Jewish support for the Nazi ascent to power During the Nazis' ascent to power, some Jewish organizations, such as the
Association of German National Jews and
The German Vanguard supported Nazism until being outlawed in late 1935. Motivated by
anticommunism,
conservative nationalism,
anti-Zionism, and
anti-liberalism, these groups had initially believed that
Nazi antisemitism was merely rhetorical
hyperbole or a tactic to "stir up the masses".
Judenrat and Ghetto Police In
German-occupied Europe during
World War II, Jews,
Romani, and some other minorities, were destined for removal, first through
ghettoization and exile, and finally through extermination. To streamline the process of excluding Jews, and to ease the burden of management, Germans established Jewish institutions in the ghettos. These included, first and foremost, Jewish administrative boards, usually called
Judenräte, and the
Jewish Ghetto Police, responsible for maintaining order in the ghettos. Formally, the Jewish police were subordinate to the Judenrats, but in most ghettos they quickly became independent of them and even gained a higher position, reporting directly to the Germans. The activities of the first wave of Judenrat leaders were primarily aimed at improving the well-being of the communities they headed. Only their successors, chosen by the Germans from among the most corrupt, were blind executors of German orders and acted mainly for their own self-interest. In some of the larger ghettos, the Judenrats were forced to prepare lists and hand over people to the Germans for deportation. More often, only the Jewish police took part in deportations. In most places this never happened. The Jewish police were widely hated among other Jews, and their members were far more likely to be corrupt and self-interested than the Judenrat leaders. In 14 ghettos, Jewish police cooperated with the resistance movement.
Jewish agents and informers A separate form of collaboration was the activity of Jewish agents and informers of the German secret services and police. In most cases, they acted voluntarily, for monetary reward, power and status. They also believed collaboration increased their chance for survival. In Berlin, the Gestapo mobilized Jewish informants under threat of death. Witold Mędykowski assesses this phenomenon as marginal; in a population of 15-20 thousand people in the
Kraków ghetto, the number of informers is estimated at between a dozen and several dozen people. Informers were fought by the Jewish resistance, and by the Polish resistance if their activities harmed the Polish underground. The "
Group 13" from the
Warsaw ghetto, led by
Abraham Gancwajch, was the only organized group of Jewish collaboraters with the Germans on the basis of ideology. The Nazis also used agents who were Jewish to arrest Jews hiding outside the ghetto or trying to escape from it. These agents also helped find people involved in smuggling, producing illegal documents or having contacts with the underground. They were widely regarded as influential people who could get things done with the Germans. They often took advantage of their position by taking bribes or helping selected individuals. Nazi agents who were Jewish include
Stella Goldschlag,
Ans van Dijk and
Betje Wery.
Lehi Operating in
Palestine since 1940, the
Zionist Lehi group of about 300 members, led by
Abraham Stern, regarded the
British Empire as its main enemy. In January 1941, they offered an anti-British partnership to Germany in exchange for allowing European Jews to emigrate to Palestine. The offer was delivered to the German Ambassador in Turkey and sent to Berlin, but there was no response. ==Aftermath==