The Wannsee Conference, 20 January 1942

The Wannsee Conference, 20 January 1942
by Dr. Norbert Kampe *
At the end of 1940, the SS (Schutzstaffel) acquired the sumptuous villa of an industrialist, built in 1914
in an elegant suburb south of Berlin, on the shore of Lake Wannsee. The villa was furnished to
provide hospitality and hold meetings of the SS. On 20 January 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, Head of the
SD (Sicherheitsdienst) – the Security Service – chaired a by invitation only conference for members of
the SS, senior civil servants and Party representatives. The only item on the agenda of the
“discussion followed by dinner” was “the final solution of the Jewish Question”.
Since January 1941, Heydrich had been charged by Göring, Himmler and their staffs in several
conversations to prepare “proposals for a final solution” for after the war. At the beginning of 1941, the
main point was the deportation of all the Jews of Europe to the defeated USSR, to “Arctic camps” in
Siberia, where they would die under unbearable living conditions. It was certainly foreseen that
immediately after the planned attack, the Jews of the Soviet Union would be massacred by the
“Einsatzgruppen” (the special action squads). Just a few weeks after the attack on 22 June 1942, the
selective execution of individual men capable of bearing arms changed into murder by firing squad of
all Jews, including the elderly, women and children. Wanting to be covered at the very highest levels
for his responsibility for the massacres by the Einsatzgruppen and for his future career as organizer of
the Final Solution, at the end of July Heydrich obtained Göring’s signature to a document he had
drafted, which gave him a free hand.
House of the Wannsee Conference, 2004
Until September 1941, Hitler insisted on giving priority to obtaining victory over the USSR, and he
refused to agree to demands by Gauleiters to deport German Jews, or to Heydrich, who wanted
partial deportations. His authorization, or rather his order, in September 1941 for the deportation of
the Jews in the Reich brushed away the last obstacles facing the heads of the SS. They certainly
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encountered considerable problems for temporary deportation locations, while they waited for
transport to camps in Siberia to become possible. The German governments of Polish ghettos
protested the arrival of Jews from Germany, and reacted by massacring local Jews “to make space”.
In this way, Gauleiter Greiser of the Warthegau obtained approval from Himmler to murder 100,000
Jews from the Lodz ghetto who were unsuited for work. The killing started on 8 December 1941 at
Chelmno, using gas chambers installed on trucks. The mass shooting of Latvian Jews from the Riga
ghetto started in November 1941, when the first convoy from Germany arrived.
In mid-December 1941, within the context of his declaration of war against the USA, Hitler told his
entourage about his ideas and wishes, and gave new orders, which had become much more radical
in respect of the “final solution”: extending the deportations, which had only originally been intended
for German Jews, to all European Jews in areas under German control. In the event that there would
be a second world war, which only became a reality in December 1941, Hitler had on many occasions
since 1939 announced in public speeches the annihilation of the Jews of Europe. Now he was obliged
to fulfill his own dramatic prophesies. At the same time, the Blitzkrieg against the USSR had run out of
steam by December 1941, and the Red Army had managed to stabilize the front and even achieve its
first successes. Blinded by racist ideas (the rule of Judeo-Bolshevik sub-humans), the German
military command launched a campaign that from the start was going to be long, on a limitless front
over immense territory, for which the army was not prepared. The decision to make an imaginary
“World Jewry” pay for this situation, for which he was responsible, was perfectly in keeping with
Hitler’s character and his fanatical hatred of Jews.
For Heydrich, this expansion of the original deportation order to all the Jews of Europe, confirmed in a
surprising manner his desire for plenipotentiary powers, which he had long thought of. This is certainly
the reason that at the last moment he postponed the conference originally scheduled for 9 December
1941, and which took place only six weeks later. When the power struggle among the Nazi leadership
and officials on the way to carry out “the solution to the Jewish question” and on who would be in
charge had been resolved at the highest levels in favor of the SS and in favor of the most extreme
plans for deportation and annihilation, it remained for Heydrich, at the 20 January “conference for
Secretaries of State”, to flex and impose his newly-acquired powers and to obtain assurances of
cooperation from the participants. It is possible that another motive for this performance - and
Eichmann suggested this several times - was Heydrich’s wish to implicate the Secretaries of State
and make them accomplices in genocide.
The fifteen participants at the “Wannsee Conference” discussed the cooperation of their various
ministries and organizations in respect of the imminent deportation of all the Jews of Europe to the
conquered territories in the East. The SD expected to deport up to 11 million people. The officials
were informed in detail of methods of extermination already tried, and themselves made various
proposals in the interest of their own departments.
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Not one of the participants evinced any scruples about planning a State crime on an almost
inconceivable scale. It was understood that command of the operations would be awarded to
Heydrich. Nonetheless, Heydrich did not succeed in his move to widen the circle of people to be
deported from the Reich, well beyond the definition of “Jew” according to the Nuremberg Laws of
September 1935. Heydrich wanted to deport “half Jews” and the Jewish husbands or wives of Aryan
partners (following a compulsory divorce). Dr. Stuckart, Secretary of State at the Ministry of the
Interior and author of the anti-Jewish laws and regulations, successfully defended his position against
this attempt to take away his prerogatives, namely his official power to define whom in a legal sense
was a Jew. It was based on Stuckart’s definition of “Jew” that Eichmann’s orders were framed for the
preparations for the deportations from Germany, which were issued immediately after the Wannsee
Conference.
The Wannsee Conference accordingly marks neither the time nor the place when the decision was
taken to murder the Jews; Hitler had taken that decision earlier, verbally among his very closest circle.
But it was the organizational conference, once the decision had been taken at the very highest level.
As a result of this conference, the entire apparatus of the German State became both active and
passive accomplices in the genocide of the Jews, of whom about six million would become victims.
The minutes of the Wannsee Conference are the most important of the many documents that have
come down to us, and describe the crimes committed under the pens of the actual authors: the
minutes prove that from January 1942, at the highest levels of government, it had been decided that
not a single European Jew should survive deportation and slave labor, and that “those who resist”
should be “handled in an appropriate fashion”, to prevent absolutely, contrary to earlier phases of the
persecution of the Jews, “a Jewish renaissance” (Minutes, p.8). This is the reason that the Wannsee
minutes are central to the claims forgery by Holocaust deniers. They ignore the documents and
quotes from the same period, which refer to the Wannsee “Secretaries of State conference”. They
ignore that Eichmann himself confirmed in court the authenticity of the minutes and identified its
authors. Even if the minutes had never been found, even if the copy of Luther from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and a participant at the Conference – nr. 16 out of a total of 30 copies of the minutes –
had been destroyed at the end of the war as the other copies almost certainly were by their recipients,
that would have changed nothing of the fact of genocide.
In 1947, the document was discovered in two Foreign Ministry files marked “final solution of the
Jewish question”. The alleged forger or forgers would have had to fake hundreds of pages, together
with handwritten notes and initials of then staff of the ministry that accompanied the minutes from
Luther’s office, which have come down to us. A physical examination of the minutes themselves and
the accompanying documents, the registration numbers, the margin notes and the signatures, all
confirm their authenticity, in the opinion of the scientific staff of the political archives of the Foreign
Ministry, beyond a shadow of a doubt. In addition, it is absurd to take account of copies or fabricated
collages after the discovery of the original, in order to prove its lack of authenticity or to make them
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look like fake variations of the original, to make that look like the work of forgers. We can only
recognize the historical fact that at the turn of the year 1941/42, the murder of all European Jews
became the official objective of the German Reich and its institutions. With the Wannsee Conference
mass murder was now transformed into systematic genocide.
* Dr. Norbert Kampe is a historian and Director of the Memorial Site House of the Wannsee Conference.
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With friendly permission of:
SHALOM - The European Jewish Times.
Vol. XLI, Spring 2004 / Pessach 5764.
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