Siegfried Polack

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Siegfried Polack

Siegfried (or Siegfrid) Polack (born July 31, 1899 in Sommerfeld , † December 27, 1944 near Budapest ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

After attending secondary school and training in a cadet school , Siegfried Polack took part in the First World War as an officer . After the war he worked as a businessman and editor.

In 1928 Polack joined the NSDAP, where from 1933 he held the office of Gau manager in Nowawes , and from 1932 he was a member of the SS . Two months after joining the SS, he was appointed SS-Sturmbannführer . He remained Gau managing director until he was demoted to SS man on November 30, 1935 by Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler and at the same time expelled from the SS. From November 1933 to March 1936 he was also a member of the NSDAP for constituency 4 (Potsdam I) in the Reichstag . After participating in World War II , he was re-admitted to the SS in 1943. He was with SS-Grenadier-Ersatzbataillon 31 from September to November 1943 and was then transferred to the SS special unit Dirlewanger . He fell north of Budapest in late 1944.

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Individual evidence

  1. The Reichstag Handbuch indicates the spelling Siegfrid; Joachim Lilla: extras in uniform give his name as Siegfried. The first name is also on the election proposal from 1933.