After the German invasion and conquest on 10 May 1940, the
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg first fell under the
Military Administration in Belgium and Northern France, commanded by
General der Infanterie,
Alexander von Falkenhausen. Under this commander, Simon took over civil administration of Luxembourg on 25 July 1940. The military occupation status ended on 2 August 1940, when Simon was appointed
Chief of Civil Administration (Chef der Zivilverwaltung, CdZ) by a decree from the
Führer (
Führererlass). His representative in this function was the
Regierungspräsident (Government District President) of Trier, . Their job was to give the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg – now the
CdZ-Gebiet Luxemburg – German administrative structures, and to prepare it to become an integral part of the
Greater German Reich.
Political assimilation On 6 August 1940, Simon ordered all police functions removed from the
Luxembourg gendarmerie and entrusted to
German police units. On 14 August, he proscribed references to the "State" or "Grand Duchy" of Luxembourg and suspended its constitution. On 26 August, the
Reichsmark was introduced as legal tender and, on 20 January 1941, the
Luxembourg franc was abolished. All existing political parties were banned and the only authorized political institution was the
Volksdeutsche Bewegung (Ethnic German Movement) whose slogan was
"Heim ins Reich" (Home to the Reich). Its declared aim was the full incorporation of Luxembourg into Nazi Germany. On 23 October 1940, Simon issued proclamations dissolving the Parliament and
Council of State. In January 1941, all manual laborers were required to join the
German Labor Front. Finally, on 30 August 1942, Luxembourg was formally annexed to the Greater German Reich, becoming part of Gau Moselland. Simon ordered that all Luxembourger males born between 1920 and 1924 were subject to compulsory military
conscription into the
Wehrmacht. In protest, a
general strike broke out the next day and was ruthlessly suppressed by Simon who declared
martial law. He threatened striking workers with execution unless they returned to their factories, and 20 strike leaders were eventually executed at the
Hinzert concentration camp. In addition, some 2,000 persons were arrested and 290 high school students who had participated were deported to "re-education" camps in Germany.
Germanization In addition to the political assimilation, Simon pursued a harsh and unrelenting policy of cultural
Germanization. On 6 August 1940, he ordered the closure of all French schools and banned the use of the
French language and the
Luxembourgish language.
German was declared the exclusive official language for government, education, the media, law and the economy. All commercial signs, building inscriptions, advertising and printed matter, as well as all traffic, street and road signs were required to be in German. Violations were punishable by fine or imprisonment. Additionally, on 31 January 1941, Simon issued orders that Luxembourgers with non-German or foreign
given names were required to adopt the German version of that name or, if no such form existed, to select a German given name. Likewise, those whose
surname had been of German origin but had later been changed to a non-German form, were required to resume the original surname.
Jewish persecution and genocide There were estimated to be about 3,500 Jews in Luxembourg at the beginning of the Nazi occupation and Simon immediately began the process of attempting to make the area
Judenfrei. On 5 September 1940, he issued an order for the
expropriation of the Jewish population. This was followed by the introduction of the
Nuremberg Laws into Luxembourg. Jews were encouraged to emigrate voluntarily, principally to
Vichy France or
Portugal. In September 1941, the public wearing of the
Star of David to identify Jews was ordered, and Jews were rounded up and confined to an internment camp near
Troisvierges. By October 1941, only about 750 Jews remained in the country and forced deportations began to
ghettos or
extermination camps in the east. Nearly all were forcibly removed in eight transports between October 1941 and September 1943. It is estimated that of the 634 deported, only 36 survived. In total, about 1,945 of Luxembourg's Jews perished by the war's end. == Capture and death ==