Totaleinsatz (German: "total deployment" or "comprehensive mobilisation") refers to forced labour under German rule during World War II during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. A total of 400,000 Czechs worked as forced labour in Germany. This was a subset of the Arbeitseinsatz for German men, but with ambiguity as to the status of Czechs under the "Protectorate" of Bohemia and Moravia. As 'inferior Slavs', Czech labourers were generally treated worse than the French and Dutch, but not as badly as de facto slave labourers like the Ukrainian Ostarbeiter.[1][2]

References

  1. Pagenstecher, Cord (2010). "Chapter 12: 'We were treated like slaves.' Remembering Forced Labor for Nazi Germany". In Hörmann, Raphael; Mackenthun, Gesa (eds.). Human Bondage in the Cultural Contact Zone: Transdisciplinary Perspectives. p. 281. ISBN 9783830973751.
  2. Jarská, Šárka (October 2010). "Czechs as Forced and Slave Labourers During the Second World War". In von Plato, Alexander; Leh, Almut; Thonfeld, Christoph (eds.). Hitler's Slaves: Life Stories of Forced Labourers in Nazi-Occupied Europe. p. 49. ISBN 9781845459901.
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