Werner Lorenz (2 October 1891 – 13 March 1974) was an SS functionary during the Nazi era. He was head of the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (VOMI) (Main Office for Ethnic Germans), an organization charged with resettling ethnic Germans in the "German Reich" from other parts of Europe, as well as colonising the occupied lands during World War II. After the war, Lorenz was sentenced to prison for crimes against humanity in 1948. He was released in 1954 and died in 1974.
Early life
He was born in Grünhof (now in
Gmina Postomino, Sławno County) near
Stolp, Pomerania. His father was a forest warden. In 1909 Lorenz went to Military school. He served in World War I first as a
cavalry officer then as a pilot in the
Luftstreitkräfte. After the war he worked as a border guard and as farmer. He later acquired land and industrial property in
Danzig. Through his daughter Rosemarie, Lorenz would become
Axel Springer's father-in-law.
Nazi Party and SS career
In 1929 Lorenz joined the
Nazi Party and the
Schutzstaffel in 1931. Two years later he had an active political role as a member of the
Landtag in the Free State of Prussia and worked at the
Hamburg State Council. At the November 1933 parliamentary election, he was elected as a
Reichstag deputy from electoral constituency 1 (East Prussia). He would remain in the
Reichstag until the fall of the Nazi regime, switching to
constituency 34 (Hamburg) at the March 1936 election.
[ Werner Lorenz entry in the Reichstag Members Database]
In November 1933 Lorenz was promoted to SS- Gruppenführer and led the SS Upper Division North in Altona from 1934 until 1937. He was promoted to SS- Obergruppenführer in 1936. In January 1937, was promoted to head the Nazi Party agency Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (VOMI) that was initially responsible for the welfare of ethnic Germans ( Volksdeutsche) living beyond the pre-war borders of Nazi Germany. After the Second World War began, the VOMI took charge of the resettlement of ethnic Germans on captured territory, but also the "Germanization" of foreign children such as Polish people and Slovenes. Some accounts consider him the "least radical" of the higher SS leadership.
Ethnic cleansing in World War II
Following the invasion of Poland in 1939, Lorenz was the chief executive responsible for allocating confiscated land, property and managing the affairs of the
Volksdeutsch in all other areas of occupied Eastern Europe. VOMI, which was an office of the Nazi Party, would take control of a district once the native populations had been driven from their homes and lands. Ethnic German settlers were then given the land to work under the direction of VOMI officials. In respect to his international work, Lorenz was
plenipotentiary for foreign relations for
Adolf Hitler's deputy,
Rudolf Hess.
In June 1941 VOMI was absorbed into the office of the RKFDV (RKFDV) run by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler. The RKFDV, as an SS-controlled organization, had the authority to say who was German, where ethnic Germans could live, and what populations should be ethnic cleansing in order to make room for the German settlers from the east Europe during action "Heim ins Reich". As RKFDV chief, Himmler authorized the Einsatzgruppen (SS death squads) and other SS police units to round up and kill , and Romani people. Lorenz remained in charge of Volksdeutsch settlements in these ethnically cleansed areas. He also was responsible for VOMI officials who handled the personal property seized from Jews killed during Operation Reinhard in the General Government during 1942-1943.
In late 1942 Lorenz was seriously injured in a vehicle accident in Bosnia while overseeing the VOMI evacuation of ethnic Germans from the region.
Post-war
At the end of World War II, Lorenz was arrested and held in an internment camp in
England. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison at the
RuSHA Trial at
Nuremberg on 10 March 1948.
Later, his sentence was reduced and Lorenz was released from prison in 1954. He died in
Hamburg in 1974.
Service record
Dates of rank
-
SS- Sturmbannführer: 31 March 1931
-
SS- Standartenführer: 7 July 1931
-
SS- Oberführer: 9 November 1931
-
SS- Brigadeführer: 1 July 1933
-
SS- Gruppenführer: 1 November 1933
-
SS- Obergruppenführer: 9 November 1936
-
SS- Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei: 15 August 1942
-
SS- Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS: 9 November 1944
Bibliography
External links