At the end of 1941, a new crisis developed in Germany. Following the mobilization of men into its massive armies, the country faced a shortage of labour in support of its war industries. To help overcome this shortage,
Göring decreed to bring in people from the territories seized during
Operation Barbarossa in
Central and Eastern Europe. These workers were called
. The crisis deepened as the war with the Soviet Union went on. By 1944, the policy turned into mass abductions of virtually anyone to fulfill the labour needs of the
Organisation Todt among other similar projects; 40,000 to 50,000 Polish children aged 10 to 14 were kidnapped by the German occupational forces and transported to Germany proper as slave labourers during the so-called . The () was an acronym for allegedly homeless, parentless and unhoused children gathered in lieu of their guardians. After arriving in Germany, the children were handed over to
Reich Labour Service or the
Junkers aircraft works. The secondary purpose of these abductions was to pressure the adult populations further to register in place of children.
Recruitment and kidnapping ." Initially a recruiting campaign was launched in January 1942 by
Fritz Sauckel for workers to go to Germany. "On January 28 the first special train will leave for Germany with hot meals in Kiev,
Zdolbuniv and
Przemyśl", offered an announcement. The first train was full when it departed from Kiev on January 22. The advertising continued in the following months. "Germany calls you! Go to Beautiful Germany! 100,000 Ukrainians are already working in free Germany. What about you?" ran a Kiev newspaper ad on March 3, 1942. Word got back however, of the sub-human slave conditions that Ukrainians met in Germany and the campaign failed to attract sufficient volunteers. Forced recruitment was implemented, When the news about the terrible conditions many faced in Germany came back to Ukraine, the pool of volunteers dried up. The Germans resorted to mass round-ups, often targeting large gatherings such as church congregations and crowds at sporting events, with entire groups simply marched off at gunpoint to waiting cattle trucks and deported to Germany.
Nannies One special category was that of young women recruited to act as nannies; Hitler argued that many women would like to have children, and many of them were restricted by the lack of domestic help (this was one of many efforts made to promote the birth rate). Since the nannies would be in close company with German children as well as in a position where they might be sexually exploited, they were required to be suitable for
Germanization. Himmler spoke of thus winning back German blood and benefiting the women, too, who would have a social rise through working in Germany and even the chance to marry there. Originally, this recruitment was carried out only in the annexed territories of Poland, but the lack of women who passed screening extended it to all of Poland, and also to occupied territories of the USSR. On 7 December 1942 Himmler called for any "unauthorized sexual intercourse" to be punishable by death. In accordance with these new racial laws all sexual relations, even those that did not result in pregnancy, were severely punished as (racial pollution). During the war, hundreds of Polish and Russian men were executed for their sexual relations with German women, even though the main offenders by far – wrote Ulrich Herbert – were the French and Italian civilian workers who were not prohibited from social contacts with them. Rape of female was extremely common and led to tens of thousands of
pregnancies caused by rape. Many died when Allied bombing raids targeted the factories where they worked and the German authorities refused to allow them into
bomb shelters. Many also perished because the German authorities ordered that "they should be worked to death". Nazi authorities attempted to reproduce such conditions on farms, ordering farmers to integrate the workers into their workforce while enforcing total social separation, including not permitting them to eat at the same table, but this proved far more difficult to enforce. Sexual relationships in particular were able to take place despite efforts to raise German women's "racial consciousness". When Germany's military situation worsened, these workers' conditions often improved as the farmers tried to protect themselves against a defeat. Native German workers served as foremen and supervisors over the forced labour in factories, and therefore no solidarity developed between foreigners and German nationals. The German workers became accustomed to inequalities raised by racism against the workers and became indifferent to their plight.
Statistics depart to Nazi Germany to serve as labor force, 1942. During the German occupation of Central and Eastern Europe in World War II (1941–44) over three million people were taken to Germany as . Some estimates put the number as high as 5.5 million. Both of these statistics probably exclude the several hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians from
Halychyna, so a final total could be about 2.5 million.
Pregnancy To prevent
Rassenschande (violation of German racial laws by the native Germans), the farmers were given propaganda leaflets about
miscegenation, which were completely ineffective. The rampant sexual abuse of Polish and Soviet female at the hands of their overseers led to tens of thousands of
unwanted births. The newborns were secretly euthanized in
Nazi birthing centres. Occasionally, when the female worker and the baby's father were "of good blood" (for example, Norwegian), the child might prove "racially valuable." In such cases, the parentage was investigated and both parents tested. If they passed, the woman would be permitted to give birth, and the child was removed for
Germanization. In some rural areas, the authorities found that German farm-wives were inclined to care for children born to their workers, along with their own children. Attempts were made to segregate these children and use ruthless propaganda to establish that if a worker of "alien blood" gave birth in Germany, it meant immediate and total separation from the child. Repeated efforts were made to propagate (racial consciousness) in order to prevent between Germans and foreign workers,
Medical experiments As a result of their abusive treatment suffered from high levels of psychological trauma, and those who were admitted to psychiatric hospitals were often the victims of abuse and murder. The Nazi regime also sanctioned the use of in medical experiments. On September 6, 1944 the Reichsminister of the Interior ordered the establishment of special units for in several psychiatric hospitals in the Reich. The reason given was: "With the considerable number of who have been brought to the German Reich as a labour force, their admission into German psychiatric hospitals as mentally ill patients has become more frequent ... With the shortage of space in German hospitals, it is irresponsible to treat these ill people, who in the foreseeable future will not be fit for work, for a prolonged period in German institutions. "The exact number of killed in these psychiatric institutions is as yet not known. 189 were admitted to the unit of the Heil- und Pflegeanstalt Kaufbeuren; 49 died as a result of the starvation diet, or from deadly injections. ==Repatriation==