(which included Latvia): a map The
German army crossed the Soviet frontier in the early morning of Sunday 22 June 1941, on a broad front from the
Baltic Sea to Hungary. The Germans advanced through Lithuania towards
Daugavpils and other strategic points in Latvia. The Nazi police state included an organisation called the Security Service (German:
Sicherheitsdienst), generally referred to as the SD, and its headquarters in
Berlin was known as the
Reich Security Main Office (RSHA).
The SD in Latvia Ahead of the invasion, the SD had organised four
Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing squads. The name
Einsatzgruppen ("special assignment units") was a euphemism; their real purpose was to murder people the Nazis saw as "undesirable". These included Communists,
Romani people, the mentally ill, homosexuals and, especially Jews. The Einsatzgruppen followed closely behind the German invasion forces and established a presence in Latvia within days and sometimes hours of the occupation of a given area by the German
Wehrmacht. Eastern Latvia, including
Daugavpils and the
Latgale region, was assigned to
Einsatzkommandos 1b (EK 1b) and 3 (EK 3). In the following days 35 Jews were exterminated in
Durbe,
Priekule and Asīte. On June 29 the Nazis started forming the first
Latvian Auxiliary Police in
Jelgava. Mārtiņš Vagulāns, member of the
Pērkonkrusts organisation, was chosen to head it. In the summer of 1941, 300 men in the unit took part in the murder of about 2000 Jews in Jelgava and other places in
Zemgale. The killing was supervised by German SD officers
Rudolf Batz and Alfred Becu, who involved the
Einsatzgruppe in the action. The most important
Jelgava synagogue was burned down through their joint effort. After the invasion of
Riga,
Walter Stahlecker, assisted by the members of Pērkonkrusts and other local
collaborationists, organised the
pogrom of Jews in the capital of Latvia.
Viktors Arājs, aged 31 at the time, a possible former member of
Pērkonkrusts and a member of a student fraternity, was appointed direct
executor of the action. He was an idle eternal student who was supported by his wife, a rich shop owner, who was ten years older than he was. Arājs had worked in the Latvian Police for a certain period of time. He stood out with his power-hungry and extreme thinking. The man was well fed, well dressed, and "with his student's hat proudly cocked on one ear".
Arajs Kommando formed , Summer, 1941. assemble a group of Jews,
Liepāja, July, 1941. On 2 July
Viktors Arājs started to form his armed unit of men who were responding to the appeal of Pērkonkrusts to take arms and to clear Latvia of Jews and communists. In the beginning, the unit mainly included members of different student fraternities. In 1941 altogether about 300 men had applied. The closest assistants of Viktors Arājs included Konstantīns Kaķis, Alfrēds Dikmanis, Boris Kinsler and
Herberts Cukurs. On the night of July 3,
Arājs Kommando started
arresting,
beating and
robbing the Riga Jews. On 4 July, the choral synagogue at Gogoļa Street was burnt, and thereafter, the synagogues at Maskavas and Stabu Streets. Many Jews were murdered during those days, including the refugees from
Lithuania. In carts and blue buses, the men of Arajs Kommando went to different places in
Courland,
Zemgale and
Vidzeme, murdering thousands of Jews there. These killings were supposed to serve as an example to other
anti-Semitic supporters of the Nazi invaders. Individual Latvian
Selbstschutz units were also involved in the mass-murder of Jews. In the district of
Ilūkste, for instance, Jews were killed by the 20-person
Selbstschutz death unit of commander Oskars Baltmanis. All murders were supervised by the officers of the German SS and SD. In July 1941, approximately 4,000 Riga Jews were murdered in the Biķernieku Forest. The killings were headed by
Sturmbannführers (majors) H. Barth, R. Batz, and the newly appointed chief of the Riga SD
Rudolf Lange. == Massacres ==