Checking a few notes that I copied from this book, I was originally only going to post this in our social democracy subcommunity, but doing research on this phenomenon I realised that it was even worse than I thought.

In case somebody is unable to read that page, it says that in 1926, Bavaria adopted a law for fighting Roma, Sinti, vagrants, and the workshy, mandating registration for all Roma along with Sinti, and this law became a model for other German states.

Read that again: the Weimar Republic (because remember that this is 1926!) adopted laws explicitly designed to persecute Roma, Sinti, vagrants and the workshy. The Weimar Republic started those laws. Not the Third Reich. Similarly, in 1929, it was the Weimar Republic’s national police commission that established a centre for antiziganism headquartered in Munich. Four years before the Third Reich even existed.

Unlike many of the regulars here, I do not subscribe to the theory that ‘social democracy is the moderate wing of fascism’ (perhaps that is another topic for another time), but I have to admit that protofascist phenomena like these do not exactly help with my case either.

Now then, quoting Herbert Heuss’s German policies of Gypsy persecution 1870–1945 in The Gypsies During the Second World War: From “race science” to the camps, pages 2325:

In 1886 Chancellor Bismarck sent a letter to all the component states of the empire in order to unify, at least in theory, the various decrees in force against [Roma and Sinti]. He recommended the expulsion of all foreign [Roma] “in order to free the territory of the country completely and permanently from this plague.”⁵

State discrimination: the Gypsy Centre in Munich

[Antiziganism] in [the Second Reich] took an unprecedented turn with the setting up, in March 1899, of an Information Service on Gypsies by the Security Police in the Imperial Police Headquarters in Munich. Here, for the first time, the total registration and surveillance of an entire population group was planned and organised.

This Gypsy Centre had all the modern aids at its disposal — a telegraph service, photographs, fingerprint systems, identification cards — the technical developments available at the time were set up in a model way by the police authorities in order to put a comparatively small number of people under the prescribed total supervision.

Alfred Dillmann, an officer of the Munich police, published his Gypsy Book, giving brief details of over 3,500 [Roma or Sinti] and “persons travelling as [them]”, in 1905. Even for the conditions of the time the book was contrary to the law. In contained a collection of personal information about members of a particular minority group, many of whom had no criminal convictions.

A similar collection about Catholics in Prussia or Jews in Hessen would have given rise to a strong protest, not only from the group concerned but from a wider public, yet, because the group singled out here were [Roma and Sinti], no public outcry ensued. This taken for granted, silent or overt consent to anti[ziganism] will be met again in the course of German history.

The Gypsy Centre in Munich survived, almost unchanged, the transition from Imperial Germany to the Weimar Republic — and later to Hitler’s Third Reich. In 1925 the Centre already had 14,000 individual and family files on [Roma and Sinti] from all over Germany.

By October 1938, when it was incorporated into the National Criminal Police Office (RKPA) as the National Centre for the Fight against the Gypsy Menace, it held over 18,000 files in which 33,524 people — representing some 80–90% of the [Romani] population at the time — were recorded. Along with these files the personnel of the Munich Centre was, of course, taken over by the Criminal Police Office.

Race science and the persecution of the [Roma and Sinti]

On July 16th 1926 Bavaria hurriedly adopted the Law for the Fight against Gypsies, Vagrants and the Workshy. In the justification of the law, its meaning and purpose were made clear:

“It is expected that the large [insert slur here] population will avoid Bavaria on its journeys and the remainder of the travelling people will be kept under control so that there is no longer anything to fear from them with regard to safety in the land.”⁶

The ministerial decision putting the law into operation brought the definition of Gypsy (Zigeuner) “in accordance with the study of race” into the state’s repertoire.

“The concept ‘[insert slur here]’ is generally known and needs no further explanation. The study of race will give the information as to who is [one].”⁷

This Bavarian law became the model for other German states and even for neighbouring countries, for example Czechoslovakia. In 1929 in the state of Hessen the then Minister for the Interior, Wilhelm Leuschner, proposed a Law for the Fight against the Gypsy Menace, the aim of which was to lead to a “unified fight against the [insert slur here] plague”.

In the past, “in spite of energetic action, the rooting out of this evil had not been possible”. This aim was incorporated in the instructions for carrying out the law, where the direct words “fighting the [insert slur here]” were used.⁸

The basic premise had changed, from fighting crime, to fighting a people — and the target group was to be determined not on juridical but on racial grounds.

Tracing the development of anti[ziganist] laws in Hessen, we see how general trends in the German state reflected, more and more, that classical liberal justice with its emphasis on punishment of the deed was changing towards a focus on punishment of the doer. As the identity of the doer came to the forefront of decisions about punishment, classification as [Romani] became an important factor in judgement of the deed.

This simultaneously eroded the rôle of lawyers in decision‐making, bringing a new coterie of experts — doctors, anthropologists, race experts — into active involvement in state institutions.

Two opposing interests came together to promote this development. The police authorities were greatly interested in changing classical criminal law which, by preventing the criminalisation of groups, deprived crime prevention of a starting point.

On the other hand, paying attention to the identity of a criminal was also a matter of concern to advanced circles who wanted social background and family circumstances looked at in connection with crime and indeed with the aim of reforming the doer. The study of race, a new, modern science that was just seeking recognition, created common ground for these different interests. The Fight against the Gypsy Menace was the lowest common denominator on which all the powerful parties and institutions could agree.

Massive discrimination against [Roma and Sinti] — who, for the most part, were German citizens — was therefore a reality long before the handover of power to the [Fascists] in January 1933. Indeed, even before 1933, [Roma and Sinti] in Germany had been classified by racial criteria in laws and decrees.

In spite of all this, it must be made clear that the potentiality for destruction which the Third Reich was about to unleash was not, so to speak, traditional discrimination. The potential for destruction required, on the one hand, the possibility of thinking about destruction. This was provided for Germany by […] concepts of race hygiene.

But it also needed a transformation, a remodelling, of the existing legal framework, in order to allow [antiziganism] to be extended into […] outright annihilation. The policy of the Third Reich, therefore, represents not just the sharpening of traditional discrimination but, with the introduction of race science as the foundation of a new order of lawmaking, the beginning of new depths of persecution.

1933: National Socialist persecution

On January 30th 1933 German President Paul von Hindenburg named Adolf Hitler as Chancellor, thus ushering in the Third Reich. With this there began a policy that built on the authoritarian structures of the Weimar Republic in so far as it continued the Weimar method of government through emergency orders.

(Emphasis added in most cases. I thought about replacing all instances of that antiziganist slur, but it would have looked so clunky and distracting that I only did it inconsistently. I can do it consistently anyway if any Roma or Sinti ask me to do so.)


Click here for events that happened today (November 8).

1885: Tomoyuki Yamashita, Axis general and war criminal, existed.
1918: Kazuo Sakamaki, Imperial America’s first Japanese POW, started his life.
1923: In Munich, Adolf Schicklgruber lead his fellow Fascists in an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the Weimar Republic.
1936: Francoist troops failed to capture Madrid but commenced their three‐year Siege of Madrid afterwards.
1937: The Fascist exhibition Der ewige Jude (‘The Eternal Jew’) opened in Munich.
1939: While celebrating the Beer Hall Putsch’s 16th anniversary in Munich, Adolf Schicklgruber narrowly escaped Georg Elser’s homicide attempt, and the Reich captured two British agents of SIS.
1940: The Fascist invasion of Greece failed as outnumbered Greek units repulsed the Fascists in the Battle of Elaia–Kalamas.
1941: Troops of the Axis’s Armeegruppe Nord captured Tikhvin near Leningrad while the IJA and IJN obeyed orders to coordinate their plans for the opening phases of the Pacific War per the Great Army Instruction № 992. At the annual Beer Hall Putsch speech, the Third Reich’s head of state claimed that the war with Soviet Union was effectively won, citing 3.6 million prisoners taken, and by conjecture that the Soviet forces must have suffered eight to ten million casualties thus far. In regards to the United States, he noted that the aggressive President Franklin Roosevelt had ordered American ships to deliberately attack any Kriegsmarine submarines they crossed, while Berlin continued to order restraint for its submarine captains; nevertheless, Berlin noted that the submarines would fight back fiercely should they be fired upon.
1942: As Axis defenses in Egypt fell back to Sidi Barrani, Allied forces successfully assaulted the Axis forces at the Algerian ports of Oran and Algiers during Operation Torch; Algiers surrendered at 1800 hours and the Axis lost a Martin 167 bomber over the Mers‐el‐Kébir harbour in Algeria, but two former U.S. Coast Guard cutters renamed HMS Walney and HMS Hartland, each carrying two hundred Yankee infantry, entered Oran, Algeria with the intention of denying the harbour facilities to the Vichyites only to both come under intense crossfire from Axis warships and subsequently sinking.

Additionally, the Eastern Axis formally took command of the Davao Penal Colony in southern Philippines, and the Axis transferred many of its Luftflotte 4 units from Stalingrad to North Africa. The Axis also transferred twenty‐five of its Jewish professional watchmakers from Majdanek to Auschwitz.
1943: Oberleutnant zur See Harald Lange assumed command of the Type IXC U-Boat U-505 at Lorient, and Aichi held the first test flight of the submarine-borne attack aircraft M6A1 Seiran over Ise Bay. Lieutenant Commander Tadashi Funada was the chief test pilot. The test was a failure due to an irresponsive horizontal tail stabilizer, but it nevertheless generated much interest with the Eastern Axis’s naval leadership.
1944: The Axis forced 25,000 Jews to walk over one hundred miles in rain and snow from Budapest to the Austrian border, followed by a second forced march of 50,000 persons, ending at Mauthausen. Likewise, the second largest cinema in England, the Gaumont State Theatre in Holloway, succumbed to a V-1 flying bomb. The cinema’s frontage and restaurant blew out; only the main walls and part of the foyer were left undamaged. Nonetheless, the most serious incident of the day was at Rochester, North Kent, in which a V-1 flying bomb impacted at at 2045 hours on the junction of Grafton Avenue and Gerrard’s Avenue, killing eight humans and seriously wounding seventeen.

Aside from that, Luftwaffe ace Major Walter Nowotny claimed his 258th victory as he shot down a B-24 Liberator bomber over Hesepe near Osnabrück. Moments later, his Me 262 jet fighter was hit by an Allied P-51 fighter, possibly the one piloted by 1st Lieutenant Richard Stevens. Nowotny’s final words were reported to be ‘My g-d, I’m burning!’ His subsequent crash and explosion was witnessed by his commanding officer Adolf Galland (who was monitoring the progress of the operation ‘Big Blow’ from the radio shack at Achmer Airfield) along with other officers, who immediately rushed to the crash site; they failed to find Nowotny’s remains, only able to locate broken pieces of the pilot’s Knight’s Cross medal.

Curiously, for the first (and only) time, the Third Reich’s head of state failed to appear at the celebration of the Beer Hall Putsch anniversary; instead, he had Himmler read his speech for him.
1945: Anton Ludwig Friedrich August Mackensen, Prussian state councillor and monarchofascist, perished.
1949: Cyriel Verschaeve, Axis collaborator and Flemish ultranationalist, died.
2014: Luigi Gorrini, Axis fighter pilot, expired.