The discrepancy in 1942–43 "resettlement" documents is addressed by recognizing that German authorities frequently used this term as a euphemism for the forced transfer of Jewish populations into a massive industrial labor system, which included over 4,000 camps and factories supporting the war effort. For individuals unable to work, the Aktion 14f13 program and general "annihilation through labor" policies resulted in extremely high mortality rates within this network, explaining the lack of maintenance records for these populations.
You are understanding the bureaucratic ideal, but not the logistical reality.
you're missing the point
which makes no sensewe're going to draft the entire population into work camps, except for those who are put in work camps
Himmlers order was revoked. Simple.bombsaway wrote: ↑Tue Feb 24, 2026 8:17 pm you're missing the point
based on this definition of resettlement "forced transfer of Jewish populations into a massive industrial labor system"
Himmler is thus saying, in his resettlement of the GG order
which makes no sensewe're going to draft the entire population into work camps, except for those who are put in work camps
resettlement, whatever it is, is *not* being put into work camps.
Minutes of the police meeting in Krakow on 18 June 1942:
"The Jewish question is settled in the city of Lublin. The previous Jewish quarter has been evacuated and the able-bodied Jews are housed outside the city in a special district.
[...]
In Radom and Czestochowa, Jewish workers will have to be retained for the armaments industries. Of course, the immediate family members of these workers have to be left behind as well, but everyone else will be resettled."
Instructions of the commissioner for the resettlement to the Jewish Council in Warsaw of 22 July 1942:
"All Jewish persons, regardless of their age and gender, who live in Warsaw are resettled to the east. The following are excluded from the resettlement:
a) All Jewish persons who are employed by the German authority or branch offices and can provide proof of this;
b) all Jewish persons who belong to the Judenrat and are employees of the Judenrat (the deadline is the date of publication of the order);
c) all Jewish persons who work for Reich-German companies and can provide proof of this ;
d) all able-bodied Jews who have not yet been included in the work process, these must be barracked in the Jewish residential area;
[...]"
I never mentioned 'resettlement'—that’s your word, not mine. My point is about the mechanics of the system.
Actually you said
It seems like you're using an LLM and not paying attention to the output, or are just generally incompetent.Nazgul wrote: ↑Tue Feb 24, 2026 7:47 am
The discrepancy in 1942–43 "resettlement" documents is addressed by recognizing that German authorities frequently used this term as a euphemism for the forced transfer of Jewish populations into a massive industrial labor system, which included over 4,000 camps and factories supporting the war effort.
I’m not 'using' the word—I am quoting the document provided. If the document uses the word 'resettlement' to describe what was actually a mass killing action in Volhynia, then the document itself is a piece of Nazi propaganda using a known euphemism. My goal is to analyze what the text says, not to adopt its terminology as my own. Since we both agree that 'resettlement' in this context meant potential death.
Therefore if not to put to work, then killed. Resettlement (as evidenced in the record) refers to Jews being killed and / or being housed somewhere without being put to work.
The argument that 'non-working Jews were immediately killed' is a oversimplification that ignores the documented administrative reality of the camp system.bombsaway wrote: ↑Tue Feb 24, 2026 11:16 pm Therefore if not to put to work, then killed. Resettlement (as evidenced in the record) refers to Jews being killed and / or being housed somewhere without being put to work.
I guess I'm just explaining to the public, because I plan to stop to talking to you, why that is.
https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... to_16.htmlThere exist quite some telling German correspondence on what was understood with the term "resettlement of the Jews" (see also Nazi Document on Mass Extermination of Jews in Auschwitz-Birkenau: The Franke-Gricksch Report).
On 24 July 1942, a local police leader of Kamenez-Podolsk cabled that "together with SD in Stara-Uschitza and Studenica...Jewish action carried out. 700 unfit shot dead."(VEJ 8, document 134).
On 6 August 1942, the KdS branch office in Kamenez-Podolsk reported that "703 Jews were executed in Solobkiwzi and Sibkiwzi...501 [Jews executed] in Wonkiwzi and again in Sibkiwzi". (VEJ 8, document 143).
On 9 August 1942, the KdS branch office in Pinsk noted that "the execution of Jews was carried out in the village Mikasewitschi, Pinsk area. There were 425 Jews in the village. Thereof were executed: 1. 102 men 2. 159 women 3. 159 children. 420 total number. For economic and for sanitary reasons, three engineers and two doctors were kept [alive]." (VEJ 8, document 147).
On 15 August 1942, the KdS office in Rovno noted on "the special treatment [Sonderbehandlung] of Jews" in the Kremianez area a figure of 13,802, thereof 3,421 children (VEJ 8, document 149).
On 18 August 1942, the KdS of Wolhynien wrote to the KdS branch office in Kamenez-Podolsk that he was informed by Hermann Ling that "Jews intended for the DG IV4" were almost about "to be executed, e.g. the executions in the Dunajwec area and Bar were already scheduled". Ling asked to make sure that "in the area next to the DG IV4 the Jews fit for work...shall no longer be executed". The KdS remarked that "the ordered Jewish resettlement will be continued as planned and without interruption. The timely separation of working Jews for the DG IV is a matter of Ling" (VEJ 8, document 154).
On 27 August 1942, a local police leader in Bar reported to the KdS of Wolhynien on "Jewish actions" that in the period 19 to 21 August 1942 the SD Kamenez-Podolsk has executed 4,304 Jews" (VEJ 8, document 161).
Also on 27 August 1942, the deputy of the Gebietskommissar in Lutsk requested "a special allocation of gasoline and oil for the special treatment of Jews [Juden-Sonderbehandlung]". For "this action about 40 motor vehicles, including 3 cars...were driven without interruption" to conduct "a transport of about 4 km (one way)". In addition, "the trucks were on the way for the supply of workers for shoveling, working equipment, food for the workers, gathering of the Jews from the state goods, etc." (VEJ 8, document 161).
The already mentioned report of 1 November 1942 by the Generalkommissar Wolhynien noted the "rumours in the population, especially in connection with the Jewish resettlement and the German transports" that "it is said that all Poles and Catholics will be concentrated in certain parts of the city and treated like the Jews" and that "now the Ukrainians will be shot, pits are laid out everywhere. The Jewish settlement has used a large part of its inhabitants to enrich themselves in a shameless manner. There is a lack of respect for foreign property, on the other hand, there is no understanding of the reasons for carrying out the Jewish resettlement" (VEJ 8, document 217).
On 9 November 1942, the leader of 10th company of SS-Polizeiregiment 15, Helmut Saur, reported that the men were employed for "guarding at the assembly point, securing the individual transports to the execution site, which was about 4 km outside Pinsk". He goes on that "10,000 people were executed. On 30 October, the ghetto was searched through for second time, on 31 October for the third time and on 1 November for the fourth time. A total of about 15,000 Jews were brought to the assembly point. Sick Jews and some children left in the houses were immediately executed in the ghetto in the courtyard. In the ghetto, about 1,200 Jews were executed." (VEJ 8, document 219).
The "resettlement of the Jews" in the Generalbezierk Wolhynien clearly meant their extermination by mass shooting at nearby execution sites.
Mattogno's assertion that "the figures reported in the report dated 28 December 1942 are, therefore, for the most part, greatly exaggerated" is unfounded in the light of the German sources. The Nazi documents indicate that an area with more than 300,000 Jews was systematically cleared in the period in question (and it is outright wrong when considering that more than 85% of the deaths can be assigned to specific killing actions, despite the scarce source coverage in some areas).
The figures your opponent cites regarding the 'unfit' and children in Volhynia must be viewed through the lens of German military pragmatism in 1942. From their perspective, a child who loses their parents in a 'security clearing' is not just a logistical burden; they are a future partisan.bombsaway wrote: ↑Wed Feb 25, 2026 11:30 pm So in light of this, I hope you can see why I think your pleading around Secret Order No. 612/43 is so silly. This applied only to people in concentration camps, which there's no evidence that the "resettled" Jews of of Volhynia and Podolia even sniffed . So you're just moving the conversation towards a completely different subject, derailing this thread.
On a meeting on 28 to 31 August 1942, the commander of the Security Police and Service (KdS) in the Generalbezirk Wolhynien Karl Pütz talked about "the general resettlement of the Jews" (Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde, p. 714).
Afterwards, Pütz instructed his branch offices that "the actions in this region are to be organized in such a manner that, similarly to the areas of Brest-Litovsk, Pinsk, Starokonstantinov and Kamenets-Podolsk, would be completed, within five weeks. At the meeting of Gebietskommissaren which took place in Lutsk, on August 29-31, 1942, the chief of the Reichskommissariat government Dargel told those present that the Reichskommissar himself had expressed his personal and ardent wish that the clean-up be 100% thorough" (Spector, The Holocaust of Volhynian Jewry, p. 172).
The meeting and policy towards the Jews was also mentioned in correspondence between the civil administration and the SS and police leader Wolhynien:
On 25 August 1942, the Generalkommissar für Wolhynien wrote to the Reichskommissar Ukraine on the "Jewish action" that "it was decided, at my request, that the resettlement of the Jews in the rural areas in the rayon towns should be carried out first, and only then that of the Jewish population at the places of the Gebietskommissare". However, in practice "the resettlements were first made in cities with large Jewish ghettos" and the "result is a general unrest among the Jewish population in the rural cities" (Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933–1945 Band 8 [VEJ 8], document 170).
On 31 August 1942, the SS and police leader Wolhynien replied on this accusation that "the actions are carried out in such a way that the resettlements in the district capitals and the rayons are as simultaneous as possible" and that "with the scale of major actions some incidents will be unavoidable and that the smooth running that has been done so far seems all the more remarkable." He also pointed that "at the meetings of the Gebietskommissare in Lutsk on 29 to 31 August, the clearing up of the problem brought complete clarity also towards the Generalkommissar" (VEJ 8, document 170).
In a report of 1 November 1942, the Generalkommissar Wolhynien remarked that "there is not much to report about Jewry, as in most areas the final resettlement is carried out; only now is it more often to be noted that this rabble is defending itself" injuring some guards "assigned to the task of resettlement" (VEJ 8, document 217).
On 8 November 1942, the local area police leader of Brest-Litowsk reported that "on 15 and 16 October 1942, the Jewish action was carried out in Brest-Litovsk. This was followed by the complete resettlement of the Jews in the district of Brest-Litovsk. In total, some 20,000 Jews have been resettled so far." (VEJ 8, document 221).
On 31 December 1942, the Generalkommissar Wolhynien stated that on the "Jewry" that "the cleansing of the area is almost completed" (Pohl et al., Der deutsche Krieg im Osten 1941-1944: Facetten einer Grenzüberschreitung, p. 184).