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  2. Forced labor of Germans after World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_labor_of_Germans...

    These prisoners were paid $0.80 per day for their labor (equivalent to $14 in 2023 dollars). [33] By contrast, wages for farm laborers in the USA had reached an average of $85.90 per month (equivalent to $1,454 in 2023 dollars) or ~$2.82/day (equivalent to $48 in 2023 dollars) in January, 1946.

  3. German–Soviet economic relations (1934–1941) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German–Soviet_economic...

    While both Stalin and Hitler had long spoken of an over-riding necessity to prepare for war, Hitler's outlook was for an offensive war, comporting with Nazi ideology, by a new community of Germans carving an empire across Europe, slaying the "Jewish Bolshevik" dragon and addressing punitive Treaty of Versailles provisions.

  4. Wehrmacht foreign volunteers and conscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wehrmacht_foreign...

    The Ukrainian collaborationist forces were composed of an estimated number of 180,000 volunteers serving with units scattered all over Europe. [6] Russian émigrés and defectors from the Soviet Union formed the Russian Liberation Army or fought as Hilfswillige within German units of the Wehrmacht primarily on the Eastern Front . [ 7 ]

  5. World War II reparations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_reparations

    Furthermore, in 1942, the Greek Central Bank was forced by the occupying Nazi regime to lend 476 million Reichsmarks at 0% interest to Nazi Germany. [ 56 ] After the war, Greece received its share of the reparations paid by Germany to the Allies as part of the proceedings of the Paris Reparation Treaty of 1946 which the Inter-Allied Reparations ...

  6. Deportation of Soviet citizens for forced labour to Germany

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportation_of_Soviet...

    According to German information, in February 1942, 8-10 thousand "civilian Russians" were sent to Germany weekly. In general, about 5 million people were taken out of the occupied territories of the USSR for forced labor, 2.4 million of them from the territory of the Ukrainian SSR, 400 thousand people from the territory of the BSSR.

  7. Ostarbeiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostarbeiter

    A Russian-language Nazi poster reading "I live with a German family and feel just fine. Come to Germany to help with household chores." One special category was that of young women recruited to act as nannies; Hitler argued that many women would like to have children, and many of them were restricted by the lack of domestic help [ 16 ] (this ...

  8. Foreign relations of Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Nazi...

    Hitler's Italian Allies: Royal Armed Forces, Fascist Regime, and the War of 1940–1943 (2000) online; Leitz, Christian. Nazi Foreign Policy, 1933–1941: The Road to Global War (2004) Martin, Bernd. Japan and Germany in the Modern World (1995) Mazower, Mark. Hitler's Empire: How the Nazis Ruled Europe (2009) excerpt and text search; Michalka ...

  9. Forced labor in Nazi concentration camps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_labor_in_Nazi...

    Forced labor was an important and ubiquitous aspect of the Nazi concentration camps which operated in Nazi Germany and German-occupied Europe between 1933 and 1945. It was the harshest and most inhumane part of a larger system of forced labor in Nazi Germany.