Top 31 Quotes & Sayings by Fritz Sauckel

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a German politician Fritz Sauckel.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Fritz Sauckel

Ernst Friedrich Christoph "Fritz" Sauckel was a German Nazi politician, Gauleiter of Gau Thuringia from 1927 and the General Plenipotentiary for Labour Deployment (Arbeitseinsatz) from March 1942 until the end of the Second World War. Sauckel was among the 24 persons accused in the Nuremberg Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal. He was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity, sentenced to death, and executed by hanging.

I am dying innocent. The sentence is wrong. God protect Germany and make Germany great again. Long live Germany! God protect my family!
As I, as a worker, came to know them, the aims of German trade unions were political, and there were a number of various trade unions with varied political views.
Although as a sailor I despised politics - for I loved my sailor's life and still love it today - conditions forced me to take up a definite attitude towards political problems.
Only Communists and Social Democrats who acted against the state were incarcerated. Most of the Communists and Social Democrats I had known became Nazis later. Only those who were doing anything against the state were thrown in concentration camps.
I was elected to the Diet in the same way as at every parliamentary election. — © Fritz Sauckel
I was elected to the Diet in the same way as at every parliamentary election.
The controversies between the proletariat and the middle class had to be smoothed out and bridged over by each getting to know and understand the other.
I'm a sailor, not a politician.
I could not have the honour of being a German soldier because of my imprisonment in the First World War. And in this world war the Fuehrer refuses to allow me to serve as a soldier.
The dissolution of the trade unions was in the air then.
I had repeatedly made written requests to the Fuehrer that I might be allowed to join the Wehrmacht as an ordinary soldier. He refused to give me this permission.
In order to provide the German housewife, above all mothers of many children...with tangible relief from her burdens, the Fuhrer has commissioned me to bring into the Reich from the eastern territories some four to five hundred thousand select, healthy, and strong girls.
I joined the Party definitely in 1923 after having already been in sympathy with it before.
Through the Young Men's Christian Association and principally in Australia and North America, as well as in South America, I came into contact with families of these countries.
The Diet was dissolved by a Reich Government decree.
As a cabin boy on a Norwegian sailing ship I earned five kronen a week in addition to my keep.
One day I heard a speech of Hitler. In this speech he said that the German factory worker and the German labourer must make common cause with the German intellectual worker.
Slaves who are underfed, diseased, resentful, despairing, and filled with hate will never yield that maximum of output which they might achieve under normal conditions.
In my Gau, as far as I know, only Communists who had actually worked against the State were arrested.
I was never informed in advance about the start of the war or about foreign political developments.
I was member of the Diet as long as it existed, until May 1933.
I became Gauleiter in 1927.
As regards personal relationships I cannot say that I had any particularly personal intercourse with anyone.
I am very proud of the fact that many workers in my Gau, numerous former Communists and Social Democrats were won over by us and became local group leaders and Party functionaries.
I had to examine myself very thoroughly to find the right path personally.
I did that all the more, if I may say so, because I was aware of the fact that there is an inclination to go to extremes in German people, and in the German character generally.
I attended the elementary school at Schweinfurt and the secondary school. — © Fritz Sauckel
I attended the elementary school at Schweinfurt and the secondary school.
Himmler, Bormann, and Goebbels, they were probably bad fellows.
What would you do if your country's welfare depended on labor? When a ship is in a storm it requires one captain.
My connection with the Reich Ministers was of a purely official nature and was very infrequent.
Many years before, I had left a beautiful country and a rich nation and I returned to that country six years later to find it fundamentally changed and in a state of upheaval, and in great spiritual and material need.
It so happened that I was on a German sailing vessel on the way to Australia when the ship was captured, and on the high seas I was made prisoner by the French.
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