Adolf EichmannEssay Preview: Adolf EichmannReport this essayADOLF EICHMANNThe Holocaust was one of the greatest tragedies the world has ever known. There were many key people who participated in this outrageous genocide however some get more attention then others. Adolf Eichmann is a classic example. Eichmann was a self-proclaimed “Jewish Specialist” and head of the Gestapo Department. Eichmann was responsible for keeping every train rolling right into the stations of the concentration and death camps during the holocaust. Now we will take a look into Eichmanns childhood, life experiences, and his later actions to see what shaped into a man of hatred towards the Jewish race.
Eichmann was born on March 19, 1906 near Cologne, Germany, into a middle class Protestant family. His family moved to Austria following the death of young Adolfs mother. He spent his youth in Linz, Austria, which had also been Hitlers hometown. As a boy, Eichmann was teased about his looks and dark complexion and was nicknamed “the little Jew” by classmates. After failing to complete his engineering studies, Eichmann had various jobs including working as a laborer in his fathers small mining company, working in sales for an electrical construction company and also worked as a traveling salesman for an American oil company. In 1932 at age 26 he joined the growing Austrian Nazi Party at the suggestion of his friend Ernst Kaltenbrunner. Eichmann then became a member of the SS and in 1934 served as an SS corporal at Dachau concentration camp. In September 1934 Eichmann found relief from the monotony of that assignment by getting a job in Heydrichs SD, the powerful SS security service. Eichmann started out as a filing clerk cataloging information about Freemasons. He was then assigned to the Jewish section, which was busy collecting information on all prominent Jews. This marked the beginning of Eichmanns interest in the Jews.
He studied all aspects of Jewish culture, attended Jewish meetings and often visited Jewish sections of cities while taking volumes of notes. He became familiar with the issue of Zionism, studied Hebrew and could even speak a bit of Yiddish. He gradually became the acknowledged Jewish specialist, realizing this could have positive implications for his career in the SS. He soon attracted the attention of Heydrich and SS ReichsfĂ‘Ĺ’hrer Heinrich Himmler who appointed Eichmann to head a newly created SD Scientific Museum of Jewish Affairs. Eichmann was then assigned to investigate possible “solutions to the Jewish question.” He visited Palestine in 1937 to discuss the possibility of large-scale immigration of Jews to the Middle East with Arab leaders. British authorities, however, ordered him out of the country.
With the Nazi takeover of Austria in March of 1938, Eichmann was sent to Vienna where he established a Central Office for Jewish Emigration. This office had the sole authority to issue permits to Jews desperately wanting to leave Austria and became engaged in extorting wealth in return for safe passage. Nearly a hundred thousand Austrian Jews managed to leave with most turning over all their worldly possessions to Eichmanns office, a concept so successful that similar offices were established in Prague and Berlin. In 1939 Eichmann returned to Berlin where he was appointed the head of Gestapo Section IV B4 of the new Reich Main Security Office (RSHA). He was now responsible for implementation of Nazi policy toward the Jews in Germany and all occupied territories (eventually totaling 16 countries). Eichmann thus became one of the most powerful men in the Third Reich and would remain head of IV B4 for the remainder of the Reich.
In July 1940 Eichmann presented his Madagascar Plan proposing to deport European Jews to the island of Madagascar, off the coast of east Africa. The plan was never implemented. Following the start of World War Two and the occupation of Poland and the Soviet Union, SS Einsatz groups murdered members of the aristocracy, professionals, clergy, political commissars, suspected saboteurs, Jewish males and anyone deemed a security threat. In Poland, which had the largest Jewish population in Europe (3.35 million) Heydrich and Eichmann ordered the Jews to be rounded up and forced into ghettos and labor camps. Inside ghettos such as Warsaw, large numbers of Jews were deliberately confined in very small areas, resulting in overcrowding and death through disease and starvation. The ghettos were chosen based on their proximity to railway junctions, pending the future “final goal” regarding the Jews. The Nazis also ordered the establishment of Jewish administrative councils within the ghettos to implement Nazi policies and decrees. “The FĂ‘Ĺ’hrer has ordered the physical extermination of the Jews,” Heydrich told Eichmann, who later reported this statement during his trial after the war. Under the supervision of Eichmann, SS Einsatz groups in occupied areas of the Soviet Union now turned their full attention to the mass murder of Jews. Einsatz leaders kept highly detailed, daily records. Competitions even arose among the four main groups as to who posted the highest numbers. In the first year of the Nazi occupation of Soviet territory, over 300,000 Jews were murdered.
The methods used at this time involved gathering Jews to a secluded location and then shooting and burying them. Eichmann traveled to Minsk and witnessed Jews being killed in this manner. He then drove to Lvov where a mass execution had just occurred. During his trial after the war, Eichmann described the scene. The execution ditch had been covered over with dirt, but blood was gushing out of the ground “like a geyser” due to pressure from the bodily gasses of the deceased. SS ReichsfĂ‘Ĺ’hrer Himmler also witnessed such a killing and nearly fainted. He then ordered more humane methods to be found, mostly to spare his SS men the ordeal of such direct methods. The Nazis then turned their attention to gassing which had already begun on a limited scale during the euthanasia program. Mobile gas-vans were used at first. These trucks had sealed rear compartments
”, and then they were wheeled out, burned, and set alight. SS soldiers proceeded to throw gas-vans into a field in order to collect the wounded in the final stages of the gassing. SS soldiers and SS guards began to pull out a list of wounded individuals. Although an average of 20,000 persons from all over the country were brought to the hospital, there were hundreds of injured bodies. A large number were left behind at the time. Even though hundreds of corpses had been recovered, there were still thousands still in the grave in the grave, waiting to be buried before their time. The dead were finally transported by SS transport to St. Petersburg for cremation. All bodies were laid to death as fast as they could be. SS men also brought medical attention to the victims, who were transported to other hospitals. By the end, some 3,700 bodies were identified including about 10,000 of a few hundred SS men. SS POWs also came out of the SS bunker at a later date. Many SS men could even be seen to be carrying large bags of bodies and clothing with them. Some SS women and SS boys were seen to be in front of a fire. A large number of SS prisoners were seen to be being tied tightly together by SS guards. All SS men reported to have watched the executions and also to have seen some SS prisoner begbed by SS men. The corpses they contained were then sold to other SS men as souvenirs, which consisted of cigarettes, food, candy, and other material used by fellow prisoners. The last thing required in a Nazi gassing operation was to kill over a million people. This was only justified by the SS leadership’s decision to use gas to save the lives of thousands of people. After the death of Heinrich Himmler, one of the most famous leaders of the Germans, who died on March 11, 1945 as the leader of the Nazi People’s Republic, the Allies finally decided to move up the Allied front in pursuit of the “greatest goal» of victory in the war. It would not be easy, however, to convince those responsible for the atrocities directed at their own people. While there was no record of any organized effort to keep the Allied front open, many individuals, particularly from the Western world, thought that the war would have been stopped with the execution of many million people. Nevertheless, to counter any sense of responsibility, many individuals in the West began to look around at one another, and the consequences could be far worse. For example, one of the largest crimes carried out during the war was the slaughter of over 1000,000 Jews. Although the extermination of the Jews was officially acknowledged by the Jewish leaders of Poland and Germany, these actions were only condemned with some indifference. In order for the West to overcome their guilt, Hitler decided to eliminate even more people that he thought was responsible for the crime. In May 1933, for instance, all German citizens must be deported to Europe or to death camps. It was only on this point that most of these deportees were Jews who were found to have committed suicide. Many German politicians and many of their closest confidants also blamed Communism for the Nazi-style massacre. The decision to use gas in the end of the war proved a step toward the restoration of Germany’s long-held moral high ground. Amongst those