Extermination through labour (redirect from Vernichtung durch Arbeit)
through labour (or "extermination through work", ‹See Tfd›German: Vernichtung durch Arbeit) is a term that was adopted to describe forced labor in Nazi concentration...
20 KB (2,326 words) - 22:00, 28 August 2024
memorial to the workers who built Valentin was erected. Titled Vernichtung durch Arbeit (Extermination through labour), it was by Bremen artist Fritz Stein...
21 KB (2,383 words) - 04:33, 27 September 2024
military machinery. However, the camp's additional purpose was Vernichtung durch Arbeit ("extermination through labor"), and prisoners were intentionally...
8 KB (898 words) - 06:05, 2 August 2024
German political prisoners were worked to death as part of the "vernichtung durch arbeit" ("annihilation by labour"). Several SS guards and local collaborators...
37 KB (4,392 words) - 08:15, 20 August 2024
from disease, many were literally "worked to death" under the Vernichtung durch Arbeit policy (extermination through labor), as inmates only had the choice...
42 KB (4,910 words) - 19:33, 17 September 2024
ISBN 978-3-486-85884-6, retrieved 9 May 2020 Kárný, Miroslav (1993). ">>Vernichtung durch Arbeit<< in Leitmeritz. Dei SS-Führungsstäbe in der deutschen Kriegswirtschaft"...
16 KB (1,536 words) - 05:27, 29 August 2024
describes daily life in the camp, and explains the principle of Vernichtung durch Arbeit (extermination through work). Since 2004 there has also been an...
52 KB (6,516 words) - 01:43, 27 September 2024
185–190. ISBN 1-56000-902-0. Cornelia Schmitz-Berning (1998). "Vernichtung durch Arbeit". Vokabular des Nationalsozialismus (Vocabulary of the National...
44 KB (4,776 words) - 05:31, 22 September 2024
worked to death out of the public eye; this policy was called Vernichtung durch Arbeit (annihilation through work). Large numbers of non-Jewish Poles...
41 KB (3,852 words) - 02:37, 6 September 2024
were literally worked to death. ‘Extermination through work” (Vernichtung durch Arbeit) entailed carrying heavy blocks of stone and climbing the 186 steps...
11 KB (1,268 words) - 12:02, 27 September 2023