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History
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Title: Concentration Camp Money - 'Lagergeld' used to Pay Prisoners for Their Work
Source: wintersonnenwende.com
URL Source: http://www.wintersonnenwende.com/sc ... archives/articles/ccmoney.html
Published: Jan 1, 2001
Author: Jennifer White
Post Date: 2006-09-23 18:44:11 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 130
Comments: 7

Concentration Camp Money

'Lagergeld' used to Pay Prisoners for Their Work

Article from The Barnes Review, Jan./Feb. 2001, pp. 7-9.
The Barnes Review, 645 Pennsylvania Ave SE, Suite 100, Washington D.C. 20003, USA.
By Jennifer White, administrative director of TBR;
published here with kind permission from TBR.
This digitalized version © 2001 by The Scriptorium.
eMail TBR - subscribe to TBR here


The 
Barnes Review Jan.-Feb. 2001 cover
The Barnes Review,
issue Jan.-Feb. 2001

Far from being the "death camps" as you have heard so often, places like Auschwitz, Dachau and Buchenwald were not in the business of extermination. They were work camps, critical to the German war effort. But did you know that the Jewish workers were compensated for their labor with scrip printed specifically for their use in stores, canteens and even brothels? The prisoner monetary system was conceived in ghettos such as Lodz, carried to camps such as Auschwitz and Dachau and still existed in the displaced persons camps that were established by the Allies after World War II. Here is the story of the money the court historians do not want you to even suspect existed.

Piles of incinerated corpses were indicting images at Nuremberg, used to prove that the German-run concentration camps during World War II were intended for purposes of exterminating the Jews of Europe. However, a plethora of documentary evidence, long suppressed, shows that prisoners were relatively well-treated, compensated for their hard work and allowed to purchase luxuries to which even the German public did not have ready access. This is not the image of abject deprivation that the Holocaust lobby would like you to entertain.

Collage
The above collage, taken from the cover of Das Lagergeld der Konzentrations- und D.P.-Lager: 1933-1945 by Albert Pick and Carl Siemsen, shows just a sample of the money printed for camps and ghettos. The predominantly-white note on the right says: "Jewish Money. Only legal as a means of payment for Jewish work within the ghetto Sokolka. City Treasury of Sokolka, The Mayor."

The irrefutable proof is the existence of a means of exchange for goods and services: Money. There were at least 134 separate issues, in different denominations and styles, for such notorious places as Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Dachau, Oranienburg, Ravensbrück, Westerbork and at least 15 other camps. (See Paper Money of the World Part I: Modern Issues of Europe by Arnold Keller, Ph.D., 1956, pp. 23-25 for a complete listing.)

A monetary system was also in existence in the ghettos, most notably Theresienstadt and Lodz, which produced beautiful notes (veritable works of art) that make U.S. currency look dull.

There are numerous dealers in rare currency and numismatics who specialize in selling "concentration camp money" or "Holocaust money" as it has been sometimes called. But the very fact of its existence does not seem to have raised questions - as it should have - about what really did (and did not) happen inside the so-called "death camps" where the Holocaust scrip was circulating in the first place.

This scrip was not negotiable outside of the camp for which it was issued. This decreased the chance of a successful escape and made it impossible for the general public to purchase some of the rare luxuries available in the camps. According to Albert Pick in Das Lagergeld der Konzentrations- und D.P.-Lager: 1933-1945:

Oranienburg, 50 Pf.
Oranienburg, eine Mark
Oranienburg, eine Mark
Oranienburg was the first known camp to have Lagergeld for its prisoners. The issues for this particular camp were in 5 Pfg. (green), 10 Pfg. (blue), 50 Pfg. (brown) and 1 Mark denominations. (Printed 1933 - August 1934, when the camp closed.) Unlike Theresienstadt, these notes were fairly plain without multiple colors and watermarks. Yet even these demonstrate the care and attention given to the design of money for the workers.

Letter from Prisoner No. 11647 Block 28/3 Dachau KIII on September 8, 1940 to his relative in Litzmannstadt (Lodz):

There was a payment schedule at Theresienstadt utilizing Th. kr. (Theresienstadt kroner) as the unit of exchange. (The Shekel Vol. XVI, No. 2, March-April 1983 p. 29). The breakdown looked like this:

To put this in perspective, a cup of coffee cost 2 Th. kr. The circulation in Theresienstadt was such that it was necessary to print over 5 million notes. See Papirove Penize Na Uzemi Ceskoslovenska 1762-1975, Second Edition, 1975, Hradek Kralove, trans. by Julius Sem, pp. 134-135.

The first worker's camp to have its own scrip was Oranienburg. Before using the camp scrip they used German currency in nearby towns, but the authorities decided to centralize. Currency was exchanged for camp money, less 30%. (The Shekel, Vol XVI, No. 2, March-April 1983, p. 40: "Concentration Camp Money of the Nazi Holocaust" by Steven Feller.)

Similarly at Buchenwald:

Was there a similar situation at all of the other camps - at least those that issued currency? As this includes Auschwitz, it would be shocking indeed to even consider marmalade and cigarettes being purchased in this "death camp." Even the existence of money in camps gives us a look at what life was really like there, yet this information has yet to make it to the History Channel.



Infamous and Intricate Camp Money

Dachau
"... [W]e must remember that like most other Concentration Camps, Dachau also functioned as a work camp. This explains the appearance of paper tokens printed in 1944.... Dachau's tokens were of three different values: 1, 2 and 3 marks. The prisoner's identification number is written on the front of this green note, alongside the date when it was issued, January 31, 1945. In fact, all of Dachau's tokens list the prisoner's identification numbers." Stahl, pp. 18- 19.

Auschwitz
"At a death camp it would seem that there was very little need for money." (The Shekel, Vol. XVI, No. 2, March-April 1983, p. 43.)

Dachau, one Mark
A Dachau camp note.

Auschwitz, one Mark
An Auschwitz camp note.

Theresienstadt
Print runs for Theresienstadt Kroner

      Denomination
          1 Th. kr.
          2 Th. kr.
          5 Th. kr.
        10 Th. kr.
        20 Th. kr.
        50 Th. kr.
      100 Th. kr.
      Size
      100 x 50 mm
      110 x 55 mm
      120 x 58 mm
      125 x 63 mm
      135 x 66 mm
      140 x 77 mm
      150 x 77 mm
            Color
            Green
            Rose
            Blue
            Brown
            Green
            Dk. Green
            Red-brown
Qty Printed     
2,242,000      
1,019,000      
530,000      
456,000      
319,000      
159,000      
279,000      

See: The Shekel Vol. XVI, No. 2, March/April 1983, p. 33.

Theresienstadt, one hundred KronenTheresienstadt, one hundred Kronen

These beautiful Theresienstadt notes, complete with watermarks, demonstrate the high-quality artwork and printing of the money.

Lodz
Colors of the different types of currency in Lodz.
In print runs in 1940, 1942 and 1944:
         50 Pfg.      Violet
          1 RM       Olive-green
          2 RM       Light Brown
          5 RM       Dark Brown
Lodz, five Mark
Lodz ghetto money.

Information from Das Lagergeld der Konzentrations- und D.P.-Lager: 1933-1945
by Albert Pick and Carl Siemsen.



Bibliography:

American Israel Numismatic Association (Tamarac, Florida).

Pick, Albert. Das Lagergeld der Konzentrations- und D.P.-Lager: 1933-1945, Munich, Battenberg Publishers, 1976.

Schöne, Michael H., Das Papiergeld im besetzten Deutschland 1945-1949, Regenstauf: Gietl, 1994.

Stahl, Zvi, Jewish Ghettos and Concentration Camps' Money, 1933-1945, London: D. Richman Books, 1990.


See also:

Campbell, Lance K., Dachau concentration camp scrip, Margate, Florida: American Israel Numismatic Association, 1992.

The Numismatist, April 1981, by Steven Feller.

Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine, 1965, 1996, "POW Money and Medals" by Slabaugh, R. Arlie.

Schultze, Manfred, Unsere Arbeit - unsere Hoffnung: Das Ghetto in Lodz 1940-1945, Schwalmtal: Phil-Creativ, 1995.

Sem, Julius, Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, 1977 (Theresienstadt notes).

Shtarot, Vol. I, No. 2, Oct. 1976. Yasha L. Beresiner.


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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#2. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

Okay, now this is odd. Why would the Germans who ran concentration camps pay their prisoners to do labor?

This is quite an interesting article.

TommyTheMadArtist  posted on  2006-09-23   19:03:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: TommyTheMadArtist (#2)

Quiet! Or you will be Zundeled off where you belong!

robin  posted on  2006-09-23   19:11:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: robin (#3)

To: TommyTheMadArtist Quiet! Or you will be Zundeled off where you belong!

That is somewhat of a problem, how people are not even allowed to wonder about how it was back then. There have been so many holocaust movies that have portrayed the Germans as more evil than anyone who ever inhabited the earth, going out of their way to kill off all the Jews. A long time ago though I heard they were indeed paid, and the reason they had no food was because no one else did either. My own mother was in Austria as a kid during the war, she came from a wealthy family but for a few years all she had to eat was potatos and cabbage, and they were rationed 3 ounces of meat per week. That was because the allies bombed all their facilities and trains carrying supplies, so no one in most of Europe had enough to eat. Many suffered from malnutrition.

It's difficult to get a real feel for what nazi concentration camps were really like, because there has been some exaggeration thrown in.

I've read extensively about the Soviet Gulags, and those were major slave camps, and the gaurds would take their frustrations out on the inmates by beating the crap out of them whenever they felt like it, breaking all their teeth, and feeding them cabbage soup and not much else. Of couse many died under the squalid and brutal conditions; many who were sent to Siberia did not have proper clothes or shoes for the climate, many froze to death and lost fingers and toes to frost-bite.

I wouldn't want to be in any kind of camp, but it's too bad people are no longer allowed to study that period in Germany, as it's a terrible sin in my book to rewrite history or cover it up.

The way things are going I wouldn't doubt they will set up Soviet-style slave camps here, where people will be abused, tortured, starved, and forced to work 18 hours a day. That's what the Gulag system was all about, kidnapping people and sticking them in those camps for free labor, until their bodies could not longer stand the abuse. Only the very tough ones survived.

Diana  posted on  2006-09-23   21:35:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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#7. To: jessejane (#6)

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jessejane  posted on  2006-09-23 22:23:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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