Poland . After
World War II began,
Nazi Germany introduced the
Kennkarte for citizens of occupied countries, including occupied Poland (
General Governorate for the Occupied Polish Region). These identification cards were issued to residents aged 15 and above between 1941 and 1943. However, due to resistance efforts, many Kennkarten were forged by the
Polish resistance. In the first weeks of the
German occupation of Poland, pre-war documents issued by the
Second Polish Republic were used for identification. On 26 October 1939, following a decree of
Hans Frank,
Kennkarten was announced. Due to legal arguments, the first cards were not issued until June 1941. German authorities continued to issue them until 1943. A
Kennkarte was a sheet of thin cardboard, measuring about 30 by 14 cm (12 x 5.5 inches). It had two parallel folds, and text on both sides, making it a six-page document, with each page measuring 10 by 14 cm (5.5 x 4 inches). The color of a
Kennkarte was based on ethnicity. Poles had gray ones; Jews and Romas, yellow; Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Georgians, and
Goralenvolk, blue. Furthermore, letters were introduced to mark each ethnicity, based on the initial letter of the German word for the ethnicity (Juden, Weissrussen, Zigeuner etc) – J for Jews, U for Ukrainians, R for Russians, W for Belarusians, K for Georgians, G for Goralenvolk, Z for Roma (Gypsies). To receive a
Kennkarte, an applicant had to fill out an application, and provide such documents as a birth certificate, pre-war Polish ID, and marriage certificate (in specified cases). Polish citizens of appropriate ethnicity were obliged to make a formal declaration that they belonged to the Aryan race. Upon receiving the card, applicants were fingerprinted. Since Polish-speaking civil servants were involved in the process, the cards were frequently forged, which allowed for members of the
Home Army, and Polish Jews, to obtain a new identity. Furthermore, illegal printing shops manufacturing the
Kennkarten operated in occupied Poland. The cards were available on the black market, for the price of 500
zlotys. According to the
Gestapo, in 1943 in
Warsaw there were up to 150,000 fake cards in circulation. The Home Army estimated that in late 1942, some 10% of residents of the General Government had fake
Kennkarten. Other important documents in Nazi-occupied Poland included: •
Ausweis,
Arbeitskarte,
Bescheinigung – issued by the workplace •
Erlaubniskarte – issued for entertainment workers (actors, etc.) == References ==