The Nazi Camp
System
The Nazi camp system began with
the establishment of Dachau, the first official, organized and permanent
concentration camp under the jurisdiction of the SS. This differed from the
earlier, temporary camps, which were run by the SA (Storm Troopers). Dachau was
established in March 1933 and served as a model for future camps in its
management and ideology. The concentration camp system was then further
developed from 1936, when new and larger concentration camps were established,
which accommodated prisoners other than political opponents of the regime. One
such camp was Sachsenhausen concentration camp, which also served as a training
camp for SS personnel to manage concentration camps. With the expansion of Nazi
Germany, the Nazi use of concentration camps as a tool for racial oppression
reached its climax. In the spring of 1942, the SS Wirtschafts -
Verwaltungshauptamt (Economic - Administrative Main Office), which included the
Concentration Camp Administration, was established. The main function of this
administration was to assign prisoners to the various camps based on the aims of
the German war economy and in keeping with Nazi ideology. Thus, the economic
exploitation of prisoners was brought to a new level.
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