Deutsche Wirtschaftsbetriebe

Main articles: Forced labor in Germany during World War II and SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt

Deutsche Wirtschaftsbetriebe (German Economic Enterprises), generally abbreviated DWB, was a project launched by the Allgemeine SS to profit from the use of Nazi concentration camp inmates as slave labor.

Holding company for Nazi concerns

See also: DEST and OST-Arbeiter
Arbeit Macht Frei ("work brings freedom") gate at Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

DWB was a holding company for more than 25 SS industries. Oswald Pohl, the head of the SS business department (known by its German initials as WVHA) was also the chief officer of DWB. Georg Lörner, another high WVHA official, was another incorporator.[1] Through stock ownership DWB controlled a wide variety of enterprises, such as stone quarries, brick manufacturing plants, cement mills, pharmaceutical factories, real estate, housing, building materials, book printing and binding, porcelain and ceramics, mineral water and fruit juices, furniture, foodstuffs, and textiles and leather.[2]

Role in war crimes

Oswald Pohl receives his sentence of death by hanging from the Nuremberg trial.
Female forced laborers wearing "OST" [Ostarbeiter] badges are liberated from a camp near Lodz.

After World War II. the surviving chief officers of WVHA were placed on trial for crimes against humanity. Most of them were found guilty. Both Oswald Pohl and Georg Lörner were sentenced to death by hanging, although Georg Lörner managed to get his sentence commuted to a prison term. The war crimes tribunal placed particular emphasis on the role the defendants had played in four DWB subsidiaries:

DEST in particular became notorious for exploitation under brutal conditions of the labor of concentration camp inmates at Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Austria.

Notes

  1. Nuremberg Military Tribunal, "Judgment of the Tribunal (regarding Georg Lörner), 3 November 1947,", United States of America v. Oswald Pohl, et al. (Case No. 4, the "Pohl Trial) V, pp. 1004–1008
  2. 2.0 2.1 Nuremberg Military Tribunal, "Judgment of the Tribunal, 3 November 1947,", United States of America v. Oswald Pohl, et al. (Case No. 4, the "Pohl Trial) V, p. 962

See also

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Further reading