Herbert Backe

Herbert Backe
Backe in U.S. custody, c. 1946–47
Minister
Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture
In office
6 April 1944 – 23 May 1945
(Acting from 23 May 1942)
ChancellorAdolf Hitler
Preceded byRichard Walther Darré
Succeeded byPosition abolished
State Secretary
Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture
In office
27 October 1933 – 6 April 1944
ChancellorAdolf Hitler
Preceded byHans Joachim von Rohr
Succeeded byHans-Joachim Riecke
Personal details
Born
Herbert Friedrich Wilhelm Backe

(1896-05-01)1 May 1896
Batumi, Kutais Governorate, Russian Empire
Died6 April 1947(1947-04-06) (aged 50)
Nuremberg Prison, Bavaria, Allied-occupied Germany
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
NationalityGerman
Political partyNazi Party
Alma materUniversity of Göttingen
ProfessionAgronomist

Herbert Friedrich Wilhelm Backe (1 May 1896 – 6 April 1947) was a German politician and SS Senior group leader (SS-Obergruppenführer) in Nazi Germany who served as State Secretary and Minister in the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture. He was a doctrinaire racial ideologue, a long-time associate of Richard Walther Darré and a personal friend of Reinhard Heydrich.[1] He developed and implemented the Operation Hunger that envisioned death by starvation of millions of Slavic and Jewish "useless eaters" following Operation Barbarossa, the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union.

Operation Hunger was developed during the planning phase of Operation Barbarossa and provided for diverting and redirecting of Ukrainian food stuffs away from central and northern Russia for the benefit of the invading army and the population in Germany. As a result, millions of local civilians died in the German-occupied territories. He was arrested in 1945 at the end of World War II and was due to be tried for war crimes at Nuremberg in the Ministries Trial but he committed suicide in his prison cell in 1947.

Biography

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Herbert Backe was born in Batumi, Georgia, the son of a retired Prussian lieutenant turned trader.[2] His mother was a Caucasus German, whose family had emigrated from Württemberg to Russia in the early 19th century.[2] He studied at the Tbilisi gymnasium (grammar school) from 1905 and was interned on the outbreak of World War I as an enemy alien because he was a citizen of Prussia. This experience of being imprisoned for being German and witnessing the beginning of the Russian Revolution made Backe an anti-communist.[2]

Backe moved to Germany during the Russian Civil War with the help of the Swedish Red Cross. In Germany, he initially worked as a laborer, and enrolled to study Agronomy at the University of Göttingen in 1920. After completing his degree he briefly worked in agriculture and then became an assistant lecturer on agricultural geography at Hanover Technical University. In 1926, he submitted his doctoral dissertation[a] to the University of Göttingen, but it was rejected.[2] "Backe's thesis was in fact a manifesto for racial imperialism", where an upper class of German occupiers would fight against the local, 'ethnically inferior', population for the control of their foodstuff.[3]

Backe joined the SA in 1922 and in 1925 in Hanover the Nazi Party.[4] After the dissolution of the regional political entity (Gau) for South-Hanover, Backe let his membership expire.[4] In 1927 Backe was inspector and administrator on a big farm in Pommern. In 1928 he was married to Ursula. With financial support of his father-in-law, in November 1928 he became tenant of domain Hornsen, with around 950 acres in the district of Alfeld.[5][6] He proceeded to lead the farm successfully. After the Nazi seizure of power, Backe became the State Secretary in the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture on 27 October 1933,[7] and in the same month he joined the SS.[8] Backe became a member of the Prussian State Council and, in October 1936, he was made the agricultural representative to Hermann Göring's Four Year Plan.[7] When the minister of Food and Agriculture Richard Walther Darré was placed on an extended leave of absence on 23 May 1942, Backe was charged with carrying out his responsibilities, though nominally remaining State Secretary. Backe also was charged with Darré's responsibilities as Reich Farmers Leader in the Nazi Party national leadership. On 9 November 1942, Backe was promoted to SS-Senior Group Leader (SS-Obergruppenführer).[9] On 6 April 1944, Hitler finally named Backe minister of the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture.[10]

Backe was a prominent member of the younger generation of Nazi technocrats who occupied second-tier administrative positions in the Nazi system such as Reinhard Heydrich, Werner Best, and Wilhelm Stuckart. Like Stuckart, who held the real power in the Interior Ministry (officially led by Wilhelm Frick) and Wilhelm Ohnesorge in the Reich Postal Ministry (officially led by the conservative Paul Eltz-Rübenach), Backe was the de facto Minister of Food and Agriculture under Darré, even before he formally took over those duties.[11]

Hunger Plan

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Backe in 1942

Backe was nominated by the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, Alfred Rosenberg, as the Secretary of State of the Reichskommissariat Ukraine where he could implement his radical and racist policies, the Hunger Plan (Der Hungerplan also Der Backe-Plan). Its objective was to inflict deliberate mass starvation on the Slavic civilian populations under German occupation by directing all food supplies to the German home population and the German Armed forces on the Eastern Front.[12] The most important accomplice of Herbert Backe was Hans-Joachim Riecke, who headed the agricultural section of the Economic Staff East. According to the historian Timothy Snyder, as a result of Backe's plan, "4.2 million Soviet citizens (largely Russians, Belarusians, and Ukrainians) were starved by the German occupiers in 1941–1944".[13]

Arrest and suicide

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Backe was retained as Reichsminister of Food and Agriculture in Hitler's will and he remained in this position until 23 May 1945 in the short-lived Flensburg Government led by Grossadmiral Karl Dönitz. After the German Instrument of Surrender, Backe was ordered by the allies, together with Julius Dorpmüller, to fly to Eisenhower's headquarters in Reims.[14][b] He was surprised to be arrested; he thought the Americans would need him as an expert to avoid hunger problems. Backe prepared himself for an expected conversation with General Dwight D. Eisenhower.[15] In a letter to his wife on 31 January 1946, he defended Nazism as one of the "greatest ideas of all times", which "found its strongest blow in the National Socialist agricultural policy".[16][15]

In Allied captivity, Backe was interrogated during the Nuremberg trials of 21 February and 14 March 1947.[17] In his prison cell in the Nuremberg war criminals' prison, Backe wrote two treatises: a so-called big report about his life and his work on Nazism, and also on 31 January 1946, a testament outline for his wife Ursula and his four children. Because of his fear that he was to be delivered to the Soviet Union,[18] he committed suicide by hanging himself in his prison cell on 6 April 1947.[19][20]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ German: Die russische Getreidewirtschaft als Grundlage der Land- und Volkswirtschaft Russlands [The Russian Grain Economy as the Basis for the Agrarian and People Economy of Russia] (self-published version, with a run of 10,000 copies, submitted in 1941 to the German authorities in occupied Soviet Union). [2]
  2. ^ Dönitz wrote: "Mitte Mai bekamen der Verkehrsminister Dr. Dorpmüller und der Ernährungsminister Backe von den Alliierten Anweisung, ins amerikanische Hauptquartier zu fliegen. Da sie in den Problemen ihres Ressorts besonders häufig mit den alliierten Kontrollbehörden in Mürwik verkehrt hatten, glaubten sie, der Flug nach Reims solle ihrer zukünftigen praktischen Mitarbeit auf ihren Tätigkeitsgebieten dienen. Wir hörten jedoch nichts mehr von ihnen. Sehr viel später erfuhr ich, daß zum mindesten Backe nicht zur Mitarbeit, sondern in die Gefangenschaft weggeflogen war." ["In mid-May the Minister of transport Dr. Dorpmüller and the Minister of Food and Agriculture Backe were instructed by the Allies to fly to the American headquarters. Since they had frequently interacted on the problems of their departments with the Allied Control Authorities in Mürwik, they believed that the flight to Reims would serve their future cooperation in their fields of activity. However, we heard nothing more of them. Very much later, I learned that at least Backe was flown out not to cooperate, but to be put in captivity.]"

References

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  1. ^ Tooze 2008, p. 478.
  2. ^ a b c d e Heim 2008, p. 19.
  3. ^ Tooze 2008, p. 179.
  4. ^ a b Lehmann 1993, p. 4.
  5. ^ Lehmann 1993, p. 3.
  6. ^ Kehrl, Hans (1973). Krisenmanager im Dritten Reich. 6 Jahre Frieden, 6 Jahre Krieg: Erinnerungen (in German). Critical comments and afterword by Erwin Viefhaus. Düsseldorf: Droste. pp. 49–50. ISBN 978-3770003556.
  7. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 52.
  8. ^ Heim 2008, p. 20.
  9. ^ Williams 2015, p. 53.
  10. ^ "Reich Changes Food Minister". The New York Times. 7 April 1944. p. 2.
  11. ^ Gesine 2009, pp. 50–4.
  12. ^ Tooze 2008, p. 668.
  13. ^ Snyder, Timothy (2010). Bloodlands. Europe between Hitler and Stalin. London: The Bodley Head. p. 411. Compare Gesine 2009, pp. 57–62.
  14. ^ Kershaw, Ian (2011). Das Ende. Kampf bis in den Untergang NS-Deutschlands 1944/45. München: DVA. pp. 511–2. ISBN 978-3-421-05807-2, citing Dönitz, Karl (1958). Zehn Jahre und zwanzig Tage. Bonn: Athenäum. pp. 470–1.
  15. ^ a b Gesine 2009, p. 63.
  16. ^ From a letter to his wife, 31 January 1946.
  17. ^ Records of the United States Nuernberg War Crimes trials Interrogations 1946–1949. (PDF; 186 kB), published 1977.
  18. ^ "Arrest German Reich Heads: To Face Trial." Lodi News-Sentinel, 24 May 1945. Retrieved: 19 March 2013.
  19. ^ Gesine 2009, p. 64.
  20. ^ Lehmann 1993, p. 10 mentions a different date for Backe's death: 7 April 1947.

Bibliography

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