Concentration Camp Money
Lagergeld
Used to Pay Prisoners for Their Work
By Jennifer
White
Far from being the “death camps”
as you have heard so often, places like Auschwitz, Dachau and Buchenwald were
not in the business of extermination. They were work camps, critical to the
German war effort. But did you know that the Jewish workers were compensated
for their labor with scrip printed specifically for their use in stores,
canteens and even brothels? The prisoner monetary system was conceived in
ghettos such as Lodz, carried to camps such as Auschwitz and Dachau and still
existed in the displaced persons camps that were established by the Allies
after World War II. Here is the story of the money the court historians do not
want you to even suspect existed.
Piles of
incinerated corpses were indicting images at Nuremberg, used to prove that the
German-run concentration camps during World War II were intended for purposes
of exterminating the Jews of Europe. How ever, a plethora of documentary
evidence, long suppressed, shows that prisoners were relatively well-treated,
compensated for their hard work and allowed to purchase luxuries to which even
the German public did not have ready access. This is not the image of abject
deprivation that the Holocaust lobby would like you to entertain.
The irrefutable proof is the existence of a means
of exchange for goods and services: Money. There were at least 134 separate
issues, in different denominations and styles, for such notorious places as
Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Dachau, Oran ien burg, Ravens brück, Westerbork and at
least 15 other camps. (See Paper Money of the World Part I: Modern Issues of
Europe by Arnold Keller, Ph.D., 1956, pp. 23-25 for a complete listing.)
A monetary system was also in existence in the
ghettos, most notably Theriesenstadt and Lodz, which produced beautiful notes
(veritable works of art) that make U.S. currency look dull.
There are numerous dealers in rare currency and
numismatics who specialize in selling “concentration camp money” or “Holocaust
money” as it has been sometimes called. But the very fact of its existence does
not seem to have raised questions—as it should have—about what really did (and
did not) happen inside the so-called “death camps” where the Holocaust scrip
was circulating in the first place.
This scrip was not negotiable outside of the camp
for which it was issued. This decreased the chance of a successful escape and
made it impossible for the general public to purchase some of the rare luxuries
available in the camps. According to Albert Pick in Das Lagergeld der
Konzentrations-und D.P.-Lager: 1933-1945:
Inmates were not paid for the work but were
given “coupons” now and then to buy things in the “Kantine”. . . . As the war
progressed badly and the number of workers declined, the KZ worker potential
became important. Offers of “premiums” and other advantages were made to the
inmates, tobacco was offered and even visits to bordellos. . . . In order that
these scrips could not be used outside the camps, special money was printed.
Letter from Prisoner No. 11647 Block 28/3 Dachau
KIII on September 8, 1940 to his relative in Litzmannstadt (Lodz):
I must write you something about myself. I am
very well. In the canteen I buy honey, marmalade, cookies, fruit and other
food. If you worry about me, you’ll indeed be committing a sin. I have more
reason to worry about you. . . . (Letters
from the Doomed: Concentration Camp Correspondence 1940-1945, Richard S.
Geehr.)
There was a payment schedule at Theresienstadt
utilizing Th. kr. (There sienstadtkroner) as the unit of exchange. (The Shekel
Vol. XVI, No. 2, March-April 1983 p. 29). The breakdown looked like this:
Working men, according to their jobs: 105-205
Th. kr.
Working women, according to their jobs: 95-205
Th. kr.
Part-time workers: 80 Th. kr.
Caretakers: 70 Th. kr.
War-wounded and holders of the Iron Cross,
First Class degree or higher: 195 Th. kr.
Prominente (doctors, professors, scientists, well-known cultural artists and
politicians): 145 Th. kr.
To put this in perspective, a cup of coffee cost 2
Th. kr. The circulation in Theresienstadt was such that it was necessary to
print over 5 million notes. See Papirove Penize Na Uzemi Ceskosloven ska
1762-1975, Second Edition, 1975, Hradek Kralove, trans. by Julius Sem, pp.
134-135.
The first worker’s camp to have its own scrip was
Oranienburg. Before using the camp scrip they used German currency in nearby
towns, but the authorities decided to centralize. Currency was exchanged for
camp money, less 30%. (The Shekel, Vol XVI, No. 2, March-April 1983, p.
40. “Concentration Camp Money of the Nazi Holocaust” by Steven Feller.)
Similarly at Buchenwald:
Each prisoner was allowed up to 10 marks per
week to be used for the purchase of cigarettes at the camp canteen, other
canteen purchases, brothel visits, or credit to a savings account. The
regulations went on to specify that a visit to a brothel would cost 2 marks for
which 1.5 marks would be kept by the SS and 0.5 marks would be used for
“expenses.” (Ibid., p. 41.)
Was there a similar situation at all of the other
camps—at least those that issued currency? As this includes Ausch witz, it
would be shocking indeed to even consider marmalade and cigarettes being
purchased in this “death camp.” Even the existence of money in camps gives us a
look at what life was really like there, yet this information has yet to make
it to the History Channel.
Bibliography
American Israel Numismatic Association (Temarac,
Florida)
Pick, Albert. Das Lagergeld der
Konzentrations-und D.P.-Lager: 1993-1945, Munich, Battenberg Publishers,
1976.
Schöne, Michael H., Das Papiergeld im besetzten
Deutschland 1945-1949, Regenstauf: Gietl, 1994.
Stahl, Zvi, Jewish Ghettos and Concentration
Camps’ Money, 1933-1945, London: D. Richman Books, 1990.
See also:
Campbell, Lance K., Dachau concentration camp
scrip, Margate, Florida: American Israel Numismatic Association, 1992.
The Numismatist, April, 1981, by Steven Feller.
Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine, 1965, 1996, “POW Money and Medals” by Slabaugh, R. Arlie.
Schultze, Manfred, Unsere Arbeit-unsere
Hoffnung: Das Ghetto in Lodz 1940-1945, Schwalmtal: Phil-Creativ, 1995.
Sem, Julius, Standard Catalog of World Paper
Money, 1977 (Thereisenstadt notes)
Shtarot,
Vol. I, No. 2, Oct, 1976. Yasha L. Beresiner.