Ubezpieczenia społeczne Żydów na ziemiach polskich okupowanych przez hitlerowskie Niemcy
Author:
Sroka, Łukasz Tomasz
Meus, Konrad
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 139, Studia Historica 14 (2013), s. [229]-241
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
ŻydziII wojna światowa
Generalne Gubernatorstwo
III Rzesza
ubezpieczenia społeczne
praca przymusowa
praca dobrowolna
World War II
General Government
Third Reich
Jews
social insurance
forced labour
voluntary labour
Date: 2013
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Jews were fighting for their lives every day. Apart from forced labour, they also undertook voluntary
low-paid jobs in German companies. The phenomenon occurred both in the General Government
and the areas incorporated by Third Reich. Unfortunately, it is not possible to provide statistical
data regarding Jewish workers who received salary and were subject to obligatory payment of social
insurance contributions. However, it is certain that the data might pertain to a few or even a few dozen
thousand people.
When it comes to the General Government, the issue of paying social insurance contributions for Jewish
workers is obvious. The phenomenon is corroborated by the quoted archival documents. On their basis,
we can state that obligatory social insurance contributions were one of the numerous methods used
to discriminate Jews during World War II and to ruin them economically, especially that Jews were
deprived of the possibility of receiving benefits that resulted from those contributions (there was an
exception concerning sickness allowances). In those circumstances, one can assume that financial
resources gathered in this way were used to support Nazi Germany.