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The Madagascar Plan, July 1940
The Jewish Question in the Peace Treaty
The
approaching victory gives Germany the possibility, and in my view also the duty, of solving the Jewish question in Europe.
The desirable solution is: all Jews out of Europe. The task of the Foreign Ministry in this is:
a) To include this
demand in the Peace Treaty and to insist on it also by means of separate negotiations with the European countries not involved
in the Peace Treaty;
b) to secure the territory necessary for the settlement of the Jews in the Peace Treaty, and to
determine principles for the cooperation of the enemy countries in this problem;
c) to determine the position under
international law of the new Jewish overseas settlement;
d) as preparatory measures:
1) clarification of the
wishes and plans of the departments concerned of the Party, State and Research organizations in Germany, and the coordination
of these plans with the wishes of the Reich Foreign Minister, including the following:
2) preparation of a survey of
the factual data available in various places (number of Jews in the various countries), use of their financial assets through
an international bank;
3) negotiations with our friend, Italy, on these matters.
With regard to beginning the
preparatory work, Section D III has already approached the Reich Foreign Minister via the Department Germany [interior affairs],
and has been instructed by him to start on the preparatory work without delay. There have already been discussions with the
Office of the Reichsfuehrer SS in the Ministry of Interior and several departments of the Party. These departments approve
the following plan of Section D III:
Section D III proposes as a solution of the Jewish question: In the Peace Treaty
France must make the island of Madagascar available for the solution of the Jewish question, and to resettle and compensate
the approximately 25,000 French citizens living there. The island will be transferred to Germany under a mandate. Diégo Suarez
Bay and the port of Antsirane, which are [sea-] strategically important, will become German naval bases (if the Navy wishes,
these naval bases could be extended also to the harbors open road-steads Tamatave, Andevorante, Mananjara, etc.). In addition
to these naval bases, suitable areas of the country will be excluded from the Jewish territory (Judenterritorium) for the
construction of air bases. That part of the island not required for military purposes will be placed under the administration
of a German Police Governor, who will be under the administration of the Reichsfuehrer SS. Apart from this, the Jews will
have their own administration in this territory: their own mayors, police, postal and railroad administration, etc. The Jews
will be jointly liable for the value of the island. For this purpose their former European financial assets will be transferred
for use to a European bank to be established for this purpose. Insofar as the assets are not sufficient to pay for the land
which they will receive, and for the purchase of necessary commodities in Europe for the development of the island, the Jews
will be able to receive bank credits from the same bank.
As Madagascar will only be a Mandate, the Jews living there
will not acquire German citizenship. On the other hand, the Jews deported to Madagascar will lose their citizenship of European
countries from the date of deportation. Instead, they will become residents of the Mandate of Madagascar.
This arrangement
would prevent the possible establishment in Palestine by the Jews of a Vatican State of their own, and the opportunity for
them to exploit for their own purposes the symbolic importance which Jerusalem has for the Christian and Mohammedan parts
of the world. Moreover, the Jews will remain in German hands as a pledge for the future good behavior of the members of their
race in America.
Use can be made for propaganda purposes of the generosity shown by Germany in permitting cultural,
economic, administrative and legal self-administration to the Jews; it can be emphasized at the same time that our German
sense of responsibility towards the world forbids us to make the gift of a sovereign state to a race which has had no independent
state for thousands of years: this would still require the test of history.
Berlin, July 3, 1940
signed Rademacher
NG-2586-B.
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