friday, February 15, 1980 15 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Nazi Slave Industries Continue to Do Well By ROBERT ST. JOHN (Copyright 1980. JTA, Inc.) By now, thanks to books, television programs and documentary films, the world at large is fully aware of the excessive sinfulness of Adolf Hitler. But until now there have been only sketchy accounts of a subsidiary crime: the use of several million men and women as slave labor- era in the German muni- tions plants. Who were the guilty? Some of the names (like Krupp and I.G. Farben) were as well known in Europe as Ford, DuPont and Chrysler are in America. But there were several hundred others who were anonymous. "Less Than Slaves," (Harvard University Press) by American Jewish lawyer Benjamin S. Ferencz, tells us that these German fac- tory owners were guilty of a double crime: they violated all the rules of war and moral codes of civilized people, but, almost as bad, after the war, when Ferencz and his colleagues tried to collect some retroactive compensation for the small percentage of slave laborers who had survived, the Ger- man industrialists unanim- ously insisted that their consciences were clear, that they had done nothing wrong, that the war is over. Ferencz, who was an American prosecutor at Nuremberg, devoted 30 years in legal struggling to get the German indus- trialists to change their minds. During those years the forced labor survivors became fewer and fewer, and their former employers became more and more adamant. Ferencz's final accom- plishment was in getting the five largest companies to pay an average of $872 to each of the 14,878 surviving Jewish slave laborers, which in some cases figured out to just a few pennies an hour for the time they had spent as helpless victims of monstrous cruelty. everything from toilet paper to dynamite; he con- trolled more than 300 corn- including panies, Daimler-Benz, which pro- duced the luxurious Mer- cedes. Flick was a personal friend of all the Nazi lead- ers, loyal to the party. He was tried at Nuremberg for war crimes and crimes against humanity, includ- ing the enslavement and abuse of concentration camp inmates. He was re- presented by 14 German lawyers. The trial, which lasted eight months, ended with a verdict of guilty and a sen- tence — not of death on the gallows, not life imprison- ment — of a mere seven years of incarceration. He was given much time off for "good behavior" and after several years he was al- ready a free man when U.S. High Commissioner McCloy released all the im- prisoned German indus- trialists. (You figure out why.) ments producer for the Third Reich; Ten years after the end of World War H it was back in op- eration in the Ruhr with half of its production de- voted to armaments. The attempt to get some compensation for the sur- vivors of the Rheinmetall slave laborers began in 1957. In 1964, the Pentagon let it be known that the old- est weapon company in the U.S., at Springfield, Mass., would have to shut down for lack of orders, but at the same time the Pentagon placed an order with Rheinmetall for $150 mil- lion worth of guns. Tohandle its public rela- tions it hired a past com- mander of the Jewish War Veterans, who had prev- iously handled publicity for I.G. Farben. About this time a secret intelligence report disclosed that the German army had phased out the gun the Pentagon was going to buy from Rheinmetall be- cause it considered it defec- tive and unusable. Several Congressmen Flick's principal com- protested giving a contract pany, Dynamit Nobel Ak- for a defective weapon to a tiengesellschaft (how firm that had used slave ironic that it bears the labor and now refused to ac- name of the inventor of knowledge that in so doing dynamite after whom the it had done any wrong. Nobel Peace Prize is Philip Klutznick, now Sec- named!) by 1963 was re- retary of Commerce, was porting munitions sales one of those who objected to of close to one million DM the Pentagon doing busi- and Flick was being ness with an unrepentant called "the most impor- Nazi firm, and he became tant industrialist of his deeply involved in the case. time." And so Ferencz So did Bnai Brith. and his colleagues ap- proached him with the suggestion that he might be interested in paying some compensation to the forced laborers who had once helped him, al- beit contrary to their will. Eventually Rhein- metall very reluctantly paid the slave labor sur- vivors an average of $425 apiece. And of course, Rheinmetall got the Pen- tagon contract. Two footnotes: At one point during the In December 1967, the protracted negotiations, U.S. army cancelled the last when Flick's lawyers were half of its $150 million insisting he could not pay a Rheinmetall contract. It single dollar or Mark in compensation because he was "short of money," he gave his 16-year-old granddaughter a cash gift in excess of the amount being asked by all 3,500 survivors, many of them in Ferencz tells the story dire need. In 1972, Flick, in his 90th unemotionally, in the cold little words most year, died in his luxurious lawyers use when they home at Lake Constance. speak or write. He lets his One of the obituaries said facts and his figures do that in recent years his the accusing. He even wealth had been increasing goes so far as to say that at the rate of more than "cruelty is not restricted one-third of a million dol- to any one people, or to lars per day. He died the any one time, or to a richest man in Germany single location," and he and the fifth richest man in urges each reader to the world, leaving more "find his own way to than $1 billion to a playboy understand the worst in son. And yet not one cent of human behavior and Flick's money was ever paid understand what feeds to a Jewish slave laborer. Ferencz asks us to under- and sustains it." This is a difficult assign- stand "the worst in human ment, for the villains in his behavior, what feeds and story have no redeeming sustains it." What else can qualities and there seems to it be in the case like that of be no excuse of any sort for - Frederich Flick but greed? their behavior. Take the — plain, unvarnished, ugly, case of Frederich Flick, vicious, self-consuming whose manipulations of greed. stock and ruthless acquisi- Even more sinister is tions made him the sole the story Ferencz tells of owner of one of the largest the Rheinmetall Co., the conglomorates in the world. His concern manufactured second largest arma- had been necessary to make 80 modifications to convert the German gun into a usa- ble weapon. Second footnote: Ferencz ends his chapter_ ith this sentence: "In 1978, the press announced that the U.S. army was prepared to spend $4.5 billion for tanks whose 120-mm cannons were to be manufactured, not by the American or British bidders, but by the German firm of Rhein- metall." I wonder why? Maybe Ferencz is right. "Each of us must find his own way to understand the worst in human behavior — and understand what feeds and sustains it." 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