All members of the Organisation Todt, even forced labourers, with the exception of Jews, were regarded as
Wehrmachtsgefolge, that is
combatants by the
law of war. Of these, only the German personnel were regarded as being Wehrmacht Auxiliaries (i.e., belonging to the
Wehrmachtgefolgschaft). The
Frontarbeiter (front workers) were German,
Volksdeutsche, or
Nordic members of the OT. They swore an oath of fidelity to Hitler, wore uniforms, and were armed. The mean age of this group was about 45–50 years. An
Einsatzarbeiter was a foreign worker that swore an oath of allegiance, wore a uniform, but were not normally armed. They could not include Czechs, Poles, Jews, or Communists. At the end of the war, their designation became
OT-Legionäre.
OT-Eigenes Personal was the organic personnel of the OT, as opposed to the
OT-Firmenangehörige, employees of the contractors working for the OT. At wars end, all Org Todt members received blanket amnesty from the Western Allies. Many went on to serve in the post-war British and U.S. Labor Services in occupied Germany before emigrating to Britain, Australia, Canada and the United States. The U.S. Labor Service was considered the forerunner of the new German army. The Organisation Todt itself was found not guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg, although its leader Albert Speer served 20 years in Spandau Prison after admitting his crimes against humanity.
Categories •
OT-Eigenes Personal consisted of administrative, supervisory, and clerical staff, recruited through voluntary employment of German citizens, or through conscription of Germans and Volksdeutsche, as well as French citizens working for OT in France, and also included
Frontarbeiter and
Einsatzarbeiter. •
OT-Firmenangehörige consisted of the German permanent employees of the contractors. as well as conscripts serving with the contracted companies. These employees received uniforms, were given a rank, and were supposed to be given a briefer period of military training. They also included
Frontarbeiter and
Einsatzarbeiter. • Foreign workers, who were either
Hilfswillige, East European volunteers, or forced Labourers of many nationalities.
Classification of personnel according to nationality • Germans and Volksdeutsche.
Frontarbeiter in OT uniform. • Nordics (English, Norwegians, Swedes, Finns, Dutch, Danes, Flemings, Swiss).
Frontarbeiter in OT uniform if volunteers. Civilian clothing for local workers in Scandinavia.
Hilfsarbeiter if conscripted. • Latins and Slovaks.
Einsatzarbeiter or
Hilfsarbeiter in local uniforms. • Baltics and Balkans.
Hilfsarbeiter. • Russians, Poles, Czech.
Hilfswilliger or
Zwangsarbeiter. • Jews.
Zwangsarbeiter. • Stateless German Speakers. "Auslander".
Frontarbeiter in OT uniform. ==Ranks==