FORCED LABOUR
GIRLS FOR GERMAN FARMS
A great number of young Germans, chiefly girls under 25 years of age,- ar« being drafted for work regarded by Nazi authorities as of jState' and political importance, cables, Sigrid Schultz from Berlin to the "Chicago Tribune." Under a decree issued by Field-Mar-shal Hermann Wilhelm Goering as chieE of the Nazi Four-Year Plan for economic independence, authorities are empowered to conscript every ablebodied German for work. The penalty for failure to comply with the order is six months in prison.
Many of the girls summoned to the labour exchanges protested in vain and sometimes in tears against the work allotted to them. In most eSses it was agricultural work or labour in armament factories. Some of the girls held comparatively well-paying jobs as stenographers or as domestic servants. They were unwilling to change these occupations for jobs as farm helpers with pay of. 11 dollars (£2 15s) a week, not counting deductions for taxes, social insurance fee, and cost of transportation. ~.■■' ' \ [ Since the farm jobs allotted to the girls were for the most part some distance away from their homes transportation fares represent a considerable deduction in pay. One girl pleaded that she was to be married in three weeks. She and the other girls, who protested against the work given them, were told by labour exchange officials that they were liable to the maximum sentence lof six months in prison and confiscation pf their labour book. This woul<S make it impossible for them to accept a new job. . The Reich Labour Trustee of Brandenburg today ruled that wages oi stenographers may not be increased unless they get less than £9 15s s. ! month. If a stenographer takes another ijob her new employer is.forbidden to j raise her salary until after she has worked six months. ■■• "•; * .- ■
A Berlin Court faied an employer £80 for increasing the pay of hij staff without permission of the authorities.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 5, 6 July 1939, Page 17
Word Count
321FORCED LABOUR Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 5, 6 July 1939, Page 17
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