By 16 May 1943, the SS Ostindustrie GmbH controlled several factories and workshops across Poland, grouped into five active Werke.[5] These included a glassworks in Wołomin (Werk I), a turf factory in Dorohucza (Werk II), a broom and brush factory in Lublin (Werk III), workshops in Bliżyn, Radom, and Tomaszów (Werk IV), and Splitwerk – a grouping which comprised a shoe factory, tailoring factory, carpentry and joinery at the BudzynArbeitslager, a turf factory in Radom and an iron foundry in Lublin (Werk V). Several additional Werke were under construction at that time, including vehicle spare parts factories, the Trawniki Arbeitslager (Werk VI), earth and stone works in Lublin (Werk VII), a medical sanitary ware factory (Werk VIII), various slave-labor workshops in Lemberg, and the Poniatowa Arbeitslager (later transferred to Többens).[6] By mid-1943, Globocnik projected the labor force of Osti to include some 45,000 Jews from a network of parallel camps with the main branch at Majdanek concentration camp; however, the physical infrastructure in the region was insufficient for such numbers.[7][8]
Dissolution
Max Horn believed that Jewish forced labor was the way of the future, but his plans were halted by the Warsaw and Białystok ghetto uprisings, the latter of which occurred where the Ostindustrie textile and armament factories were scheduled for relocation.[7][9][10] In the wake of the uprisings, and with the war on the Eastern Front increasingly turning against Germany, the SS decided to eliminate Poland's remaining Jewish forced laborers to prevent further unrest. On 3 November 1943, Osti's workforce was liquidated in its entirety in the course of Aktion Erntefest, the single largest German massacre of Jews in the entire war, with approximately 43,000 victims across District Lublin being shot in fake anti-tank trenches.[11] Subsequently, Horn complained in a report to Globocnik about the outcome of Aktion Erntefest; he stated that it had made Osti "completely valueless through the withdrawal [sic] of Jewish labor".[12] The company became officially defunct in March 1944.[1]
Baudienst, a conscript labour service run by German authorities in Occupied Poland
References
^ abcdYad Vashem (2013). "Ostindustrie GMBH"(PDF file, direct download 19.6 KB). Shoah Resource Center, The International School for Holocaust Studies. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
^ abChmielewski, Jakub (2013). "Ostindustrie (Osti)". Obozy pracy w dystrykcie lubelskim (in Polish). Leksykon Lublin (Ośrodek "Brama Grodzka – Teatr NN"). Retrieved 12 July 2013.
^"Zagłada lubelskich Żydów" [Annihilation of Lublin Jews]. Obozy pracy w dystrykcie lubelskim (in Polish). Leksykon Lublin (Ośrodek "Brama Grodzka – Teatr NN"). 2013. Archived from the original on 14 September 2013. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
^Browning, Christopher R. (1998) [1992]. "Arrival in Poland"(PDF file, direct download 7.91 MB complete). Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland. Penguin Books. pp. 135–142. Archived(PDF) from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.