Ordinary men

Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the final solution in Poland

231 pages

English language

Published 1992 by HarperCollins.

OCLC Number:
28107347

View on OpenLibrary

No rating (0 reviews)

In the early hours of July 13, 1942, the men of Reserve Police Battalion 101, a unit of the German Order Police, entered the Polish Village of Jozefow. They had arrived in Poland less than three weeks before, most of them recently drafted family men too old for combat service--workers, artisans, salesmen, and clerks. By nightfall, they had rounded up Jozefow's 1,800 Jews, selected several hundred men as "work Jews," and shot the rest--that is, some 1,500 women, children, and old people.

Most of these overage, rear-echelon reserve policemen had grown to maturity in the port city of Hamburg in pre-Hitler Germany and were neither committed Nazis nor racial fanatics.

Nevertheless, in the sixteen months from the Jozefow massacre to the brutal Erntefest ("harvest festival") slaughter of November 1943, these average men participated in the direct shooting deaths of at least 38,000 Jews and the deportation to Treblinka's gas chambers …

17 editions

Subjects

  • Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei. Reservepolizeibataillon 101
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland
  • World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, German
  • War criminals -- Germany
  • World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities