Racism and
antisemitism were basic tenets of the
Nazi Party and the Nazi government. Discrimination and violent attacks against Jews began immediately after the
seizure of power in 1933. Violence and economic pressure were used by the Nazis to encourage Jews to voluntarily leave the country. By 1939, around 250,000 of Germany's 437,000 Jews had emigrated to the United States, Argentina, the United Kingdom, and other countries, as well as the
British Mandate of Palestine. The Nazi leadership seized on the idea of deporting the remaining German Jews overseas. Barren, unproductive lands were viewed as appropriate destinations as this would prevent the deportees from flourishing in their new location. In his May 1940 memorandum to Hitler,
Concerning the Treatment of the Alien Population in the East,
Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler declared that he hoped to see "the term 'Jew' [...] completely eliminated through the massive immigration of all Jews to Africa or some other colony".
Planning begins Initial discussions began to take place in 1938 among Nazi ideologues such as
Julius Streicher,
Hermann Göring,
Alfred Rosenberg, and
Joachim von Ribbentrop. Ten per cent of Jews under German jurisdiction by that date were Polish nationals.
Józef Lipski, the Polish ambassador to Germany, expressed his country's reluctance to take them back, and the Polish government decreed that Polish passport holders would not be permitted to return except under specific conditions. When Ribbentrop raised the matter with French foreign minister
Georges Bonnet in December of that year, Bonnet expressed French reluctance to receive more German Jews and inquired if measures could be taken to prevent their arrival. France itself was contemplating how to deport some 10,000 Jews and considered whether Madagascar might be an appropriate destination. Planning for German deportations to Madagascar formally began in 1940.
Franz Rademacher, recently appointed head of the Jewish Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, forwarded on 3 June to his superior, the diplomat
Martin Luther, a memorandum on the fate of the Jews. Rademacher said: "The desirable solution is: all Jews out of Europe". He briefly considered Palestine as a destination, but deemed it unsuitable, as he considered it undesirable that a strong Jewish state should be created in the Middle East. In addition, Palestine was under British control at the time. Rademacher recommended that the French colony of Madagascar should be made available as a destination for the Jews of Europe as one of the terms of the surrender of France, which the
Germans had invaded on 10 May 1940. The resettled Jews, noted Rademacher, could be used as hostages to ensure "future good behaviour of their racial comrades in America". The plan was developed by Referat D III of the
Abteilung Deutschland. Luther broached the subject with Foreign Minister Ribbentrop, who was simultaneously developing a similar scheme. By 18 June, Hitler and Ribbentrop spoke of the Plan with Italian leader
Benito Mussolini as a possibility that could be pursued after the defeat of France. Once he learned of the plan, SS-
Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich, chief of the
Reich Security Main Office (RSHA), insisted that Ribbentrop relinquish any future responsibility for the Plan to that office. As Heydrich had been appointed by Göring in January 1939 to oversee Jewish evacuation from German-occupied territory, the
Jewish question was hence under his purview.
Adolf Eichmann, head of the
RSHA Sub-Department IV-B4, which dealt with Jewish affairs and evacuation, soon became involved. On 15 August, he released a memorandum titled
Reichssicherheitshauptamt: Madagaskar Projekt (Reich Security Main Office: Madagascar Project), calling for the resettlement of a million Jews per year for four years and abandoning the idea of retaining any Jews in Europe. The RSHA, he emphasised, would control all aspects of the program. While Rademacher called for the colony to be under German control but self-governing under Jewish administration, Eichmann made it plain that he intended for the
SS to control and oversee every aspect of life on the island, which they would govern as a police state. Most Nazi bureaus, including the Foreign Office, the Security Police, and the
General Government (the occupied portion of Poland) pinned their hopes on the plan as the last chance to "solve the Jewish problem" through emigration. In particular,
Hans Frank, governor of the General Government, viewed the forced resettlement to Madagascar as being preferable to the heretofore piecemeal efforts at deportation into Poland. As of 10 July, deportations into Poland were cancelled, and construction of the
Warsaw ghetto was halted, since it appeared to be unnecessary.
Planning continues Rademacher envisioned the founding of a European bank that would ultimately liquidate all European Jewish assets to pay for the plan. This bank would then play an intermediary role between Madagascar and the rest of the world, as Jews would not be allowed to interact financially with outsiders. Göring's office of the
Four Year Plan would oversee the administration of the plan's economics. Additionally, Rademacher foresaw roles for other government agencies. Ribbentrop's
Foreign Affairs Ministry would negotiate terms with the French for the handover of Madagascar to Germany. It would also play a part in crafting other treaties to deal with Europe's Jews. Its Information Department, along with
Joseph Goebbels and his
Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, would control the flow of information at home and abroad.
Viktor Brack, a division chief in the
Chancellery of the
Führer, would oversee transportation. The SS would undertake the expulsion of the Jews from Europe and govern the island as a police state. The Nazis expected that after the invasion of the United Kingdom in
Operation Sea Lion that they would commandeer the British merchant fleet to transport the Jews to Madagascar. The Nazis expected many deportees to perish in the harsh conditions or die at the hands of the SS. The plan has been characterised by the historian
Ian Kershaw as
genocide by an alternative method.
Plan abandoned With the failure to defeat the
Royal Air Force in the
Battle of Britain, the proposed invasion of the UK was postponed indefinitely on 17 September 1940. This meant the British merchant fleet would not be at Germany's disposal for use in evacuations, and planning for the Madagascar proposal stalled. In late August 1940, Rademacher entreated Ribbentrop to hold a meeting at his ministry to begin drawing up a panel of experts to consolidate the plan. Ribbentrop never responded. Likewise, Eichmann's memorandum languished with Heydrich, who never approved it. Establishment of ghettos in Warsaw and other cities in Poland resumed in August 1940. Further complicating matters, the RSHA had estimated it would take some four years to transport all the Jews to Africa's east coast, making it further impracticable. The plan was officially shelved within the Foreign Office in February 1942. British forces took the island from
Vichy France in the
Battle of Madagascar in November 1942 and control was transferred to the
Free French. Britain's refusal to surrender, the failure to implement
Operation Sealion, and Germany's lack of naval control made the Madagascar Plan unfeasible. With removal no longer viable, the Nazi regime turned to harsher internal measures, driven more by wartime realities than ideological ones. New opportunities in the East led Hitler to abandon the plan in favour of deportation to occupied territories. Once planning for
Operation Barbarossa commenced, Hitler asked Himmler to draft a new plan for the elimination of the Jews of Europe, and Himmler passed along the task to Heydrich. His draft proposed the deportation of the Jews to the Soviet Union via Poland. The later
Generalplan Ost (General Plan for the East), prepared by Professor
Konrad Meyer and others, called for deporting the entire population of occupied Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to Siberia, either for use as slave labour or to be murdered after the Soviet defeat. The plan hinged on the rapid defeat of the Soviet forces. Once it became apparent that the war against the Soviet Union would drag on much longer than expected, Heydrich revised his plans to concentrate on the Jewish population then under Nazi control. Since transporting masses of people into a combat zone would be impossible, Heydrich decided that the Jews would be killed in
extermination camps set up in occupied areas of Poland. Estimates of the total number of Jews murdered during the resulting
Holocaust range from 5.5 to 6 million people. ==See also==