IBM at Auschwitz, New Documents

Edwin Black, Reader Supported News

28 February 12

Newly-released documents expose more explicitly the details of IBM's
pivotal role in the Holocaust - all six phases: identification,
expulsion from society, confiscation, ghettoization, deportation, and
even extermination. Moreover, the documents portray with crystal
clarity the personal involvement and micro-management of IBM president
Thomas J. Watson in the company's co-planning and co-organizing of
Hitler's campaign to destroy the Jews.

IBM's twelve-year alliance with the Third Reich was first revealed in
my book IBM and the Holocaust, published simultaneously in 40
countries in February 2001. It was based on some 20,000 documents
drawn from archives in seven countries. IBM never denied any of the
information in the book; and despite thousands of media and communal
requests, as well as published articles, the company has remained
silent.

The new "expanded edition" contains 32 pages of never-before-published
internal IBM correspondence, State Department and Justice Department
memos, and concentration camp documents that graphically chronicle
IBM's actions and what they knew during the 12-year Hitler regime. On
the anniversary of the release of the original book, the new edition
was released on February 26, 2012 at a special live global streaming
event at Yeshiva University's Furst Hall, sponsored by the American
Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists together with a coalition of
other groups.

Among the newly-released documents and archival materials are secret
1941 correspondence setting up the Dutch subsidiary of IBM to work in
tandem with the Nazis, company President Thomas Watson's personal
approval for the 1939 release of special IBM alphabetizing machines to
help organize the rape of Poland and the deportation of Polish Jews,
as well as the IBM Concentration Camp Codes including IBM's code for
death by Gas Chamber. Among the newly published photos of the punch
cards is the one developed for the statistician who reported directly
to Himmler and Eichmann.

The significance of the incriminating documents requires context.

Punch cards, also called Hollerith cards after IBM founder Herman
Hollerith, were the forerunner of the computers that IBM is famous for
today. These cards stored information in holes punched in the rows and
columns, which were then "read" by a tabulating machine. The system
worked like a player piano - but this one was devoted to the devil's
music. First designed to track people and organize a census, the
Hollerith system was later adapted to any tabulation or information
task.

>From the first moments of the Hitler regime in 1933, IBM used its
exclusive punch card technology and its global monopoly on information
technology to organize, systematize, and accelerate Hitler's
anti-Jewish program, step by step facilitating the tightening noose.
The punch cards, machinery, training, servicing, and special project
work, such as population census and identification, was managed
directly by IBM headquarters in New York, and later through its
subsidiaries in Germany, known as Deutsche Hollerith-Maschinen
Gesellschaft (DEHOMAG), Poland, Holland, France, Switzerland, and
other European countries.

Among the punch cards published are two for the SS, including one for
the SS Rassenamt, or Race Office, which specialized in racial
selections and coordinated with many other Reich offices. A third card
was custom-crafted by IBM for Richard Korherr, a top Nazi statistician
and expert in Jewish demographics who reported directly to
Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler and who also worked with Adolf Eichmann.
Himmler and Eichmann were architects of the extermination phase of the
Holocaust. All three punch cards bear the proud indicia of IBM's
German subsidiary, DEHOMAG. They illustrate the nature of the end
users who relied upon IBM's information technology.

In 1937, with war looming and the world shocked at the increasingly
merciless Nazi persecution of the Jews, Hitler bestowed upon Watson a
special award - created specifically for the occasion - to honor
extraordinary service by a foreigner to the Third Reich. The medal,
the Order of the German Eagle with Star, bedecked with swastikas, was
to be worn on a sash over the heart. Watson returned the medal years
later in June 1940 as a reaction to public outrage about the medal
during the bombing of Paris. The return of this medal has been used by
IBM apologists to show Watson had second thoughts about his alliance
with the Reich. But a newly released copy of a subsequent letter dated
June 10, 1941, drafted by IBM's New York office, confirms that IBM
headquarters personally directed the activities of its Dutch
subsidiary set up in 1940 to identify and liquidate the Jews of
Holland. Hence, while IBM engaged in the public relations maneuver of
returning the medal, the company was actually quietly expanding its
role in Hitler's Holocaust. Similar subsidiaries, sometimes named as a
variant of "Watson Business Machines," were set up in Poland, Vichy
France, and elsewhere on the Continent in cadence with the Nazi
takeover of Europe.

Particularly powerful are the newly-released copies of the IBM
concentration camp codes. IBM maintained a customer site, known as the
Hollerith Department, in virtually every concentration camp to sort or
process punch cards and track prisoners. The codes show IBM's
numerical designation for various camps. Auschwitz was 001, Buchenwald
was 002; Dachau was 003, and so on. Various prisoner types were
reduced to IBM numbers, with 3 signifying homosexual, 9 for
anti-social, and 12 for Gypsy. The IBM number 8 designated a Jew.
Inmate death was also reduced to an IBM digit: 3 represented death by
natural causes, 4 by execution, 5 by suicide, and code 6 designated
"special treatment" in gas chambers. IBM engineers had to create
Hollerith codes to differentiate between a Jew who had been worked to
death and one who had been gassed, then print the cards, configure the
machines, train the staff, and continuously maintain the fragile
systems every two weeks on site in the concentration camps.

Newly-released photographs show the Hollerith Bunker at Dachau. It
housed at least two dozen machines, mainly controlled by the SS. The
foreboding concrete Hollerith blockhouse, constructed of reinforced
concrete and steel, was designed to withstand the most intense Allied
aerial bombardment. Those familiar with Nazi bomb-proof shelters will
recognize the advanced square-cornered pillbox design reserved for the
Reich's most precious buildings and operations. IBM equipment was
among the Reich's most important weapons, not only in its war against
the Jews, but in its general military campaigns and control of railway
traffic. Watson personally approved expenditures to add bomb shelters
to DEHOMAG installations because the cost was born by the company.
Such costs cut into IBM's profit margin. Watson's approval was
required because he received a one-percent commission on all Nazi
business profits.

Two telling U.S. government memos, now published, are remarkable for
their telling irony. The first is a State Department memo, dated
December 3, 1941, just four days before the attack on Pearl Harbor and
as the Nazis were being openly accused of genocide in Europe. On that
day in 1941, IBM's top attorney, Harrison Chauncey, visited the State
Department to express qualms about the company's extensive involvement
with Hitler. The State Department memo recorded that Chauncey feared
"that his company may some day be blamed for cooperating with the
Germans."

The second is a Justice Department memo generated during a federal
investigation of IBM for trading with the enemy. Economic Warfare
Section chief investigator Howard J. Carter prepared the memo for his
supervisors describing the company's collusion with the Hitler regime.
Carter wrote: "What Hitler has done to us through his economic
warfare, one of our own American corporations has also done ... Hence
IBM is in a class with the Nazis." He ended his memo: "The entire
world citizenry is hampered by an international monster."

At a time when the Watson name and the IBM image is being laundered by
whiz computers that can answer questions on TV game shows, it is
important to remember that Thomas Watson and his corporate behemoth
were guilty of genocide. The Treaty on Genocide, Article 2, defines
genocide as "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in
part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group." In Article 3,
the treaty states that among the "acts [that] shall be punishable,"
are the ones in subsection (e), that is "complicity in genocide." As
for who shall be punished, the Treaty specifies the perpetrators in
Article 4: "Persons committing genocide or any of the other acts
enumerated in Article 3 shall be punished, whether they are
constitutionally responsible rulers, public officials, or private
individuals."

International Business Machines, and its president Thomas J. Watson,
committed genocide by any standard. It was never about the
antisemitism. It was never about the National Socialism. It was always
about the money. Business was their middle name.

________________________________________

Edwin Black is the author of IBM and the Holocaust, The Strategic
Alliance Between Nazi Germany and America's Most Powerful Corporation,
newly released in the Expanded Edition.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work.
Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back
to Reader Supported News.
-- 
Jim Devine / "In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to
be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But
in poetry, it's the exact opposite." -- Paul Dirac
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to