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(Schutzstaffel,
Protection Squad).
Elite organization within the Third Reich
that was responsible for the "Final
Solution" and other acts of terror and destruction. The SS was
originally instituted in March 1923 as
Adolf Hitler’s
personal bodyguard corps. It consisted of elite fighters,
and competed with the
Nazi Party’s other militia, the Storm
Troopers (SA), for superiority. SS members were subject to
strict military discipline and swore an oath of complete
loyalty to Hitler and those appointed by him. In January
1929 Nazi leader
Heinrich
Himmler became the national head of the SS, or "Reich
Leader of the SS." Under his leadership, the SS greatly
expanded in size and strength. By the time Hitler rose to
national power in Germany in 1933, Himmler had made the SS
the dominant organization within the Reich. He created many
new departments within the SS organization, such as an
intelligence department called the
Security Service (SD), which he put under the authority
of
Reinhard Heydrich; and the Race and Resettlement Main
Office, which was in charge of all racial purity issues. Himmler
also took charge of the security of the Nazi Party
headquarters and leaders. Himmler
transformed the SS into the most elite group within the
Reich. In order to become an SS officer, a person had to
prove his "racial purity" and that of his wife back to the
eighteenth century, be of Aryan appearance; and had to
pledge unconditional allegiance to Hitler. SS members wore
uniforms that contributed to their dark aura of
fearlessness: black uniform, black cap, death's head badge,
death's head "ring of honor," and officer's dagger, which
was engraved with the SS's motto: "Loyalty is My Honor."
In 1934
Himmler concentrated the power of the SS. He crushed the
original SA leadership, taking the militia under SS command,
and took control of the Gestapo (the Reich's secret
political police) and all concentration camps in Germany. He
put the camps under the authority of
Theodore Eicke,
the head of the SS Guard and
Death's head units. The Death's Head Units were the
source of SS military units that later became known as the
Waffen-SS. Himmler also developed a strategy for
bringing key Germans into the SS as "honorary leaders" and
recruiting low-level police officers. Over the
next few years, Himmler instituted young officers' schools
and special SS police units, known as
Einsatzgruppen.
In 1939 he created special SS courts, which legally
allowed the SS to ignore established German law. After the
outbreak of
World War II in September 1939, the SS grew
significantly. SD units, Einsatzgruppen, and local SS
offices carried out the Reich's anti-Jewish policies all
over occupied Europe. The Reich Security Main Office (reichssicherheitshauptamt,
RSHA) was established, and given the tasks of internal
Reich security, hunting and killing suspected enemies of the
state, and sending prisoners to concentration camps. SS officers
were in charge of the planning of the "Final Solution" - the
extermination of European Jewry. When Germany invaded the
Soviet Union in June 1941, the Einsatzgruppen mobile
killing units spearheaded the execution of hundreds of
thousands of Jews. The RSHA's Jewish affairs expert,
Adolf
Eichmann, planned and supervised the deportation of Jews
from their homes to ghettos,
and then on to their deaths at concentration or
extermination camps. SS officers were also directly
responsible for the management of those camps, where
millions of Jews were murdered by poison gas. During its
existence, millions of soldiers and officers passed through
SS ranks. After the
war, the SS was declared to be a criminal organization by
the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Members of
all its sub-organizations, including the
Gestapo, SD,
Death's Head Units, Waffen-SS, and others were tried
as war criminals. Some were sentenced to death or life
imprisonment, but many were released.
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