Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Radicalizing Warfare: The German Command and the Failure of Operation Barbarossa
- 2 Urban Warfare Doctrine on the Eastern Front
- 3 The Wehrmacht in the War of Ideologies: The Army and Hitler's Criminal Orders on the Eastern Front
- 4 “The Purpose of the Russian Campaign Is the Decimation of the Slavic Population by Thirty Million”: The Radicalization of German Food Policy in Early 1941
- 5 The Radicalization of German Occupation Policies: The Wirtschaftsstab Ost and the 121st Infantry Division in Pavlovsk, 1941
- 6 The Exploitation of Foreign Territories and the Discussion of Ostland's Currency in 1941
- 7 Axis Collaboration, Operation Barbarossa, and the Holocaust in Ukraine
- 8 The Radicalization of Anti-Jewish Policies in Nazi-Occupied Belarus
- 9 The Minsk Experience: German Occupiers and Everyday Life in the Capital of Belarus
- 10 Extending the Genocidal Program: Did Otto Ohlendorf Initiate the Systematic Extermination of Soviet “Gypsies”?
- 11 The Development of German Policy in Occupied France, 1941, against the Backdrop of the War in the East
- Conclusion: Total War, Genocide, and Radicalization
- Appendix: Comparative Table of Ranks for 1941
- Selected Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
9 - The Minsk Experience: German Occupiers and Everyday Life in the Capital of Belarus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Radicalizing Warfare: The German Command and the Failure of Operation Barbarossa
- 2 Urban Warfare Doctrine on the Eastern Front
- 3 The Wehrmacht in the War of Ideologies: The Army and Hitler's Criminal Orders on the Eastern Front
- 4 “The Purpose of the Russian Campaign Is the Decimation of the Slavic Population by Thirty Million”: The Radicalization of German Food Policy in Early 1941
- 5 The Radicalization of German Occupation Policies: The Wirtschaftsstab Ost and the 121st Infantry Division in Pavlovsk, 1941
- 6 The Exploitation of Foreign Territories and the Discussion of Ostland's Currency in 1941
- 7 Axis Collaboration, Operation Barbarossa, and the Holocaust in Ukraine
- 8 The Radicalization of Anti-Jewish Policies in Nazi-Occupied Belarus
- 9 The Minsk Experience: German Occupiers and Everyday Life in the Capital of Belarus
- 10 Extending the Genocidal Program: Did Otto Ohlendorf Initiate the Systematic Extermination of Soviet “Gypsies”?
- 11 The Development of German Policy in Occupied France, 1941, against the Backdrop of the War in the East
- Conclusion: Total War, Genocide, and Radicalization
- Appendix: Comparative Table of Ranks for 1941
- Selected Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
Summary
The Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic was one of the first territories of the Soviet Union to be invaded by the German Wehrmacht in the summer of 1941. With at least 1.6 million dead from a total prewar population of 9 million, nearly one-fifth of its inhabitants died during the war. In parts of Belarusian SSR and eastern prewar Poland, Nazi Germany erected the Generalkommissariat Weißruthenien (General Commissariat White Ruthenia), governed by Generalkommissar Wilhelm Kube, and based in the Belarusian capital of Minsk; it encompassed some 60,000 square kilometers, had 2.5 million inhabitants, and was divided into eleven Gebietskommissariate. Minsk, conquered on June 28, 1941, and liberated by the Red Army on July 3, 1944, numbered about 240,000 inhabitants before the German invasion-more than half of them died during the three years of occupation. The Nazi racial war of extermination not only led to the death of a large part of the country's population, but also to the destruction of Minsk, which suffered near complete destruction in 1944.
Although long neglected by historians, the German crimes and the occupation regime in Belarus are both now fairly well researched. The opening of the Communist archives during the 1990s led to the availability of previously inaccessible sources. Primarily younger German historians made use of these possibilities and produced monographs of great depth and content; unfortunately, only rarely have these research results been translated into English or made accessible via scholarly articles.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Nazi Policy on the Eastern Front, 1941Total War, Genocide, and Radicalization, pp. 240 - 266Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012