Social Welfare Decoration

Summary

The Social Welfare Decoration (German: Ehrenzeichen für deutsche Volkspflege) was a German Civil Award created by Adolf Hitler on 1 May 1939 for services in the social sector. The decoration was issued in three classes and was awarded for a wide variety of service, in the social sector, to the German state. Qualifying service would have been with Winterhilfswerk, National Socialist People's Welfare, medical and rescue work, or care of foreign and ethnic Germans. As a replacement for the German Red Cross Decoration, it was conferred in four classes consisting of a white-enameled gold Balkenkreuz with Reich eagle and swastika. A "Medal of Social Welfare" was also issued for lesser degrees of service, not warranting the higher presentation of a class award.

Social Welfare Decoration
Ehrenzeichen für deutsche Volkspflege
The four classes of the decoration
TypeCivil Award
Awarded forMerits in the field of welfare, Winterhilfswerk or the care of sick and wounded
Country Nazi Germany
Presented by Nazi Germany
StatusObsolete
Established1 May 1939 (1939-05-01)
Precedence
EquivalentGerman Red Cross Decoration
Next (lower)Medal of Social Welfare

The main requirement for the award was that the service rendered should be to the benefit of the civil population. Reinhard Heydrich was awarded the decoration for his running of the Gestapo in the 1930s and for providing "security" to the German people. The infamous Doctor Josef Mengele was also awarded the decoration in 1941, for providing medical services to wounded soldiers and civilians alike on the battlefields of the Eastern Front.

Holders of the Social Welfare Decoration First Class with Diamonds edit

Bibliography edit

  • Christian Zentner, Friedemann Bedürftig (1991). The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich. Macmillan, New York. ISBN 0-02-897502-2

External links edit

  • Red Cross and Social Welfare Decorations