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SOBIBÓR - Holocaust Handbooks

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196 J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, <strong>SOBIBÓR</strong><br />

hearted toward the sufferings of the poor Jewish people at a time<br />

when it is their obvious duty to help.”<br />

Hitler was alluding to the failure of the Evian conference, held from<br />

6 to 15 July 1938 at the famous French spa. It had been convened at the<br />

suggestion of U.S. President Roosevelt and was to provide help for the<br />

victims of National-Socialist persecutions, primarily the Jews. But right<br />

from the beginning the good intentions of the U.S. President appeared<br />

dubious, as we hear from the Jewish historian Michael Mazor: 567<br />

“At his press conference in Warm Springs, President Roosevelt<br />

had already limited the possibilities for Evian by saying that no revisions<br />

or increases in the immigration quotas of the United States<br />

were planned in this respect. In the invitations to the conference sent<br />

to 33 countries, Roosevelt had underlined that it was not expected of<br />

any country to accept more immigrants than were presently scheduled<br />

by its laws.”<br />

On such a basis, the Evian conference was doomed from the start.<br />

The result was that “the free world abandoned the Jews of Germany and<br />

Austria to their merciless fate.” 567<br />

On 25 November 1939 Ehrhard Wetzel and Gerhard Hecht, officials<br />

concerned with racial policy, penned a memorandum entitled “The<br />

question of the treatment of the formerly Polish territories from the<br />

point of view of racial policy,” which constituted a first draft of the future<br />

“Generalplan Ost.” It contained, i.a., a plan for the resettlement of<br />

“some 800,000 Jews from the Reich (Altreich, Austria, Sudetenland,<br />

and Protectorate)” into the occupied Polish territories and of “another<br />

530,000 Jews” from the formerly Polish territories now incorporated into<br />

the Reich. 568<br />

The destination of these deportees was undoubtedly the General<br />

Government, which had been set up officially on 12 October. The plan<br />

followed directives by Heydrich, addressed by express letter to all heads<br />

of Einsatzgruppen, on the subject of the “Jewish question in the occupied<br />

territories” dated 21 September 1939. 569 One of these directives,<br />

the Nisko 570 plan, suggested the creation of a Jewish reservation in east-<br />

567<br />

M. Mazor, “Il y a trente ans: La Conférence d’Evian,” in: Le Monde Juif, No. 50, April-<br />

June 1968, pp. 23 and 25.<br />

568<br />

“Die Frage der Behandlung der Bevölkerung der ehemaligen polnischen Gebietes nach<br />

rassenpolitischen Gesichtpunkte,” PS-660, p. 25.<br />

569<br />

PS-3363.<br />

570<br />

Between 20 October 1939 and 12 March 1941, 6,615 Jews from Austria were taken to<br />

Nisko and other towns in the General Government. Cf. chapter 9.4., p. 316.

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