KL: A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps, by Nikolaus Wachsmann, is an intricate look at the Concentration Camp system that the Nazi's used in Germany from the 1930's to 1945. Right off the bat, I will say this book is dense and difficult to read. The subject matter is horrifying, detailed to the extreme, and tackled in an academic way. Wachsmann is chronicling the history of camps used as points of destruction for political prisoners in Germany, as collection points for those deemed to be inferior races by the Nazi government, and slaves.
Wachsmann's book, however, is important to read. Much has been written on the Nazi's political experiments with mass extermination, but KL chronicles the camps themselves. The growth of the camps, from thrown-together collection points for political prisoners who were opposed to the Nazi regime in the 1930's, is detailed, with the likes of Dachau, Mauthausen, Auschwitz, and the dozens of other camps that sprang up in Europe examined. For example, Ravensbruck was originally a concentration camp for women. Other camps were for high ranking Jews and political prisoners to be used as hostages later on, and of course camps like Auschwitz, which were constructed as collection points for slave labour and extermination of invalid and sick prisoners.
Wachsmann also details the Camp SS, a division of the SS which ran the concentration camps. Figures like Theodore Eicke, Hoss, and Himmler - bigwig Nazi's with extremist racial ideals, are detailed. These figures had a massive influence on the management structures of the Camp SS, with martial violence as a tool for terror and control, slave labour as a means to encourage war time production, government-industry partnerships which saw slaves working in BMW, VW, Siemens, and IG Farben factories, to name a few. These attitudes trickled down to Camp SS guards and administrative staff. Casual violence was common, abuse widespread, and political extremism the norm in the SS. These men and women saw themselves as the front line soldiers of a racial war, which pitted Germans against "inferior races" like Slavs, Jews and Sinti (Gypsies) as well as unwanted parts of German society like the "asocial," "work-shy," criminals, homosexuals and those who did not believe in Nazi ideology, or who challenged the state.
The lives of prisoners is also examined in detail. This is one of the toughest parts of the book to read. The different camps did develop for particular purposes, so camp life could be better or far worse depending on the location, the ideological zeal/sadism of the staff, and the presence of various types of forced labour. For example, some of the worst camps, like Dora, were work camps where slave labour was employed to try and construct underground factories for airplanes and V2 rockets. These camps, with construction or manual labour production, often had the highest casualty rates, as SS maximized construction efficiency by reducing rest time, rations, and other necessities for life. Indeed, as the war progressed the SS began to implement "destruction through labour" with prisoners literally worked to death. Those who were broken, starved or sick were sent to gas chambers to be liquidated.
Conflicts between various prisoner groups is also examined in detail. It is a misnomer to think that prisoners did not have a hierarchy, and indeed this was actively encouraged by the SS. The most famous example is of the Kapos, usually German men who were placed in positions of power amongst prisoners. These Kapos received extra rations, comfortable living quarters and so on, in exchange for keeping the prisoners in line. A system of identification badges, like yellow stars for Jews, pink triangles for homosexuals, black triangles for workshy, green for asocial and so on, was used. This made is easy for SS to target their most hated groups, with abuse often targeted at certain groups throughout the camp system. During the early war years, asocials and political prisoners like communists were particularly harshly treated, often being worked to death, beaten randomly and summarily executed. As the years moved on, the targeted groups shifted to Poles, Soviet POW's, and Jewish inmates.
Death and violence was an integral part of the camp. The early camps were characterized by sadistic SA brown-shirts lynching old Weimar politicians. After Ernst Rohm's fall from grace and the destruction of the SA, the extremist SS units took over the camps. This was the beginning of the rise of radical racial ideals, extremist economic thought and systemic violence. Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, saw them as perfect ideological soldiers, fighting against the internal enemies of the German Reich. They utilized brutality to break prisoners spirits from the beginning. Extra-judicial killings were common at the beginning of the camp system, but systemic death was not yet the norm. At the beginning, these camps were collection points for unwanted elements of German society. As time went on, they grew into collection points for forced labour and eventually full, brutal chattel slavery. The movement from political to ideological radicalism saw growing casualty rates among prisoners. At first, this was because of lack of adequate shelter, with disease and epidemics becoming rampant. This began to change, however. Reductions in rations and growing corruption in SS ranks encouraged starvation. Prisoners also began to work as forced labour and slaves, in camp construction, maintenance and eventually, in war production and industry. Those who were broken by the work, or starved beyond the brink, became known as "Muslims." These were often rounded up and destroyed.
Extermination of unwanted elements of society began in the early 1940's, and began to take on its terrifying shape during the run up to wars end. Camps grew exponentially as prisoners from Poland, the USSR and other conquered territories flooded in. At this time, unwanted elements of German society were also targeted for arrest by police, and sent to camps. The Nazi's then implemented directives to destroy unwanted elements and those not fit for labour. Clearing out the camps became a priority. Sadistic bureaucrats began to experiment with methods of destruction. Mass killings by firing squad, death through labour, gas chambers, death trucks, medical experimentation and starvation began to kill hundreds, thousands, and eventually millions. Poles and Soviet POW's were the guinea pigs for these mass-killing implements, and eventually the destruction of Europe's Jewish population, the Gypsy's and Slavic peoples became a priority. Trainloads of those condemned in Nazi "selections" were carted straight to gas chambers. Experimentation on crematorium locations came from the study of killing efficiency. Truly, this terrifying system of mass death is unique in history.
Clearly, this book is something else. The causal brutality of mass death that the SS implemented during the years of the Third Reich seems almost unprecedented. Wachsmann examines this in detail using cold, clinical academic research. The book is not heartless, with Wachsmann's scholarly professionalism cracking at times due to the brutality of the subject matter. Individual stories are woven along with the narrative of events to give concrete and real examples of ideas and facts that seem so inhuman that they are often difficult to comprehend. Even so, Wachsnmann chronicles the history of the camps themselves. This is an interesting and original way to examine this period of history. Often, the camps are seen as just instruments of death, but their growth and movement toward this climax needs to be examined closely. The mentality of this system is also examined. It is important for this to be done, as clearly systemic racism is not something that will disappear overnight from humanity. The depravity of the SS and the Third Reich, the complacency of many German civilians, and the casual racism, slavery and genocide that took place need to be understood to ensure they never happen again. The economic utopianism of SS leaders lead to chattel slavery not seen since the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and indeed surpassed it in its ultimate aim: the destruction of entire people groups.
To sum up, this book was difficult to read, due to its shocking and terrifying subject matter. No matter how many times I read about the Holocaust, it never gets easier to try and comprehend. Even so, it is important to try and do so. This stuff can never be forgotten. The ideals that led to this dark period in human history can rise again. Racism has not left us. Concentration camps still exist in some forms, for example. When one reads a book like KL, one can understand how important it is to ensure we never go back. Do I recommend this book? Wholeheartedly yes. Everyone needs to read about the Holocaust and KL is one of the best books to do so. It is long and dark, clinical in its approach, and all the more effective for it.