The Jäger Report: An Invaluable Source of the Efficiency of Einsatzkommando 3 (Einsatzgruppe A) that Illustrates the Annihilation by Bullets of Jewish Men, Women, and Children in Lithuania

Autores/as

  • Antonia Tejeda Barros Tiergarten 4 Association, Berlin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_historiografias/hrht.12057

Resumen

The Einsatzgruppen massacres mark a turning point in the mass extermination of Jewish men, women, and children during the Shoah. The Jäger report is one of the most detailed sources of the Einsatzgruppen massacres; it thoroughly details the killings of 137,448 victims (the total number of victims given in the report is inaccurate), of whom 135,392 are Jewish victims and 2,056 are non-Jewish victims. The disproportion between Jewish victims (98.5 percent) and non-Jewish victims (1.5 percent) in the report is gigantic. The massacres of the Jäger report were carried out by Einsatzkommando 3 of Einsatzgruppe A (with the enthusiastic collaboration of the Lithuanian auxiliary police), mainly in Lithuania, from July 4, 1941, to November 29, 1941, solely by bullets. Although there are in fact two Jäger reports (September 10 and December 1, 1941), in the present paper I focus on the later one, known as ‘the’ Jäger report. After briefly introducing Operation Barbarossa and describing the structure of the four Einsatzgruppen, I analyze the Jäger report, while emphasizing the high number of Jewish victims (who were slaughtered only because they were Jewish) versus the much lower number of non-Jewish victims (all of whom, except for one Roma/Sinti child and 48 children with physical, psychiatric, and intellectual disabilities –so-called ‘Geisteskranke’, do not include children). I argue that separating Jewish victims from non-Jewish victims is paramount to a serious research of both the Einsatzgruppen and the Shoah.

Keywords

Jäger report, Einsatzgruppen, Einsatzgruppe A, Einsatzkommando 3, Jewish victims, Shoah

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Biografía del autor/a

  • Antonia Tejeda Barros, Tiergarten 4 Association, Berlin

    Antonia Tejeda Barros (Barcelona, 1975) es investigadora (Shoah) en la Tiergarten 4 Association en Berlín (Research of Nazi War Crimes), Doctora en Filosofía (UNED, 2023, cum laude), Magíster en Filosofía (UNED, 2015, cum laude) y Bachelor of Music (Música Antigua y Pedagogía, 2002, Koninklijk Conservatorium, La Haya). Sus áreas de investigación son la Shoah, el antisemitismo, Viktor Frankl, Primo Levi, Sartre, Ortega, Hannah Arendt y Golda Meir. Está escribiendo un libro sobre Sartre, Frankl, Auschwitz y el sentido y sinsentido del sufrimiento de las víctimas. Ha sido invitada a dar conferencias sobre Viktor Frankl, Primo Levi y la Shoah en el Centro Sefarad Israel.

     

     

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Publicado

2025-06-29 — Actualizado el 2025-07-18

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Sección

Varia historiográfica

Cómo citar

Tejeda Barros, A. (2025). The Jäger Report: An Invaluable Source of the Efficiency of Einsatzkommando 3 (Einsatzgruppe A) that Illustrates the Annihilation by Bullets of Jewish Men, Women, and Children in Lithuania. Historiografías, 94-130. https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_historiografias/hrht.12057 (Original work published 2025)