The Wannsee Conference (January 20, 1942, during World War II) was a high level ministerial meeting of Nazi German civilian government and SS officials convened by Reinhard Heydrich, to bring together the leaders of the German organizations whose cooperation was necessary to carry out the Nazi plan for the extermination of the entire Jewish population of Europe and to make it clear to these other German ministers that this "Final Solution of the Jewish Question" was a strategic imperative of the Third Reich.
The conference was held in the Wannsee Villa overlooking the Wannsee lake in southwestern Berlin.
Although documentary evidence detailing the Nazi state's genocidal intentions towards the Jews predates this meeting, the Wannsee Conference occupies a privileged place in understanding Nazi Germany's policy towards the Jews because: (i) a complete documentary record relating to the convening of the meeting and the minutes of the meeting survived the war; (ii) the representatives at the meeting were the most senior members of the key ministries and institutions needed to implement the deportation and systematic killing of the Jews; (iii) following this meeting mass deportations and systematic killings at camps designed for this purpose intensified; and (iv) the minutes of the meeting were used extensively during examinations and cross-examinations at the Nuremberg Trials.
The combination of measures described in the protocol — deportation, forced work and systematic killing — were interrelated in the Nazi state's genocidal policy. Deportation was not an end in itself. Forcibly transportating the Jews out of the territories held or conquered by Germany and its allies was a measure taken not simply to remove Jews from Nazi controlled territory but to better facilitate organizing those deported into work brigades. The work brigades fulfilled two primary purposes simultaneously. Forced labor was to be focused upon large-scale infrastructure projects, specifically road construction, but also other forms of slave labor. This work was expected to be performed under grueling and punishing conditions and was expected to result in the deaths of "a large number of them." Those that survived these conditions were to be killed. ("Those who ultimately will possibly get by will have to be given suitable treatment..."). The protocol makes clear that "special treatment" was a synonym for "killing," as Eichmann later admitted at his trial. Within a year, as the Holocaust accelerated, most Jews would be immediately killed upon arrival at the Nazi death camps, rather than being first organized into work groups.
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