Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-5wvtr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-24T05:59:26.789Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Women's Labor Service in Nazi Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Extract

The totalitarian pretensions of the Nazi party's leadership are nowhere better illustrated than in the belief that the entire German people could be “educated” to a sense of service to the Volk, that mythical national community whose sum was allegedly infinitely greater than its parts. Excluded from real power in the state— whatever was claimed about “the unity of party and state”—the party in the Third Reich assumed the role of “spiritual leader” of the community, with the task of reorienting the aspirations of men, women, and children away from the satisfaction of personal desires and ambitions and toward service. Germans were not merely to accept passively the wisdom of the regime's policies, but were positively to channel their concern and their energy into supporting them. In this way, ran the message, they would find deeper satisfaction than in the pursuit of selfish pleasure.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Broszat, Martin, Der Staat Hitlers (Munich, 1969), pp. 262–67.Google Scholar

2. Vogt, Hannah, The Burden of Guilt (London, 1965), p. 150Google Scholar; Maschmann, MelitaFazit: Keine Rechtfertigungsversuch (Stuttgart, 1963), pp. 3741.Google Scholar

3. Bundesarchiv (hereafter BA), NSD30/1836, Informationsdienst für die soziale Arbeit der NSV, Jan. 1939, p. 72, and Feb. 1939, p. 87; Stephenson, Jill, Women in Nazi Society (London, 1975), pp. 103–5, 142Google Scholar, Stephenson, Jill, “Middle-Class Women and National Socialist ‘Service,’” History, 02 1982, pp. 3536.Google Scholar

4. Hierl, Konstantin, Im Dienst für Deutschland 1918–1945 (Heidelberg, 1954), p. 75.Google Scholar The italics are Hierl's.

5. “Der Arbeitsdienst wurde zur Brücke zwischen Stadt und Land,” Völkischer Beobachter (hereafter VB), Sept. 8, 1933; Zypries, Gertrud in Deutsches Frauenschaffen, 1939, pp. 8991.Google Scholar

6. von Gersdorff, Ursula, Frauen im Kriegsdienst 1914–1945 (Stuttgart, 1969), p. 68.Google Scholar

7. Boberach, Heinz, ed., Meldungen aus dem Reich (Munich, 1968), pp. 294–95, 384, 405Google Scholar; Institut für Zeitgeschichte Archiv (hereafter IfZ), MA 441/8, frames 2–759517–18, Meldungen aus dem Reich, “Lücken in der Verordnung vom 27.1.1943.”

8. Rupp, Leila J., Mobilizing Women for War (Princeton, 1978), pp. 105–12, 127–33, 135–36Google Scholar; Stephenson, Women, pp. 106–10; Stephenson, Jill, The Nazi Organisation of Women (London, 1980), pp. 180–82, 184–85.Google Scholar

9. Bajohr, Stefan, “Weiblicher Arbeitsdienst im ‘Dritten Reich’: Ein Konflikt zwischen Ideologie und Ökonomie,” Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte 25 (1980): 352–53.Google Scholar

10. Rupp, Mobilizing Women, pp. 111–12.

11. Mason, Timothy W., Sozialpolitik im Dritten Reich (Opladen, 1977), pp. 1541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12. Heimpel-Michel, Elisabeth, Ida von Kortzfleisch: Frauenbewegung und Frauendienstpflicht (Gotha, 1931), pp. 4446Google Scholar; van den Nieuwenhuysen, P. W., De Nationaalsocialistische Arbeidsdienst (Louvain, 1939), pp. 1617.Google Scholar

13. Evans, Richard J., The Feminist Movement in Germany 1894–1933 (London, 1976), pp. 207–9Google Scholar; Gersdorff, Frauen im Kriegsdienst, pp. 15–20.

14. Benz, Wolfgang, “Vom freiwilligen Arbeitsdienst zur Arbeitsdienstpflicht,” Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte 16 (1968): 317–18Google Scholar; Nieuwenhuysen, Arbeidsdienst, pp. 20–24.

15. Benz, “Vom freiwilligen,” pp. 321–22; Freising, Hans, “Entstehung und Aufbau des Arbeitsdienstes im Deutschen Reich” (diss., Rostock, 1937), pp. 1418.Google Scholar

16. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1931 I, July 23, 1931, pp. 398–400.

17. Benz, “Vom freiwilligen,” pp. 325–27; Nieuwenhuysen, Arbeidsdienst, pp. 30–33.

18. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, June 26, 1935, p. 769.

19. On the separation of the sexes in Nazi theory and practice, see Stephenson, Women, pp. 8–9, 32, 95, 117–18, 126, 136, 140–41, 159–60, 165–66, and Stephenson, Nazi Organisation, pp. 14, 83, 124, 217; also Rupp, Mobilizing Women, pp. 30–32.

20. Reichsgesetzblatt, 06 26, 1935, and 1939 I, Sept. 4, 1939, p. 1747.

21. BA, Sammlung Schumacher (hereafter Slg.Sch.), 262, “Aufklärungs- und Redner-Informationsmaterial der Reichspropagandaleitung,” Apr. 1934, pp. 11–12.

22. Stephenson, Jill, “Girls' Higher Education in Germany in the 1930s,” Journal of Contemporary History 10, no. 1 (01 1975): 59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

23. BA, Slg. Sch., 262, Apr. 1934, pp. 11–12.

24. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, June 27, 1935, p. 772, and Oct. 1, 1935, p. 1216.

25. Hierl, Im Dienst, pp. 110–11.

26. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1932 I, July 16, 1932, p. 352.

27. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, NSDAP Reichsleitung, 1932 Rundschreiben no. 14a, Oct. 5, 1932; BA, R 45 IV/vorl. 10, “Die Arbeiterinnen in die Einheitsfrontaktion,” RGO Referenten Materialien, Oct. 1932, p. 8, “Frauen im ‘freiwilligen’ Arbeitsdienst”; Saring, Toni, Der Deutsche Frauenarbeitsdienst (Berlin, 1934), p. 71.Google Scholar

28. Stephenson, Nazi Organisation, pp. 97–111.

29. Bajohr, “Weiblicher Arbeitsdienst,” pp. 336–37; Scholtz-Klink, Gertrud, Die Frau im Dritten Reich (Tübingen, 1978), pp. 2930.Google Scholar

30. Berlin Document Center, Akten des Obersten Parteigerichts, 2684/34, letter from Paula Siber to Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, May 21, 1934.

31. Broszat, Der Staat Hitlers, pp. 333–34.

32. Scholtz-Klink, Die Frau, p. 30.

33. Scholtz-Klink, Gertrud, Der Deutsche Frauenarbeitsdienst (Berlin, 1934)Google Scholar; Scholtz-Klink, Die Frau, pp. 439–54.

34. Stephenson, Nazi Organisation, pp. 106–14.

35. There is slight confusion about the length of the period of service specified at the Jan. 5, 1934, meeting. One draft in BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Neuordnung des weiblichen Arbeitsdienstes,” says “13 weeks.” But the published version of this same document, BA, Slg.Sch., 262, Deutscher Arbeitsdienst, “Neuordnung des weiblichen Arbeitsdienstes,” p. 54, says “20 weeks.” Another report of the Jan. 5, 1934, meeting, in Deutsche Mädchenbildung, 1934, p. 96, says “20 weeks.” The assumption made here is that twenty weeks was the length of service agreed on at the Jan. 5 meeting.

36. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, Deutscher Arbeitsdienst, p. 54.

37. “Der Frauenarbeitsdienst,” Führerlexikon, 1934–1935, p. 94.

38. Haupt, Joachim, Neuordnung itn Schulwesen und Hochschulwesen (Berlin, 1933), p. 22Google Scholar; extract from Volk und Führer: Deutsche Geschichte für Schulen (Berlin, 1943), p. 232Google Scholar; Stephenson, Jill, “Girls' Higher Education,” pp. 5961.Google Scholar

39. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Aufklärungs- und Redner-Informationsmaterial,” p. 12.

40. Saring, Frauenarbeitsdienst, pp. 79–80.

41. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, Pollmann, Karl, “Die Reichsanstalt für Arbeitsvermittlung und Arbeitslosenversicherung und der Deutsche Frauenarbeitsdienst,” Deutscher Arbeitsdienst(Sonderausgabe), n.d. (summer 1935?), p. 11.Google Scholar

42. “Gesamtstärke der Freiwilligen Frauenarbeitsdienstes, Juli 1933 bis Dezemberi935.” Wirtschaft und Statistik, Feb. 1936, p. 137.

43. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Der Deutsche Frauenarbeitsdienst,” Deutscher Arbeitsdienst, p. 10.

44. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, pp. 772 and 1216.

45. Röbke, Hanna, “Arbeitsdienst fiir die weibliche Jugend,” Jahrbuch des Reichsarbeitsdienstes, 1936, pp. 4649Google Scholar; Hierl, Im Dienst, p. 95.

46. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, p. 772; Röbke, “Arbeitsdienst,” p. 48.

47. Report in Frankfurter Zeitung, Jan. 8, 1936; “Soil meine Frau auf dem Strohsack schlafen?” Der Angriff, 01 16, 1936.

48. Nieuwenhuysen, Arbeidsdienst, p. 241; “Mädchen in Uniform,” Frankfurter Zeitung, Aug. 9, 1939.

49. Kirkpatrick, Clifford, Woman in Nazi Germany (London, 1939), pp. 8790.Google Scholar

50. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, pp. 769–70.

51. Miller, Gisela, “Erziehung durch den Reichsarbeitsdienst für die weibliche Jugend (RADwJ): Ein Beitrag zur Aufklärung nationalsozialistischer Erziehungsideologie,” in Heinemann, Manfred, ed., Erziehung und Schulung im Dritten Reich (Stuttgart, 1980), 2: 178–80.Google Scholar

52. Bajohr, “Weiblicher Arbeitsdienst,” p. 344.

53. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, Karl Pollmann, p. 11.

54. Miller, “Erziehung,” p. 179; Stephenson, Nazi Organisation, pp. 87–92; Stephenson, “Middle-Class Women,” pp. 35–36.

55. Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich, 1941–1942, p. 420.

56. Scholtz-Klink, Frauenarbeitsdienst, p. 10.

57. Das Archiv, 1934–1935, July 1, 1934, p. 475.

58. Retzlaff, Hans, Arbeitsmaiden am Werk (Leipzig, 1940), p. 13.Google Scholar

59. “Der Arbeitsdienst für die weibliche Jugend,” VB, Oct. 31, 1937; “Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin—ein neuer Beruf für Mädchen,” VB, Oct. 20, 1937; Zypries, Gertrud, “Der Beruf der Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin,” Die Frau, 02 1939, pp. 174–76.Google Scholar

60. “Beruf der Arbeitsdienstführerin,” Deutsche Wissenschaft, Erziehung und Volksbildung, 1938, no. 109, Feb. 18, 1938, p. 111. The Abitur is the school certificate which qualifies holders for admission to a university.

61. “Führerin im Reichsarbeitsdienst, Arbeitsdienst für die weibliche Jugend,” Frauenkultur im Deutschen Frauenverk, Sept. 1937, inside cover.

62. On the behavior of young women leaders in the League of German Girls (female branch of the Hitler Youth), see Koehn, Use, Mischling, Second Degree (London, 1977), pp. 4653, 8692, 106–15, 124–28, 133–36, 140–41, 150–55.Google Scholar

63. Hierl, Im Dienst, p. 97.

64. Members of the men's Labor Service were permitted to marry when they reached the age of twenty-five. Brides had to be “Aryan,” “hereditarily healthy,” and of good character. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1935 I, p. 1216.

65. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1936 I, Sept. 26, 1936, p. 747, and 1937 I, Nov. 24, 1937. p. 1298.

66. On the shortage of labor in agriculture, see Farquharson, J. E., The Plough and the Swastika: The NSDAP and Agriculture in Germany 1928–1945 (London, 1976), pp. 196202.Google Scholar

67. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1938 I, Sept. 7, 1938, p. 1157.

68. BA, R 2/4525, letters from Krosigk to Frick, Oct. 14, 1938, and from Hierl to Krosigk, Feb. 28, 1938.

69. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1939 I, Sept. 4, 1939, p. 1639.

70. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, letter from Stuckart to the Reich ministries and Reichsstatthalter, Sept. 27, 1939.

71. BA, R 2/4527, “Organisation des RAD für die weibliche Jugend, Rechnungsjahr 1939,” p. 9.

72. BA, R 2/4527, “Haushalt des RADwJ—Rechnungsjahr 1940,” p. 267.

73. For an example of this in the women's organizations, see Stephenson, Jill, “Propaganda, Autarky and the German Housewife,” in Welch, David, ed., Nazi Propaganda: The Power and the Limitations (forthcoming, London, 1983).Google Scholar

74. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, circular from Conti to the Reich authorities, Sept. 27,1939; BA, R 77/158, circular from the Coburg RAD leader to the mayor of Coburg and neighboring Landräte, Sept. 20, 1939; BA, R 77/158, “Verzeichnis,” signed by the mayor of Kleinkunstadt, Dec. 9, 1939.

75. Rupp, Mobilizing Women, pp. 110–12.

76. The marriage rate rose from 7.9 per 1,000 of the population in 1932 to 9.7 in 1933 and 11.2 in 1934. From 1935–38 it fluctuated between 9.1 and 9.7, again reaching 11.2 in 1939. Figures from Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich, 1934, p. 27; 1937, p. 37; 1939–1940, p. 42; 1941–1942, p. 66.

77. BA, R 77/158, letter from a Coburg Landrat to the Coburg RAD recruitment office, Nov. 25, 1939.

78. There are numerous documents to this effect in the BA, R 77/158 file.

79. BA, R 77/162, “Erfassung des Geburtenjahrganges 1924,” Mar. 10, 1942.

80. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, circular from the Holzkirchen Employment Office to all local Pflichtjahr girls, Oct. 16, 1939; BA, Slg.Sch., 262, letter from Gau München-Oberbayern to the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior, Nov. 8, 1939; BA, R 77/157, “Zurückstellung vom RADwJ,” Coburg, Oct. 16, 1939.

81. BA, Slg. Sch., 262, circular from the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior to the NSDAP Gau München-Oberbayern, Oct. 30, 1939; BA, Slg.Sch., 262, letter from the Bavarian section of the Reichsnährstand to the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior, Oct. 30, 1939.

82. IfZ, MA 441/6, frames 2–757123–26, Meldungen aus dem Reich, no. 299, July 13, 1942.

83. Verfügungen, Anordnungen, Bekanntgaben (hereafter V, A, B), Partei-Kanzlei II B 4, May 11, 1943.

84. IfZ, MA 441/8, frames 2–759281–83, Meldungen aus dem Reich, n.d. (July 1943?).

85. Marawske-Birkner, Lilli, Der weibliche Arbeitsdienst (Leipzig, 1942), pp. 251–54, 278–79.Google Scholar

86. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Reichsarbeitsdienst-Pflicht-Stammkarte weibliche Jugend” be longing to Erna Lisette Heilmeier, 1942–43.

87. BA, R 77/157, circular from Dr. Will Decker, Sept. 17, 1941.

88. V, A, B, V.I. 38/493 v. 28.8.43, pp. 355–57; Gersdorff, Frauen im Kriegsdienst, p. 425, document no. 208, Dec. 20, 1943; BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Erlass des Führers …,” July 29, 1941.

89. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, “Erlass des Führers …,” July 29, 1941.

90. IfZ, MA 441/5, frame 2–755206, Meldungen aus dem Reich, Nov. 10, 1941; IfZ, MA 441/5, frames 2–755478–81, Meldungen aus dem Reich, Dec. 15, 1941; cf. Gersdorff, Frauen im Kriegsdienst, pp. 68–69.

91. VB, Sept. 8, 1933.

92. Maschmann, Fazit, pp. 38, 94–105, 134–35.

93. Bajohr, “Weiblicher Arbeitsdienst,” pp. 352–55.

94. Winkler, Dörte, Frauenarbeit im “Dritten Reich” (Hamburg, 1977), pp. 129–32.Google Scholar

95. BA, R 77/63, Rundverfügung 22/42 KHD 2, Jan. 24, 1942.

96. Gersdorff, Frauen im Kriegsdienst, pp. 69–70.

97. Hierl, Im Dienst, pp. 110–11.

98. Bajohr, “Weiblicher Arbeitsdienst,” pp. 355–56; Winkler, Frauenarbeit, p. 132.

99. Gersdorff, Frauen iin Kriegsdienst, pp. 69–70.

100. IfZ, MA 294, frame 2–562575, letter from Frau Else Bruger, Adelsheim, to Brandt, on Himmler's staff, Feb. 23, 1945.

101. BA, Slg.Sch., 262, notice from Stuckart, in the Ministry of the Interior, n.d. (early Mar. 1945?).

102. Maschmann, Fazit, p. 135; Winkler, Frauenarbeit, p. 131.

103. Rupp, Mobilizing Women, pp. 133–34. Rupp is concerned with presenting the image of women in Nazi propaganda, rather than the reality of life. Some of her remarks about the Women's Labor Service, especially on p. 134, misleadingly give the impression that the reality was the same as the image projected.

104. Winkler, Frauenarbeit, pp. 131, 80.

105. BA, NS 22/2037, “Rundschreiben 11/41—Aktivierung der Dorfkultur,” Sept. 12, 1941.

106. BA, R 77/63, “Die Durchführung des politischen Unterrichtes im Winterhalbjahr 1942/43,” Oct. 19, 1942.

107. Winkler, Frauenarbeit, pp. 131–32.

108. BA, Slg.Sch., 368, Partei-Kanzlei-Korrespondenz, notes for a speech by Friedrichs, July 20, 1944.