Re: I.B.M. and the Nazi Holocaust



Final Solutions
How IBM Helped Automate the Nazi Death Machine in Poland

by Edwin Black
The Village Voice

When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, most of the world saw a menace
to humanity. But IBM saw Nazi Germany as a lucrative trading partner.
Its president, Thomas J. Watson, engineered a strategic business
alliance between IBM and the Reich, beginning in the first days of the
Hitler regime and continuing right through World War II. This alliance
catapulted Nazi Germany to become IBM's most important customer outside
the U.S. IBM and the Nazis jointly designed, and IBM exclusively
produced, technological solutions that enabled Hitler to accelerate and
in many ways automate key aspects of his persecution of Jews,
homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and others the Nazis considered
enemies. Custom-designed, IBM-produced punch cards, sorted by IBM
machines leased to the Nazis, helped organize and manage the initial
identification and social expulsion of Jews and others, the
confiscation of their property, their ghettoization, their deportation,
and, ultimately, even their extermination.
Recently discovered Nazi documents and Polish eyewitness testimony make
clear that IBM's alliance with the Third Reich went far beyond its
German subsidiary. A key factor in the Holocaust in Poland was IBM
technology provided directly through a special wartime Polish
subsidiary reporting to IBM New York, mainly to its headquarters at 590
Madison Avenue.

And that's how the trains to Auschwitz ran on time.

Thousands of IBM documents reviewed for the first edition of my book
'IBM and the Holocaust,' published early last year and focused mainly
on IBM's German subsidiary, revealed vigorous efforts to preserve IBM's
monopoly in the Nazi market and increase contracts to meet wartime
sales quotas.

Since then, continued research and interviews have uncovered details,
described here for the first time, of IBM's work for the Nazis in
Poland through the separate subsidiary and of the Polish subsidiary's
direct contact with IBM officials on Madison Avenue.

Documents were obtained from IBM files shipped to NYU for processing
and from scores of other archival sources here and abroad. Not a single
sentence written by IBM personnel has been discovered in any of the
documents questioning the morality of automating the Third Reich, even
when headlines proclaimed the mass murder of Jews.

IBM's German subsidiary was Deutsche Hollerith Maschinen Gesellschaft,
known by the acronym Dehomag. (Herman Hollerith was the German American
who first automated U.S. census information in the late 19th century
and founded the company which became IBM. Hollerith's name became
synonymous with the machines and the Nazi "departments" that operated
them.)

Watson tightly managed the lucrative German operation, traveling to
Berlin at least twice annually from 1933 until 1939 to personally
supervise Dehomag. Major German correspondence was translated for
review by the New York office and often for Watson's personal comment.
Before big new accounts were accepted, Watson had to assent. For
deniability, he insisted on making direct verbal instructions to his
German managers the rule rather than exception-even in place of major
contracts. Once, when German managers wanted to paint a corridor, they
awaited his specific permission. Watson's auditors continuously tracked
the source and status of every reichsmark and pfennig-in one typical
case, exchanging numerous transatlantic letters over the disposition of
just a few dollars. Not infrequently, Dehomag managers objected to his
"domination." Understandably, IBM's lawyers and managers in Berlin
personally updated Watson constantly, and generally signed their
reports, "Awaiting your further instructions."

No machines were sold to the Nazis-only leased. IBM was the sole
source of all punch cards and spare parts, and it serviced the machines
on-site-whether at Dachau or in the heart of Berlin-either directly
or through its authorized dealer network or field trainees. There were
no universal punch cards. Each series was custom-designed by IBM
engineers not only to capture the information going in, but also to
tabulate the information the Nazis wanted to come out.

IBM constantly updated its machinery and applications for the Nazis.
For example, one series of punch cards was designed to record religion,
national origin, and mother tongue, but by creating special columns and
rows for Jew, Polish language, Polish nationality, the fur trade as an
occupation, and then Berlin, Nazis could quickly cross-tabulate, at the
rate of 25,000 cards per hour, exactly how many Berlin furriers were
Jews of Polish extraction. Railroad cars, which could take two weeks to
locate and route, could be swiftly dispatched in just 48 hours by means
of a vast network of punch-card machines. Indeed, IBM services coursed
through the entire German infrastructure in Europe.

The war broke out on September 1, 1939, when Germany invaded Poland.
Germany annexed northwestern Poland; the remaining Polish territory in
Nazi hands was treated as "occupied" and called the "General
Government." That annexed northwestern quadrant was serviced by IBM's
German subsidiary, Dehomag, mainly to handle the payrolls of Silesian
coal mines and heavy industry. At about that time, IBM New York
established a special subsidiary, Watson Business Machines, to deal
with the General Government. It remained completely legal for IBM to
service the Third Reich until just before America entered the war in
December 1941.

The savaging of Poland was no secret to IBM executives. From the
outset, worldwide headlines reported barbarous massacres, rapes,
purposeful starvation, systematic deportations, and the resulting
unchecked epidemics. As early as September 13, 1939, The New York Times
reported the Reich's determination to make Polish Jewry disappear, a
headline declaring, "Nazis Hint Purge of Jews in Poland." A subhead
added, "3,000,000 Population Involved." The article quoted the German
government's plan for the "removal of the Polish Jewish population from
the European domain." The Times added, "How . . . the 'removal' of Jews
from Poland [can be achieved] without their extermination . . . is not
explained."

Germany had plans. Polish Jews, during a sequence of sudden
relocations, were to be catalogued for further action in a massive
cascade of repetitive censuses and registrations with up-to-date
information being instantly available to various Nazi planning agencies
and occupation offices. How much usable forced labor for armament
factories could they generate? How many thousands would die of
starvation each month? A spectrum of Nazi census, registration, and
statistical tabulation was performed on custom-designed IBM punch-card
programs and machinery.

On September 9, 1939, Dehomag general manager Hermann Rottke wrote
directly to Watson in New York, asking for advanced equipment. Rottke
reminded Watson, "During your last visit in Berlin at the beginning of
July, you made the kind offer to me that you might be willing to
furnish the German company machines from Endicott [an IBM factory near
Binghamton] in order to shorten our long delivery terms. . . . You have
complied with this request, for which I thank you very much, and have
added that in cases of urgent need, I may make use of other American
machines. . . . You will understand that under today's conditions, a
certain need has arisen for such machines, which we do not build as yet
in Germany. Therefore, I should like to make use of your kind offer and
ask you to leave with the German company . . . the alphabetic
tabulating machines. . . . "

Eighteen days later, a vanquished Warsaw formally capitulated. The next
day, September 28, IBM's general manager in Geneva, J.W. Schotte,
telephoned Berlin to confirm Watson's permission for the new equipment.


Meanwhile, Reinhard Heydrich, chief of Heinrich Himmler's Security
Service, the SD, had already circulated a top-secret letter to the
chiefs of his Einsatzgruppen, which evolved into mobile killing units.
Heydrich's September 21 memo, titled "The Jewish Question in the
Occupied Territory," laid out a plan of population control through a
sequence of strategic censuses and registrations. It began, "I would
like to point out once more that the total measures planned (i.e., the
final aim) are to be kept strictly secret." First, Jews were to be
relocated to so-called concentration towns at "either railroad
junctions or at least on a railway." Addressing the zone from east of
Kraków to the former Czechoslovakian-Polish border, Heydrich directed,
"Within this territory, only a temporary census of Jews need be taken."
Heydrich demanded that "the chiefs of the Einsatzgruppen report to me
continually regarding . . . the census of Jews in their districts. . .
.. "

Shortly thereafter, Heydrich sent a follow-up cable to his occupying
forces in Poland, Upper Silesia, and Czechoslovakia, outlining how a
new December 17 census would escalate the process from mere
identification and cataloguing to deportation and execution. Heydrich's
memo entitled "Evacuation of the New Eastern Provinces" decreed, "The
evacuation of Poles and Jews in the new Eastern Provinces will be
conducted by the Security Police. . . . The census documents provide
the basis for the evacuation. All persons in the new provinces possess
a copy. The census form is the temporary identification card giving
permission to stay. Therefore, all persons have to hand over the card
before deportation. . . . Anyone caught without this card is subject to
possible execution. . . . "

Quantifying and organizing the deportation of millions of people from
various regions across Eastern Europe could take years using pencils
and paper. Relying upon the lightning speed of Hollerith machines, it
took just days. Heydrich assured, "That means the large-scale
evacuation can begin no sooner than around January 1, 1940." Nazi
Germany employed only one method for conducting a census: IBM
punch-card processes, each one designed for the specific census.

In Nazi Poland, railroads constituted about 95 percent of the IBM
subsidiary's business, using as many as 21 million punch cards
annually. Watson Business Machines was headquartered at Kreuz 23 in
Warsaw. And one of its important customer sites, newly discovered since
the first edition of my book was published a year ago, was the
Hollerith department of Polish Railways, at 22 Pawia Street in Kraków.
This office kept tabs on all trains in the General Government,
including those that sent Jews to their death in Auschwitz.

Leon Krzemieniecki is probably the only man still living who worked in
that Hollerith department. It must be emphasized that Krzemieniecki did
not understand any of the details of the genocidal train destinations.
His duties required tabulating information on all trains, from ordinary
passenger to freight trains, but only after their arrival.

The high-security five-room office, guarded by armed railway police,
was equipped with 15 punchers, two sorters, and a tabulator "bigger
than a sofa." Fifteen Polish women punched the cards and loaded the
sorters. Three German nationals supervised the office, overseeing the
final tabulations and summary statistics in great secrecy. Handfuls of
printouts were reduced to a small envelope of summary data, which was
then delivered to a secret destination. Truckloads of the preliminary
printouts were then regularly burned, along with the spent cards,
Krzemieniecki told me in an interview.

As a forced laborer, Krzemieniecki was compelled to work as a "sorter
and tabulator" 10 hours per day for two years. He never realized that
his work involved the transportation of Jews to gas chambers.

"I only know that this very modern equipment made possible the control
of all the railway traffic in the General Government," he said.

Krzemieniecki recalled that an "outside technician," who spoke German
and Polish and "did not work for the railroad," was almost constantly
on-site to keep the machines running, performing major maintenance
monthly.

IBM's tailored railroad-management programs, several million
custom-designed punch cards printed at IBM's print shop at 6 Rymarska
Street, across from the Warsaw Ghetto, and the railway's leased
machines were under the New York-controlled subsidiary in Warsaw, not
the German subsidiary, Dehomag. The distinction is important. Since the
disclosures about IBM's involvement in the Holocaust first surfaced in
February 2001, the company has continually pointed to supposed lack of
control of its German subsidiary. But Watson Business Machines was
established in Poland by IBM New York itself, at the time of Germany's
invasion.

"I knew they were not German machines," recalled Krzemieniecki. "The
labels were in English. . . . The person maintaining and repairing the
machines spread the diagrams out sometimes. The language of the
diagrams of those machines was only in English."

I asked Krzemieniecki if the machine logo plates were in German,
Polish, or English. He answered, "English. It said, 'Business
Machines.' " I asked, "Do you mean 'International Business Machines'?"
Krzemieniecki replied, "No, 'Watson Business Machines.' "

Dwarfing the railroad operation in Poland described by Krzemieniecki
was a massive Hollerith statistical center at 24 Murner Street in
Kraków, staffed by more than 500 punching and tabulating employees and
equipped with dozens of machines. New research has uncovered the
existence of a previously unknown Berlin agency, the Central Office for
Foreign Statistics and Foreign Country Research, which continuously
received detailed data from the Kraków statistical center.

By late 1939, the Reich's Jewish-population statistics wizard, Fritz
Arlt, had been appointed head of the Population and Welfare
Administration of the General Government. A Hollerith expert and
colleague of Adolf Eichmann, Arlt edited his own statistical
publication, Political Information Service of the General Government,
which featured such data as Jews per square meter, with projections of
decrease from forced labor and starvation.

"We can count on the mortality of some subjugated groups," one Arlt
article asserted. "These include babies and those over the age of 65,
as well as those who are basically weak and ill in all other age
groups."

The data-hungry Nazis created an expanded Statistics Office in Kraków
in 1940. The expansion was dependent on more leased machines, spare
parts, company technicians, and a guaranteed continued supply of
millions of additional IBM cards. IBM's European general manager,
Werner Lier, visited Berlin in early October 1941 to oversee IBM New
York's deployment of machines in Poland and other countries. In two
detailed reports, written from Berlin and sent to Watson, as well as to
other senior staff in New York, Lier reported moving a small group of
Polish machines into Romania for the Jewish census there. The Polish
machines would soon be replaced by others.

The expanded Statistics Office assured Berlin in a November 30, 1941,
report that its Hollerith operation would employ equipment more modern
than the old IBM machinery found in most pre-war Polish data agencies,
thus allowing the Nazis to launch a plethora of "large-scale censuses."
Also planned was a long list of "continuous statistical surveys,"
including those for population, domestic migration, and causes of
death. Moreover, regular surveys of food and agriculture were "coupled
with summary surveys of the population and ethnic groups." Tabulating
food supplies against ethnic numbers allowed the Nazis to ration
caloric intake as they subjected the Jewish community to starvation.

The Statistics Office's report concluded, "Our work is just beginning
to bear fruit."

Once the U.S. Entered the war in December 1941, Germany appointed a
Nazi devoted to IBM, Hermann Fellinger, as enemy-property custodian. He
maintained the original staff and managers of Watson Business Machines,
keeping it productive for the Reich and profitable for IBM. The
subsidiary now reported to IBM's Geneva office, and from there to New
York. The company was not looted, its leased machines were not seized.
"Royalties" were remitted to IBM through Geneva. Lease payments and
profits were preserved in special accounts. After the war, IBM
recovered all its Polish profits and machines.

Since the war, IBM, having left Madison Avenue for new headquarters in
suburban Armonk, has obstructed, or refused to cooperate with,
virtually every major independent author writing about its history,
according to numerous published introductions, prefaces, and
acknowledgments.

But silence cannot alter the historical documentation. A tangle of
subsidiaries throughout Europe helped IBM reap the benefits of its
partnership with Nazi Germany. After all, "business" was IBM's middle
name.

The IBM Response
Asked about IBM's Polish subsidiary's involvement with the Nazis, IBM
spokeswoman Carol Makovich in New York repeated the same official
statement she issued more than a year ago: "IBM does not have much
information about this period." Asked a dozen times, Makovich simply
repeated the phrase.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Edwin Black is the author of IBM and the Holocaust: The Strategic
Alliance Between Nazi Germany and America's Most Powerful Corporation
(Crown Books, 2001, and Three Rivers Press, 2002), just released in
paperback with new information. He can be reached at
www.edwinblack.com.

-----------

namaste;
bodhi

.



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