Friedrich Wilhelm Kritzinger
Friedrich Wilhelm Kritzinger was a German lawyer who became the State Secretary in the Reich Chancellery under Reichsminister Hans Lammers in Nazi Germany. He was Lammers' representative to the 20 January 1942 Wannsee Conference, at which the genocidal Final Solution to the Jewish Question was planned. He was arrested after the fall of the Nazi regime, incarcerated from 1945 to 1947 but released due to ill health and died without ever facing trial.
Early life and education
Kritzinger was born the son of a Protestant pastor in Grünfier in the Prussian province of Posen. He attended secondary schools in Posen and Gnesen, receiving his Abitur in 1908. He then studied law at the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, the Humboldt University of Berlin and the University of Greifswald. After passing the first state law examination in October 1911, he began a legal clerkship. His legal training was interrupted by his service in the First World War where he served in Jäger Battalion #5 from 1914 to 1918. He fought on the western front, attained the rank of Leutnant in the reserves and earned the Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class and the Order of Hohenzollern. He was wounded and captured by the French and released in February 1920. In 1921, he completed his legal clerkship and passed the second state law examination.Weimar Republic
From July to September 1921, Kritzinger worked as an attorney at the Amtsgericht in Striegau. He then was employed by the Reich Ministry of Justice dealing with questions of international law. In 1925, he transferred to the Prussian Ministry of Trade and Commerce but then returned to the Reich Ministry of Justice the following year, where he was to remain until 1938. He worked as a Referent, initially on matters of international law and, from 1928, matters of constitutional law. During this time he was promoted to Regierungsrat, Oberregierungsrat and Ministerialsrat. Kritzinger did not belong to a political party in the Weimar Republic but, according to his account, he voted for the conservative German National People's Party in the Reichstag elections until 1933.Career in Nazi Germany
Kritzinger welcomed the Nazi seizure of power and dismissed the street violence of those turbulent years as revolutionary excesses. While at the Justice Ministry, Kritzinger was involved in drafting legislation that supported the Nazi regime. For example, he helped to draft the legislation that established the legal basis for expropriating the property of the outlawed trade unions. After the Night of the Long Knives, he worked on a law that legitimized as acts of self-defense the extrajudicial murders of high-ranking Sturmabteilung leaders and other political opponents.In early 1938, Kritzinger was offered the opportunity to transfer to the Reich Chancellery. Although the position involved a promotion, he hesitated when informed by the Chancellery Chief Hans Lammers that membership in the Nazi Party was a prerequisite. However, Kritzinger was encouraged to take the position by Minister of Justice Franz Gürtner. Gürtner had been a member of the DNVP and favored having his trusted colleague in the job rather than a more fanatical Nazi. On 1 February 1938, Kritzinger accepted the transfer to the Reich Chancellery as head of Division B with the civil service rank of Ministerialdirektor, and he joined the Nazi Party.
Kritzinger's division was in charge of matters involving the issuing of permits for exemption from the Nuremberg Laws. He also was involved with the drafting of draconian wartime legislation such as the so called Regulation Against Public Pests of 5 September 1939, which imposed the death penalty for acts like looting and arson. Other laws sought to further deprive the German Jewish population of its remaining rights. The 11th Regulation of the Citizenship Law stipulated that all German Jews who had emigrated retrospectively lost their German citizenship, and it provided for the confiscation of their assets. The 13th Regulation provided that the assets of German Jews would become the property of the Reich upon their death. It also transferred responsibility for any criminal proceedings against Jews from the judiciary to the police.
Wannsee Conference
Kritzinger was the oldest of the participants at the Wannsee Conference of 20 January 1942, which planned the implementation of The Final Solution. There is no record of any comments by him in the official minutes of the meeting. There also is no documentation that he vocally or openly opposed the plans discussed at Wannsee, though evidence suggests that he sought to distance himself from the whole affair. He did not attend the follow-up meeting on 6 March 1942, opting to send a less senior official who was instructed not to discuss policy positions but only to report back on the meeting. This may also have been the approach taken by Kritzinger at Wannsee.German historian Hans Mommsen claimed that Kritzinger did not see the Wannsee Conference as consequential, and described it to a colleague using a German phrase meaning a greatly anticipated event that comes to nothing. In the spring of 1942, Kritzinger attempted to resign his position in the Chancellery but his resignation was refused by Lammers, who told him that things would become "much worse if you leave".
Later war years
Kritzinger stayed on at the Reich Chancellery and, as the management of the Second World War consumed more and more of Adolf Hitler's time and energy, Lammers was usually with the Führer at his military field headquarters. Consequently, Kritzinger took on more of the day-to-day operations of the Chancellery in Berlin. He was rewarded on 21 November 1942 when Hitler promoted him to State Secretary of the Chancellery, making him the senior civil servant in the staff of about seventy-five. This was a relatively small staff, considering the large amount of work it had in coordinating the activities of all the Reich ministries. The workload began to take a toll on Kritzinger's health, necessitating a six-week leave of absence in the spring of 1943 for high blood pressure and impaired vision.Shortly before the fall of Berlin to the Red Army, Kritzinger left the city on 23 April 1945, where he had been in charge of coordinating the evacuation of the remaining ministry officials and files since 20 April. Making his way westward, he continued to serve as the Chancellery's State Secretary in the Flensburg government set up under Hitler's appointed successor, Großadmiral Karl Dönitz.