Quoting Regula Ludi in Refugees from Nazi Germany and the Liberal European States, pages 94–5:

In Bern, throughout the spring and summer of 1938, different agencies were tackling the problem of how to identify Jewish refugees at the border and distinguish them from other German travellers.⁵⁸ Anxious not to disturb ‘normal relations’ with the Third Reich, Swiss diplomats were eagerly seeking a practicable solution.

In May of 1938, Rothmund was the first to propose a visa requirement for the Jews only in an internal note. While his suggestion found the approval of colleagues from other government agencies, it did not resonate well with [Fascist] authorities. Such a provision was obviously in direct contradiction to the [Fascist] goal of removing Jews from the Third Reich. In addition, it would require mechanisms for the identification of Jews that were not yet in place.

By the end of July 1938, Swiss worries materialised: the [Third Reich] officially announced the replacement of Austrian passports by German ones.⁵⁹ Some time later in August, the idea to mark the passports of ‘non‐Aryan’ German citizens emerged in a letter by Hans Frölicher, the Swiss ambassador to Berlin.

However, the documents are not clear about whether German or Swiss negotiators first came up with this suggestion. They only testify to the persisting reluctance of the [Third Reich] to agree to any solution reducing the chances of emigration for the Jews. Eventually, in August of 1938, the Swiss threatened to reintroduce a general visa requirement. As Rothmund stressed, such a step would require German applicants to ‘present proof that they were Aryan’, which implied additional administrative work for Swiss consulates.⁶⁰

In addition, the general visa requirement would probably have failed to find federal government approval because of its unpredictable economic repercussions and potential damage to the tourist industry. As a bluff to speed up negotiations, however, it was successful. In early September, the Swiss sensed a breakthrough as the [Fascists] gave up their opposition and agreed to mark the passports of Jewish nationals, but they insisted on reciprocity. This entailed that the Swiss government condone discrimination against its own Jewish citizens.

Rothmund objected to this compromise, even though he had been the first to propose discriminatory measures, and he warned that such a step would not only alienate Swiss Jews, but also expose Switzerland internationally to the accusation of becoming embroiled in [Fascist] antisemitism. As a consequence he reiterated the demand for a general visa requirement. None of these considerations eventually entered the final agreement.

The German–Swiss Protocol of 29 September 1938 included the [Third Reich’s] promise to mark the passports of its nationals belonging to the ‘Jewish race’, to be defined according to the Nuremberg Laws, with a distinctive mark and thus prevent their holders from entering Switzerland. The mark should be a clearly visible and indelible ‘J’‐stamp, as the two parties agreed. The document also included provisions that introduced discrimination against Swiss Jews. Rothmund, who was directly involved in the last rounds of negotiations, did not endorse the agreement.

The Federal Council did not heed his reservations and adopted the Protocol in a meeting of 4 October 1938. Simultaneously, it introduced the visa requirement for ‘Non‐Aryan Germans’. It thereby allowed [Fascist] racial terminology and ‘German racial legislation to penetrate Swiss administrative law’.⁶¹ The federal authorities had to deal with the international and domestic protests that followed publication of the visa requirement.

This decision, however, was the only part of the whole story to become publicly known in 1938, in contrast to Switzerland’s active rôle in the preceding negotiations that only entered public knowledge through an Allied edition of German documents in 1953.⁶² Within days, on 15 October 1938, Sweden followed the Swiss example and signed a similar agreement with the [Third Reich].

More than ever, the federal authorities were zealously dedicated to fighting ‘foreign inundation’, but by the autumn of 1938 they had dropped all pretences, leaving no doubt of whom they had in mind when talking of ‘undesirable elements’. Official discourse no longer distinguished between Jewish foreigners and refugees but used the terms ‘emigrant’ and ‘Jew’ in an interchangeable way. And all those considered ‘emigrants’ were treated as if they were undocumented or even stateless persons.

The introduction of the visa requirement for German Jews was soon followed by mandatory visa for all ‘emigrants’ on 20 January 1939, regardless of their country of origin and subsequently also for holders of Czechoslovakian passports on 15 March 1938. Eventually, not only German Jews, but all Jews and any potential refugee had to reckon with expulsion, even when they arrived from a country that had no travel restrictions between itself and Switzerland.

As a consequence, they were trapped in a dilemma: either they risked being turned away when entering without permission or they forfeited almost any chance of acceptance when revealing their true intentions by submitting a visa application.

(Emphasis added.)

It may seem odd that the Third Reich wanted to prevent Jews and legally ‘Jewish’ people from escaping to the Swiss Confederation and the Kingdom of Sweden in the 1930s, but this was likely so as to maintain good relations with the Swiss and Swedish ruling classes, which were disinterested in providing for a huge influx of refugees.


Click here for other events that happened today (September 29).

1881: Ludwig von Mises, Austrofascist turned neoclassical liberal, rudely burdened us all with his presence.
1912: Michelangelo Antonioni, Axis journalist and draftee, was born.
1933: The Third Reich passed a hereditary farm law that protected farmers against potential predatory practices by financial institutions, but it also bound the farmers to the land comparably to serfs.
1934: The Third Reich recommissioned Emden into service, with Karl Dönitz in command.
1936: The Nationalist cruiser Canarias sunk the Spanish Republican destroyer Almirante Juan Fernandez during a naval battle off the coast near Gibraltar.
1937: Imperial aircraft sank Chinese gunboat Chuyou.
1938: The Munich Conference between Adolf Schicklgruber, Neville Chamberlain, Benito Mussolini, and Édouard Daladier took place at the Führerbau building in München, during which London and Paris ceded Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia to the Third Reich in an attempt to avoid war. The two Czechoslovakian representatives at the conference became locked in an adjacent room, unpermitted to actually participate in the negotiations.
1939: Berlin issued a repatriation order for the 86,000 ethnic Germans living in Estonia and Latvia, knowing that Moscow would soon demand the Baltics. Aside from that, the Imperialists reached the outskirts of Changsha, Hunan Province, China; the Empire of Japan had thus far suffered 40,000 casualties on this assault.
1940: At 1600 hours, a large group of Luftwaffe flightcraft, mostly fighters, conducted a sweep in Kent in southern England. This sweep failed to draw Allied fighters, but overnight the Axis heavily bombed London while assaulting Liverpool.
1941: The Einsatzgruppen, with the aid of Ukrainian anticommunists, commenced the two‐day Babi Yar massacre, resulting in the deaths of 50,000–96,000 Soviets (33,771 of whom were Jewish). Likewise, Berlin ordered that Leningrad be wiped out by artillery and aerial bombardment. The Third Reich could not and would not feed its population, which was of no use for the future of the Fascist bourgeoisie. Lastly, Reinhard Heydrich became Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia.
1942: A lone Axis bomber assaulted the rural town of Petworth in Sussex County, England in the morning, destroying a boys’ school, killing twenty‐three folk (a score of whom were children), and seriously injuring thirty (two dozen of whom were children). The Axis also attacked Somerton, Somerset County; Shrewton, Wiltshire County; and Betteshanger Collthbourne, Kent County.

Aside from that, somebody informed Max Merten that, starting two days later, he would be the head of the Administrative and Economic Department of the Axis occupation administration in Thessaloniki. Meanwhile, Axis submarine I‐25 surfaced off Cape Blanco, Oregon in the early morning darkness. Warrant Officer Nobuo Fujita took off in I‐25’s Yokosuka E14Y “Glen” floatplane and flew inland from the Cape Blanco lighthouse and dropped two incendiary bombs on an Oregonian forest, but nobody reported any fire! This was the twoth and last ever aerial bombardment of the mainland United States.
1943: Axis occupation troops fought against the resistance in the Giuseppe Mazzini Square (where an Axis tank fired on the Italians), the Ponticelli district, the Capodichino military airfield, the Piazza Ottocalli square, and other locations in Naples. As the scale of the uprising continued to grow, Colonel Walter Schöll began negotiating with some of the Italian leaders, using captured resistance fighters as collateral.
1998: Bruno Munari, Axis artist, expired.