Category
page 1Nazi forced labour
Arbeit macht frei
slogan (“Work sets you free”) on the entrance of Auschwitz and other Nazi concentration camps
Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach
German industrialist (1907–1967)

OST-Arbeiter
thumb|250px|"Nationality badges" () of from Russia, [[Ukraine and Belarus colored in accordance with their national flags: blue Saint Andrew's cross on white within a red oval (white-blue-red flag of Russia), yellow within blue badge with the Ukrainian trident and white and red badge in accordance to the white-red-white flag of Belarus. The badges were legally introduced on 19 June 1944 as replacements for the "OST" badges and practically implemented seemingly only after February 1945.]]
'''''''''' (, "Eastern worker") was a Nazi German designation for foreign workers gathered from occupied Ce
forced labour under German rule during World War II
slavery and force labor under Nazi rule
German military brothels in World War II
Brothels for members of the Wehrmacht and the SS
extermination through labor
killing prisoners by means of forced labour

Mittelwerk
Mittelwerk (; German for "Central Works") was a German World War II factory built underground in the Kohnstein to avoid Allied bombing. It used slave labor from the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp to produce V-2 ballistic missiles, V-1 flying bombs, and other weapons.
German camp brothels in World War II
brothels in Nazi concentration camps
Topf and Sons
company
Malgré-nous
thumb|Monument to the Malgré-nous in Obernai, [[Bas-Rhin]]
Malgré-nous (, or, more figuratively, 'we who are forced against our will') is a term that refers to men from Alsace–Lorraine who were conscripted into the German military after the region's annexation from France during World War II. They are sometimes referred to as forced enlistees ().
Bücker Flugzeugbau
Defunct German aircraft manufacturing company

Hugo Schneider AG
HASAG (also known as Hugo Schneider AG, or by its original name in ) was a German metal goods manufacturer founded in 1863. Based in Leipzig, it grew from a small business making lamps and other small metal products by hand into a large factory and publicly traded company that sold its wares in several countries. During the Second World War, Hasag became a Nazi arms-manufacturing conglomerate with dozens of factories across German-occupied Europe using slave labour on a massive scale. Tens of thousands of Jews from Poland, and other prisoners, died producing munition for Hasag.
Deutsche Ausrüstungswerke
Nazi German defense contractor owned and operated by the Schutzstaffel and staffed by concentration camp prisoners
Service du travail obligatoire
Forced deportation of French workers, WWII
P
sign for Polish workers during the NS-Regime in Nazi Germany
Zivilarbeiter
thumb|ID card of a Zivilarbeiter from Nazi-occupied Soviet Union
right|thumb|200px|Arbeitsbuch für Ausländer (Workbook for Foreigner) identity document issued to a Polish Zivilarbeiter in 1942 together with a letter "P" patch Poles were required to wear attached to their clothing.
Zivilarbeiter () refers primarily to ethnic Polish residents from the General Government (Nazi-occupied central Poland), used during World War II as forced laborers in the Third Reich.

Deutsche Wirtschaftsbetriebe
holding company for SS operations
Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich
literary title
Heu-Aktion
thumb|right|320px|Boys' roll call at the main Łódź Ghetto#Deportations|children's concentration camp in [[Łódź, of which KZ Dzierżązna, for Polish girls as young as eight, was a sub-camp.]]
Baudienst
Baudienst (from German, lit. "building service" or "construction service"), full name in German Baudienst im Generalgouvernement (Construction Service in the General Government), was a forced labour organization created by Nazi Germany in the General Government territory of occupied Poland during World War II. Baudienst was subordinate to the Reichsarbeitsdienst (RAD, lit. "Reich Labour Service").
Dora Trial
war crimes trial
Deutsch Schützen massacre
1945 mass killing in Deutsch Schützen-Eisenberg, Austria
Hungarian Labour Service
system of forced labor service for Jewish men in Hungary during World War II
Ausländerkinder-Pflegestätte
systematically neglectful children's homes in Nazi Germany

Blood Road
street in Norway
Polish decrees
Italian military internees
Italian soldiers captured in Nazi Germany
Arbeitseinsatz
Arbeitseinsatz () was a forced labour category of internment within Nazi Germany () during World War II. When German men were called up for military service, Nazi German authorities rounded up civilians to fill in the vacancies and to expand manufacturing operations. Some labourers came from Germany but exponentially more from roundups in the German-occupied territories. Arbeitseinsatz was not restricted to the industry sector and to arms producing factories; it also took place, for example, in the farming sector, community services, and even in the churches.
Weingut I
German WW2 bunker construction project
Arbeitslager
right|thumb|200px|Arbeitsbuch Für Ausländer (Workbook for Foreigners) identity document issued to a Polish Forced Labourer in 1942 by the Germans, together with a letter "P" patch that Poles were required to wear to identify them to the German population.
Arbeitslager () is a German language word which means labor camp. Under Nazism, the German government (and its private-sector, Axis, and collaborator partners) used forced labor extensively, starting in the 1930s but most especially during World War II. Another term was Zwangsarbeitslager ("forced labor camp").
Polenlager
The Polenlager (, Polish Camps) was a system of forced labor camps in Silesia that held Poles during the World War II Nazi German occupation of Poland. The prisoners, originally destined for deportation across the border to the new semi-colonial General Government district, were sent to the Polenlager between 1942 and 1945, once the other locations became too overcrowded to accommodate the prisoners.