Jump to content

Belarusian Auxiliary Police

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 69.171.160.182 (talk) at 09:23, 14 August 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Belarus Auxiliary Police
Activefrom July 1941
Country Nazi Germany
RoleAuxiliary police
EngagementsAnti-partisan operations in Belarus

Belarus Auxiliary Police, later renamed - Ordnungsdienst - OD, was established in July 1941. It was staffed by local inhabitants and had similar functions to those of the Ordnungspolizei - OrPo - German Police. The OD activities were supervised by defense police departments, local commandant's offices, and garrison commandants. The OD units consisted of one police officer for every 100 rural inhabitants and one police officer for every 300 urban inhabitants. The OD was in charge of guard duty, and included both stationary & mobile posts plus groups of orderlies. It was subordinate to the defense police leadership. Belarus Auxiliary Police participated in various massacres of villages inside Belarus. [1] The Germans carried out the first killings by exerting force, using experienced guards and all necessary precautions (in Homel, Mozyrz, Kalinkowicze, Korma). The Belarus police took on a secondary role in the first stage of the killings. The rest of the Jews were crushed and deprived of the will to live- women, children, and the elderly - was killed with the Nazis’ bare hands (in Dobrusz, Czeczersk, Żytkowicze). After a while, police, being locals, and a minimal convoy led these remaining Jews out of the ghetto to their place of death. Such a tactic was successful (without much exertion of force) in places where the liquidation of Jews was carried out early September, October-November 1941. In winter 1942, a different tactic of killing was used - raids (in Żłobin, Petryków, Streszin, Czeczersk). The role of the Belarus police in killing the Jews became particularly noticeable during the second wave of destruction, starting in February-March 1942. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Nazi Occupation in Belarus
  2. ^ Leonid Smilowicki Ph. D., Commonalities and Unique Features, 1941-42
Mohylew, March 1943.
Mohylew, March 1943.