Germanisation According to the testimony of Kuno Wirsich: When Germany
invaded Poland in 1939, it annexed the western part of the country (taking
East Upper Silesia, creating the new entities of the
Reichsgaue of
Danzig-West Prussia and
Wartheland, the
Zichenau Region (or South East Prussia), and the
General Government, the latter for the administration of the rest of
its own occupied part of the country. The plan for Poland, as set forth in
Generalplan Ost, was to "purify" the newly annexed regions in order to create a Germanised buffer against Polish and Slavic influence. This entailed deporting Poles from these westernmost areas to those under General Government control, and settling the region with ethnic Germans from other places including from the General Government area, from within the pre-war German borders and from various areas that came under the control of Soviet Russia (Baltic States, eastern Polish territories, Volhynia, Galicia, Bukovina, Bessarabia and Dobrudscha). To further its objective of Germanisation, Nazi Germany endeavoured to increase the number of '
Volksdeutsche' in the conquered territories by a policy of Germanising certain classes of the conquered people, mainly those among the Czechs, Poles, and Slovenes who had German ancestors. Thus, the Nazis encouraged the Polish offspring of Germans, or Poles who had family connections with Germans, to join the 'Volksliste', often applying pressure to compel registration. Those who joined enjoyed a privileged status and received special benefits. Registrants were given better food, apartments, farms, workshops, furniture, and clothing—much of it having been confiscated from Jews and Poles who were deported or sent to
Nazi concentration camps. Determining who was an ethnic German was not easy in regions that had Poles, ethnic Germans, and individuals of German ancestry who had been
Polonised. There were many in western Poland who claimed German ancestry and resisted deportation to the General Government on the basis of it. Similar ambiguities occurred in all other eastern areas, such as
Bohemia and Moravia, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia, Romania, and Serbia. Even Himmler was impressed by this and said that such resistance must be evidence of their Nordic qualities. Furthermore, Nazi officials in charge of the various annexed territories from Poland did not want to see too many economically valuable local nationals sent eastwards, so they, too, desired some form of criteria that would allow them to avoid deporting any skilled Poles with German ancestry. Poles who were considered to be suitable for Germanisation were sent to the Reich as labourers. A "racial assessment" was also performed with regard to the ethnic German returnee with often disappointing results. In 2006, German historian
Götz Aly said the Nazi policy was based on French Republic selection criteria that were used after the First World War to expel ethnic Germans from Alsace.
Multiple ad hoc categorisation schemes From the beginning of the
German occupation of Poland,
a number of categorisation schemes were developed at the local level, leading to confusion. For example, in October 1939, the governor of the
Warthegau,
Gauleiter Arthur Greiser, established a central bureau for the registration of
Volksdeutsche, the
Deutsche Volksliste (
DVL: German Peoples List), also known as the
Volksliste. At the beginning of 1940, distinctions were introduced to divide those registered in the DVL into four categories: ethnic Germans active on behalf of the Third Reich, "other" ethnic Germans, Poles of German extraction (Poles with some German ancestry), and Poles who were related to Germans by marriage.
Himmler's solution Himmler's solution to the confusing and competing categorisation schemes was the Deutsche Volksliste (DVL), a uniform categorisation scheme that could be applied universally. The Racial Office of the Nazi Party had produced a registry called the
Deutsche Volksliste in 1939, but this was only one of the precursors of Himmler's final version. The Deutsche Volksliste consisted of four categories: • Category I:
Volksdeutsche (German > "Ethnically German") —Persons of German descent who had engaged themselves in favour of the Reich before 1939. At first, only Category I were considered for membership in the SS (Schutzstaffel). Similarly, women
recruited for labour in Germany as nannies were required to be classified as Category I or II, because of their close contact with German children and the possibility of sexual exploitation, and so of children; Himmler praised it as a chance to win back blood and benefit the women as well. Himmler declared that no drop of "German blood" would be lost or left behind to mingle with an "alien race". ==Implementation in Poland==