acts of sabotage and
arson after the entry of the German Wehrmacht. In Duenaburg so
many fires were started by Jews that a large part of the city
was destroyed. The electric power station was burned out
completely. Streets inhabited mainly by Jews remained
untouched. Up to now 30,000 Jews have been executed in Latvia.
The pogrom in Riga eliminated 500.
Most
of the 4,500 Jews living in Estonia at the start of the
Eastern campaign fled with the retreating Red Army. About
2,000 stayed behind. In Reval alone there were about 1,000
Jews.
The
arrest of all male Jews over the age of sixteen is almost
completed. With the exception of the doctors and the Jewish
Elders appointed by the Sonderkommando they [the
remaining Jews] are being executed by the Estonian
Self-defense under the supervision of Sonderkommando
1a. Jewesses between the ages of 16 through 60 in Reval and
Pernau, who are fit for work, were arrested and used to cut
peat and for other work.
At
present a camp is being built at Harku, to which all the Jews
in Estonia will be sent, so that in a short time Estonia will
be cleared of Jews.
After
the carrying out of the first large-scale executions in
Lithuania and Latvia it already proved that the total
elimination of the Jews is not possible there, at least not at
the present time. As a large part of the skilled trades is in
Jewish hands in Lithuania and Latvia, and some (glaziers,
plumbers, stove-builders, shoemakers) are almost entirely
Jewish, a large proportion of Jewish craftsmen are
indispensable at present for the repair of essential
installations, for the reconstruction of destroyed cities, and
for work of military importance. Although the employers aim at
replacing Jewish labor with Lithuanian or Latvian workers, it
is not yet possible to replace all the Jews presently
employed, particularly in the larger cities. In cooperation
with the labor exchange offices, however, Jews who are no
longer fit for work are picked up and will be executed shortly
in small Aktionen.
It
must also be noted in this connection that in some places
there has been considerable resistance by offices of the Civil
Administration against large-scale executions. This
[resistance] was confronted in every case by pointing out that
it was a matter of carrying out orders [involving] a basic
principle.
Apart
from organizing and carrying out the executions, preparations
were begun from the first days of the operation for the
establishment of ghettos in the larger cities. This was
particularly urgent in Kovno, where there were 30,000 Jews in
a total population of 152,400. At the end of the early
pogroms, therefore, a Jewish Committee was summoned and
informed that the German authorities had so far seen no reason
to interfere in the conflicts between the Lithuanians and the
Jews. A condition for the creation of a normal situation would
be, first of all, the creation of a Jewish ghetto. When the
Jewish Committee remonstrated, it was explained that there was
no other possibility of preventing further pogroms. At this
the Jews at once declared that they were ready to do
everything to transfer their co-racials as quickly as possible
to the Viliampole Quarter, where it was planned to establish
the Jewish ghetto. This area is situated in the triangle
between the River Memel and a branch of the river, and is
linked with Kovno by only one bridge, and therefore easily
sealed off.
In
Riga the so-called "Moscow Suburb" was designated as
the ghetto. This is the worst residential quarter of Riga,
which is already inhabited mainly by Jews. The transfer of
Jews into the ghetto area proved rather difficult because the
Latvians living in that district had to be evacuated and
residential space in Riga is very crowded. Of about 28,000
Jews remaining in Riga, 24,000 are now housed in the ghetto.
The Security Police carried out only police duties in the
establishment of the ghetto, while the arrangements and
administration of the ghetto, as well as the regulation of the
food supply for the inmates of the ghetto, were left to the
Civil Administration; the Labor Office was left in charge of
Jewish labor.
Ghettos
are also being set up in other cities in which there are a
large number of Jews....
L-180.
*
The reference is to Aktionen against Jews carried out
by the local population.
**
A nationalist organization in Lithuania that rose against
Soviet rule on the day the Germans moved in. |