Initially the Potulice camp was one of numerous transit points for
Poles expelled by the German authorities from territories of western Poland annexed into the newly created
Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia. The
forcible displacement of Polish nationals known as
Lebensraum; was meant to create space for German colonists (the
Volksdeutsche) brought in
Heim ins Reich from across Eastern Europe. The facility quickly expanded to include a
slave-labor subcamp of the
Stutthof concentration camp nearby, supplying a free workforce for the Hansen Schneidemühl machine shop set up on the premises. The first mass transport of 524 Poles came to the Potulice concentration camp from
Bydgoszcz on February 4, 1941. The camp served as a place for detention of Polish children; of the 1,296 people who died there, 767 victims were minors. In 1943 a special unit in the camp was created especially for children and the name „Ostjugendbewahrlager Potulitz” or „Lebrechtsdorf” started to appear in German documentation.
Racist theories and a policy of
Germanisation that sought to Germanise children who were tested for racial purity of the supposed
Aryan race traits led to organised kidnappings by German officials in
occupied Poland. The children from the camp were placed there as a result of this policy. If the tests were positive and it was believed the child had lost emotional contact with their parents, then it could be sent to German families for Germanisation. This operation was organised by the
SS Rasse und Siedlungshauptamt RuSHA (SS Office of Race and Settlement). Formally designated a labour camp, the camp was not controlled by concentration camp authorities. However, the conditions in it were comparable to those at the
Stutthof concentration camp. ==Slave work and punishment==