The double deportation

From Cairo Montenotte concentration camp to forced labour at Gusen


The concentration camp at Cairo Montenotte (Savona) was operational from the end of February 1943  until 8 Ocotober of that same year, housing around 1,256 Slovanian and Croation male internees who had been arrested  on charges of aiding and abetting the partians or of belonging to their families.   The arrests were part of  an initiative known as "measures to control the rebels", implemented by the   fascist regime in the provinces of Gorizia, Trieste, Pula and Fiume from the beginning of 1943.


The internments in this camp - which even continued during the 45 days of the Badoglio government – had been ordained by the Special Royal Police Inspectorate for Venezia Giulia, purposely set up  by the Ministry of the Interior at the beginning of 1943 under the administration of   Giuseppe Guidi.


The commandant of the camp was Colonel Alessandro Passavanti, who, according to a witness, "was an avid fascist and often threatened  to line us up and shoot us"1.

When on 25 July 1943 the news came through of  the arrest of Mussolini,   Colonel Passavanti, faced with scenes of jubilation on the part of the  internees, rimonstrated with them severely, threatening to kill them all as if they were dogs2.

On 8 September 1943, the day of the Italian armistice, Colonel  Passavanti  forbade anyone to leave the camp3. The camp chaplain reported in a missive to his superiors that orders to reinforce the guard  had been issued  on the evening of the 8th, and that the Germans had taken possession of the camp on the morning of the 9th, forcing everyone to remain where they were upon pain of  internment in Germany. The chaplain spoke of negotiations being entered into (but it is not clear whether he was referring to  Italians or the internees) in the hope that the latter might be freed,  but he pointed out that there were little hope of this taking plaace. It seemed that the Germans wanted to grant them release on probation: the alternative would be the transfer of the entire camp to Germany4.

At the same time the prison camp guards were absenting themselves without leave in the course of  a few days:   on 11 September 80 soldiers slipped away to join the underground movement, the followiing day another 50 did likewise, and on 13  September yet another 32 followed their example. On 14 September only  42 remained on duty, mostly Calabrians, Sicilians and Apulians who did not know how best to set out for home5.

Given the situation, on 13 September General Guassardi, in charge of the Military Defence of Genoa, ordered  Passavanti to hand over  the camp to the Germans6.

According to a report by Passavanti himself,  the period between 14 and 21 September was particularly chaotic:  the Germans showed no particular interest in taking over the camp and indeed ordered him to remain in command with the few men who were still on duty, sending him only minimal reinforcements.

The situation  partially resolved itself only around the 23rd, when Passavanti and his superiors succeeded in reconstituting a Camp Guard made up of about 60 soldiers7.

Towards the end of the month the camp was visited by some officers belonging to  the German State Police; on 5 October, despite the fact that  the Italian Military Command in Genoa had ordered that the camp was to remain unter the command of Passavanti,  the German officers informed the latter  that it would be closed on 8 October as it was needed by the military8.

During that period some  of the internees were released (about 170 were ill or  infirm although 40 were escapees)9.  According to one witness,  among  those released  were some indiviuals  who had collaborated with Passavanti,  playing a significant role in restraining the internees at the time of the Italian armistice by convincing them to remain calm, given that  they would soon be going home10.

All the others were deported to Mauthausen.

Their transport, consisting of thirty cattle wagons, left  Cairo on 8 October  and arrived at Mauthausen on the 12th,  only to to be diverted the next day to the sub-camp of Gusen11. The number of  registered deportees came to 985 (according to the Slovenian historian Filipič there were  990, but during the journey a few  managed to escape).

The living conditions in Gusen were dramatic. The reports  describing  the camp in terms of daily life, work at the quarries, the unloading and loading of  wagons and much else, paint a picture of death caused by work.

As a consequence about 200 people lost their lives  in the first three months; some 80 Croatian deportees were freed upon intervention by the  Croatian Ustaša regime (the fascist movement that nominally ruled the Independent State of Croatia during World War II); another 342 were diverted to become forced labour in German industries or agricultural complexes: finally, 358 persons, mostly elderly and sick, were freed on 24  January 1944 and sent back to their homes, often in conditions which had brought them to the limit of survival. In chronological order, the following releases and transfers occurred:

-on 23 November 1943 70 internees who were minors (born between 1925 and 1929) left  the camp.  In actual fact they were sent as  forced labour to  Linz, to sub-camp number 3912;

-On 25 November 1943 another 80 internees of various ages were released, mostly native to Rijeka and Sušak., following  intervention by the Croatian Ustaša regime. When they arrived in Zagreb they were handed over to the Croatian Red Cross before being freed13;

-On 8 and 9 December,  272 persons were released, including the most senior deportee, Jernej Martinčić of Senožeče, who had been born on 28 June 1875, had been arrested on 10 February 1943 and who died on 16 June 1945. They were also  transferred to Linz14.

-on 24 January the last group of 358 persons was finally released, to be sent home and not to Linz15.

According to Filipič, the liberation of this group should be considered as one of the many demagogic gestures made by the Germans in the hope of eliciting the support of the local population in the newly-established  Adriatisches Künstenland and preventing them from going to swell the ranks of the partisans16. This interpretation also seems plausible  in the light of a note, made by the  headquarters of the frontier police at Gorizia  upon the arrival on 26 January of three hundred Slovenians, who after having been interned in Cairo Montenotte  had been sent  by the Germans to Linz, which pointed out that in fact this transfer had been anything but  positive. Ìt defines their physical condition  as "pitiful ", and records  that the Germans had forbidden  them to speak of the conditions in the camp in which they had been held. The short note continues: "Clearly depressed, they have provoked a sense of consternation and distrust among the local Slovenian population, casting doubts upon  the current  policy  of the Axis Powers and tending to intensify the reaction of the Slovenians to the politics of assimiliation which have been put into operation over the past  twenty years in Venezia Giulia "17.

In all, the trainload that left from  Cairo Montenotte was without doubt the largest contingent sent to Mauthausen from Italy. The group from Cairo Montenotte represented just under 25% of the total number of  Slovenians deported to Mauthausen and its sub-camps (990 deportees, of whom 875 were Slovenes from  the hinterland of Trieste and Gorizia and 115 were Croatian Istrians18, out of a total of 4,153)19.

There was a similar  correlation between the total number of Slovenians dying in the camp (about 1,500)20 and those from Cairo (217, whose deaths took place  during the  three months up to January 25, 1944 due to the terrible conditions in the camp at Gusen)21.

For a long period of time the the German authorities considered that the transport which left Cairo was carrying Italians. Similiarly,  the 1,657 Slovenians deported after 8 September 1943 from the Italian zones would also have been considered to be of  Italian nationality22.

Milovan Pisarri (2016)

Note 1

Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, p. 15.


Note 2

France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 338.

Note 3
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 338.
Note 4
Archivio diocesano di Trieste, Fondo ordinario della Diocesi di Trieste e Capodistria, prot. 253/1943 ( Diocesan Archives of Trieste, Documentary Collection  of the Diocese of Trieste and Koper, Prot. 253/1943)
Note 5
Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, pp. 64-65.
Note 6
Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, p. 65.
Note 7
Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, p. 67.
Note 8
Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, p. 68.
Note 9

France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 332 and p. 336; and Adriano Brignone, Nilo Calvini, Campo di concentramento No. 95, 1941-1945, Cairo Montenotte, municipality of Cairo Montenotte, Cairo Montenotte, 1995, p. 68.


Note 10

Arhiv Jugoslavije (AJ), 110-256-585.


Note 11

France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 339 and p. 588


Note 12
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 347.
Note 13
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, pp. 347-348.
Note 14
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 348.
Note 15
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 348.
Note 16
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 346.
Note 17

ARS (Archivio della Repubblica slovena), 1829, Gk, TE 79, PE 1196, N. 0801-E3, Gorizia police headquarters.


Note 18
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 587.
Note 19
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 581.
Note 20
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 581.
Note 21
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 346 and p. 588.
Note 22
France Filipič, Slovenes v Mauthausenu, Cankarjeva Zal., Ljubljana 1998, p. 346 and p. 588.
AEL Arbeitserziehungslager
The workers' re-education camps (AEL) were set up in 1940 by the Gestapo in order to re-educate individuals accused of acts of industrial sabotage or who, for some reason, were held to be “reluctant” to work. In effect, these camps were also a means of exploiting forced labour. It has been estimated that in Germany and the German-occupied territories around 200 Arbeitserziehungslager had been set up in which around 500,000 people had been imprisoned.
Bau-und Arbeits Battallion B.A.B.
During the Second World War the Germans established prisoner of war units known as Bau-und Arbeits Battaillon (shortened to B.A.B.). The B.A.B. were made up on average of 600 prisoners of war who were used as forced labour. The distinguishing feature of these forced labour units was that they were mobile; unlike the prisoners who were being held in the Stalag, these workers were not stationed in a specific location but were moved around according to necessity.
I.G. Farben
The I.G. Farben Company was founded in 1925 from the merger of several different German industries. During the Second World War it was the main producer of chemicals for Nazi Germany. I.G. Farben made more use of forced labour than any other industry, particularly during the construction of the plants at Auschwitz. The directors of I.G. Farben were among the accused at the Nuremberg Trials of 1947/48. At the end of the war the decision was taken to split up the industry into its original component parts.
Kriegsgefangenen Arbeitskommando
The Arbeitskommando were work camps detachments for prisoners who had been captured by the Germans. Usually made up of a few hundred prisoners, they were set up near to places of employment (factories, mines, agricultural establishments etc.). They were run from a central Stalag (prisoner of war camp), which may have been responsible for hundreds of work detachments. The work detachments for Allied prisoners of war were visited on a regular basis by representatives of the Red Cross.
Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro (Military Work Inspectorate)
The Military Work Inspectorate was set up in October 1943 with the aim of organising a workforce which was to construct territorial defences for the Italian Republic of Salò and repair the damage caused by air raids. Known as the “Organizzazione Paladino” (Paladino Organisation) after its founder and commanding officer, and operating in strict collaboration with, and at times directly employed by, the Germans, it took on several tens of thousands of workers.
Todt Organisation
The Todt Organisation was begun in Germany at the end of the 'Thirties with the aim of setting up a workforce which would build military defences. The idea of Fritz Todd, who was also its director until his death in 1942, during the war it exploited forced labour in German-occupied countries. In Italy it played a fundamental role in the construction of defences along the Appenines in support of the Wehrmacht, employing tens of thousands of men.
Paladino Francesco
Born in Scilla (Reggio Calabria) in 1890, he volunteered for the Corps of Engineers as a telegraphist in 1907. In 1908 he rose to the rank of sergeant, a rank he held throughout the War in Libya. In 1914 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant and during the First World War he was made captain.
Afterwards he remained in the Armed Forces and in 1932 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1936 he took part in the War in Ethiopia, during which he was promoted to the rank of colonel.
In the Second World War, he returned to Italy after participating in the Greek campaign and was assigned to the Bolzano Corps. In 1942 he was promoted to brigader general. After the armistice he joined the Italian Social Republic for which he created the Military Labour Inspectorate.
He finally retired in 1945 and in 1970 he was awarded the honorary grade of major general.
He died in 1974.
Sauckel Fritz

Fritz Sauckel, born in 1894, was a local Nazi party official. In 1942 he was nominated plenipotentiary for the organisation of work throughout all the German-occupied territories. In practice, he was responsible for the compulsory engagement of forced labour. In Italy his organisation tried to round up hundreds of thousands of men to send to the German Reich, with scarce results. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to death, the sentence being carried out in 1946.

Speer Albert
Albert Speer, born in 1905, was an architect who enjoyed an excellent personal relationship with Adolf Hitler. Even though he was not an ardent Nazi, he was the brains behind the staging of the Party parades, thereby assuring for himself the esteem and trust of the dictator. In 1942, after the death of Fritz Todt, he was put in charge of the Ministry of Arms and Munitions, which oversaw the Todt organisation. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to twenty years imprisonment. He died in London in 1981.
Stalag
A German prisoner of war camp. The living conditions in the Stalag varied considerably according to the nationality of the prisoners (Allied, Russian, Italian military internees, etc.)
Todt Fritz
Fritz Todt was a German engineer who was responsible, in the 'Thirties, for building the motorway system as desired by Hitler. At the end of the 'Thirties he set up the Todt Organisation, with the aim of supplying forced labour to be used in the building of defences along the French border. During the war his organisation oversaw the use of forced labour in the occupied territories. He died in a plane crash in 1942.
Gemeinschaftslager
The Gemeinschaftslager, like the Wohnlager, were unsupervised camps for foreign workers, while the Arbeitslager were supervised. Generally speaking, the concept of forced labour is applied only to the latter, but at the present time historians are undoubtedly tending to review the concept of forced labour, extending it to include work situations which are apparently free but in reality are forced. More specifically, the current discussion tends to be orientated towards a concept of forced labour which includes these three distinctive elements:
- from a legal point of view, it is impossible for the worker to dissolve the relationship with his employer
- from the social point of view, the possibilities of significantly influencing employment conditions are limited
- there is a high mortality rate, which indicates a higher than average workload and a provision of means of sustenance below the necessary requirements.
See: [https://www.bundesarchiv.de/zwangsarbeit/geschichte/auslaendisch/begriffe/index.html]
AEL Arbeitserziehungslager
The workers' re-education camps (AEL) were set up in 1940 by the Gestapo in order to re-educate individuals accused of acts of industrial sabotage or who, for some reason, were held to be “reluctant” to work. In effect, these camps were also a means of exploiting forced labour. It has been estimated that in Germany and the German-occupied territories around 200 Arbeitserziehungslager had been set up in which around 500,000 people had been imprisoned.
Bau-und Arbeits Battallion B.A.B.
During the Second World War the Germans established prisoner of war units known as Bau-und Arbeits Battaillon (shortened to B.A.B.). The B.A.B. were made up on average of 600 prisoners of war who were used as forced labour. The distinguishing feature of these forced labour units was that they were mobile; unlike the prisoners who were being held in the Stalag, these workers were not stationed in a specific location but were moved around according to necessity.
I.G. Farben
The I.G. Farben Company was founded in 1925 from the merger of several different German industries. During the Second World War it was the main producer of chemicals for Nazi Germany. I.G. Farben made more use of forced labour than any other industry, particularly during the construction of the plants at Auschwitz. The directors of I.G. Farben were among the accused at the Nuremberg Trials of 1947/48. At the end of the war the decision was taken to split up the industry into its original component parts.
Kriegsgefangenen Arbeitskommando
The Arbeitskommando were work camps detachments for prisoners who had been captured by the Germans. Usually made up of a few hundred prisoners, they were set up near to places of employment (factories, mines, agricultural establishments etc.). They were run from a central Stalag (prisoner of war camp), which may have been responsible for hundreds of work detachments. The work detachments for Allied prisoners of war were visited on a regular basis by representatives of the Red Cross.
Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro (Military Work Inspectorate)
The Military Work Inspectorate was set up in October 1943 with the aim of organising a workforce which was to construct territorial defences for the Italian Republic of Salò and repair the damage caused by air raids. Known as the “Organizzazione Paladino” (Paladino Organisation) after its founder and commanding officer, and operating in strict collaboration with, and at times directly employed by, the Germans, it took on several tens of thousands of workers.
Todt Organisation
The Todt Organisation was begun in Germany at the end of the 'Thirties with the aim of setting up a workforce which would build military defences. The idea of Fritz Todd, who was also its director until his death in 1942, during the war it exploited forced labour in German-occupied countries. In Italy it played a fundamental role in the construction of defences along the Appenines in support of the Wehrmacht, employing tens of thousands of men.
Paladino Francesco
Born in Scilla (Reggio Calabria) in 1890, he volunteered for the Corps of Engineers as a telegraphist in 1907. In 1908 he rose to the rank of sergeant, a rank he held throughout the War in Libya. In 1914 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant and during the First World War he was made captain.
Afterwards he remained in the Armed Forces and in 1932 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1936 he took part in the War in Ethiopia, during which he was promoted to the rank of colonel.
In the Second World War, he returned to Italy after participating in the Greek campaign and was assigned to the Bolzano Corps. In 1942 he was promoted to brigader general. After the armistice he joined the Italian Social Republic for which he created the Military Labour Inspectorate.
He finally retired in 1945 and in 1970 he was awarded the honorary grade of major general.
He died in 1974.
Sauckel Fritz

Fritz Sauckel, born in 1894, was a local Nazi party official. In 1942 he was nominated plenipotentiary for the organisation of work throughout all the German-occupied territories. In practice, he was responsible for the compulsory engagement of forced labour. In Italy his organisation tried to round up hundreds of thousands of men to send to the German Reich, with scarce results. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to death, the sentence being carried out in 1946.

Speer Albert
Albert Speer, born in 1905, was an architect who enjoyed an excellent personal relationship with Adolf Hitler. Even though he was not an ardent Nazi, he was the brains behind the staging of the Party parades, thereby assuring for himself the esteem and trust of the dictator. In 1942, after the death of Fritz Todt, he was put in charge of the Ministry of Arms and Munitions, which oversaw the Todt organisation. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to twenty years imprisonment. He died in London in 1981.
Stalag
A German prisoner of war camp. The living conditions in the Stalag varied considerably according to the nationality of the prisoners (Allied, Russian, Italian military internees, etc.)
Todt Fritz
Fritz Todt was a German engineer who was responsible, in the 'Thirties, for building the motorway system as desired by Hitler. At the end of the 'Thirties he set up the Todt Organisation, with the aim of supplying forced labour to be used in the building of defences along the French border. During the war his organisation oversaw the use of forced labour in the occupied territories. He died in a plane crash in 1942.
Gemeinschaftslager
The Gemeinschaftslager, like the Wohnlager, were unsupervised camps for foreign workers, while the Arbeitslager were supervised. Generally speaking, the concept of forced labour is applied only to the latter, but at the present time historians are undoubtedly tending to review the concept of forced labour, extending it to include work situations which are apparently free but in reality are forced. More specifically, the current discussion tends to be orientated towards a concept of forced labour which includes these three distinctive elements:
- from a legal point of view, it is impossible for the worker to dissolve the relationship with his employer
- from the social point of view, the possibilities of significantly influencing employment conditions are limited
- there is a high mortality rate, which indicates a higher than average workload and a provision of means of sustenance below the necessary requirements.
See: [https://www.bundesarchiv.de/zwangsarbeit/geschichte/auslaendisch/begriffe/index.html]
AEL Arbeitserziehungslager
The workers' re-education camps (AEL) were set up in 1940 by the Gestapo in order to re-educate individuals accused of acts of industrial sabotage or who, for some reason, were held to be “reluctant” to work. In effect, these camps were also a means of exploiting forced labour. It has been estimated that in Germany and the German-occupied territories around 200 Arbeitserziehungslager had been set up in which around 500,000 people had been imprisoned.
Bau-und Arbeits Battallion B.A.B.
During the Second World War the Germans established prisoner of war units known as Bau-und Arbeits Battaillon (shortened to B.A.B.). The B.A.B. were made up on average of 600 prisoners of war who were used as forced labour. The distinguishing feature of these forced labour units was that they were mobile; unlike the prisoners who were being held in the Stalag, these workers were not stationed in a specific location but were moved around according to necessity.
I.G. Farben
The I.G. Farben Company was founded in 1925 from the merger of several different German industries. During the Second World War it was the main producer of chemicals for Nazi Germany. I.G. Farben made more use of forced labour than any other industry, particularly during the construction of the plants at Auschwitz. The directors of I.G. Farben were among the accused at the Nuremberg Trials of 1947/48. At the end of the war the decision was taken to split up the industry into its original component parts.
Kriegsgefangenen Arbeitskommando
The Arbeitskommando were work camps detachments for prisoners who had been captured by the Germans. Usually made up of a few hundred prisoners, they were set up near to places of employment (factories, mines, agricultural establishments etc.). They were run from a central Stalag (prisoner of war camp), which may have been responsible for hundreds of work detachments. The work detachments for Allied prisoners of war were visited on a regular basis by representatives of the Red Cross.
Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro (Military Work Inspectorate)
The Military Work Inspectorate was set up in October 1943 with the aim of organising a workforce which was to construct territorial defences for the Italian Republic of Salò and repair the damage caused by air raids. Known as the “Organizzazione Paladino” (Paladino Organisation) after its founder and commanding officer, and operating in strict collaboration with, and at times directly employed by, the Germans, it took on several tens of thousands of workers.
Todt Organisation
The Todt Organisation was begun in Germany at the end of the 'Thirties with the aim of setting up a workforce which would build military defences. The idea of Fritz Todd, who was also its director until his death in 1942, during the war it exploited forced labour in German-occupied countries. In Italy it played a fundamental role in the construction of defences along the Appenines in support of the Wehrmacht, employing tens of thousands of men.
Paladino Francesco
Born in Scilla (Reggio Calabria) in 1890, he volunteered for the Corps of Engineers as a telegraphist in 1907. In 1908 he rose to the rank of sergeant, a rank he held throughout the War in Libya. In 1914 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant and during the First World War he was made captain.
Afterwards he remained in the Armed Forces and in 1932 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1936 he took part in the War in Ethiopia, during which he was promoted to the rank of colonel.
In the Second World War, he returned to Italy after participating in the Greek campaign and was assigned to the Bolzano Corps. In 1942 he was promoted to brigader general. After the armistice he joined the Italian Social Republic for which he created the Military Labour Inspectorate.
He finally retired in 1945 and in 1970 he was awarded the honorary grade of major general.
He died in 1974.
Sauckel Fritz

Fritz Sauckel, born in 1894, was a local Nazi party official. In 1942 he was nominated plenipotentiary for the organisation of work throughout all the German-occupied territories. In practice, he was responsible for the compulsory engagement of forced labour. In Italy his organisation tried to round up hundreds of thousands of men to send to the German Reich, with scarce results. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to death, the sentence being carried out in 1946.

Speer Albert
Albert Speer, born in 1905, was an architect who enjoyed an excellent personal relationship with Adolf Hitler. Even though he was not an ardent Nazi, he was the brains behind the staging of the Party parades, thereby assuring for himself the esteem and trust of the dictator. In 1942, after the death of Fritz Todt, he was put in charge of the Ministry of Arms and Munitions, which oversaw the Todt organisation. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to twenty years imprisonment. He died in London in 1981.
Todt Fritz
Fritz Todt was a German engineer who was responsible, in the 'Thirties, for building the motorway system as desired by Hitler. At the end of the 'Thirties he set up the Todt Organisation, with the aim of supplying forced labour to be used in the building of defences along the French border. During the war his organisation oversaw the use of forced labour in the occupied territories. He died in a plane crash in 1942.
AEL Arbeitserziehungslager
The workers' re-education camps (AEL) were set up in 1940 by the Gestapo in order to re-educate individuals accused of acts of industrial sabotage or who, for some reason, were held to be “reluctant” to work. In effect, these camps were also a means of exploiting forced labour. It has been estimated that in Germany and the German-occupied territories around 200 Arbeitserziehungslager had been set up in which around 500,000 people had been imprisoned.
Bau-und Arbeits Battallion B.A.B.
During the Second World War the Germans established prisoner of war units known as Bau-und Arbeits Battaillon (shortened to B.A.B.). The B.A.B. were made up on average of 600 prisoners of war who were used as forced labour. The distinguishing feature of these forced labour units was that they were mobile; unlike the prisoners who were being held in the Stalag, these workers were not stationed in a specific location but were moved around according to necessity.
I.G. Farben
The I.G. Farben Company was founded in 1925 from the merger of several different German industries. During the Second World War it was the main producer of chemicals for Nazi Germany. I.G. Farben made more use of forced labour than any other industry, particularly during the construction of the plants at Auschwitz. The directors of I.G. Farben were among the accused at the Nuremberg Trials of 1947/48. At the end of the war the decision was taken to split up the industry into its original component parts.
Kriegsgefangenen Arbeitskommando
The Arbeitskommando were work camps detachments for prisoners who had been captured by the Germans. Usually made up of a few hundred prisoners, they were set up near to places of employment (factories, mines, agricultural establishments etc.). They were run from a central Stalag (prisoner of war camp), which may have been responsible for hundreds of work detachments. The work detachments for Allied prisoners of war were visited on a regular basis by representatives of the Red Cross.
Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro (Military Work Inspectorate)
The Military Work Inspectorate was set up in October 1943 with the aim of organising a workforce which was to construct territorial defences for the Italian Republic of Salò and repair the damage caused by air raids. Known as the “Organizzazione Paladino” (Paladino Organisation) after its founder and commanding officer, and operating in strict collaboration with, and at times directly employed by, the Germans, it took on several tens of thousands of workers.
Todt Organisation
The Todt Organisation was begun in Germany at the end of the 'Thirties with the aim of setting up a workforce which would build military defences. The idea of Fritz Todd, who was also its director until his death in 1942, during the war it exploited forced labour in German-occupied countries. In Italy it played a fundamental role in the construction of defences along the Appenines in support of the Wehrmacht, employing tens of thousands of men.
Paladino Francesco
Born in Scilla (Reggio Calabria) in 1890, he volunteered for the Corps of Engineers as a telegraphist in 1907. In 1908 he rose to the rank of sergeant, a rank he held throughout the War in Libya. In 1914 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant and during the First World War he was made captain.
Afterwards he remained in the Armed Forces and in 1932 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1936 he took part in the War in Ethiopia, during which he was promoted to the rank of colonel.
In the Second World War, he returned to Italy after participating in the Greek campaign and was assigned to the Bolzano Corps. In 1942 he was promoted to brigader general. After the armistice he joined the Italian Social Republic for which he created the Military Labour Inspectorate.
He finally retired in 1945 and in 1970 he was awarded the honorary grade of major general.
He died in 1974.
Sauckel Fritz

Fritz Sauckel, born in 1894, was a local Nazi party official. In 1942 he was nominated plenipotentiary for the organisation of work throughout all the German-occupied territories. In practice, he was responsible for the compulsory engagement of forced labour. In Italy his organisation tried to round up hundreds of thousands of men to send to the German Reich, with scarce results. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to death, the sentence being carried out in 1946.

Speer Albert
Albert Speer, born in 1905, was an architect who enjoyed an excellent personal relationship with Adolf Hitler. Even though he was not an ardent Nazi, he was the brains behind the staging of the Party parades, thereby assuring for himself the esteem and trust of the dictator. In 1942, after the death of Fritz Todt, he was put in charge of the Ministry of Arms and Munitions, which oversaw the Todt organisation. He was tried at Nuremberg and condemned to twenty years imprisonment. He died in London in 1981.
Todt Fritz
Fritz Todt was a German engineer who was responsible, in the 'Thirties, for building the motorway system as desired by Hitler. At the end of the 'Thirties he set up the Todt Organisation, with the aim of supplying forced labour to be used in the building of defences along the French border. During the war his organisation oversaw the use of forced labour in the occupied territories. He died in a plane crash in 1942.