c) Jüdische Produktion GmbH⁴⁹¹
d) The W.C. Toebbens Company
6) The legal and actual form of workshops
7) The Department’s relations with groups of entrepreneurs and shareholders
8) The scope of workshops’ production
9) Workshops as a form of cottage industry
10) The Union of Jewish Craftsmen⁴⁹² and workshops
11) The internal organisation of workshops
a) the hiring of labourers
b) the issue of machinery
c) premises and their adaptation
12) A look at the organisation of major workshops on the “Aryan” side
13) The number of workshops, addresses, the number of licences granted
14) The budgets of workshops, the components of production costs, administration,
bookkeeping, transport of raw materials
Mechanisation of workshops (assembly line system)
16) Workshops in numbers
a) the current number of commissions
b) the average daily number of employed labourers
c) dinner rations } check the mutual relations
d) paid out labour costs } between these points
17) Conditions of labour and remuneration of workshop labourers
a) piecework
b) daily wages
c) the differences between individual earnings
d) work performed by women
18) [2] Workshops as presented by labourers
19) Workshop kitchens
20) Products issued to labourers
21) Hunger and its effects among workshop labourers
491 (Ger.) Jewish Production Ltd. A company established on 16 August 1941, which took over production workshops from the Department of Production. It was also licensed to trade with companies outside the ghetto. Its shareholders were employees of the Department of Production: Mieczysław Orlean, Beniamin Gliksman, and Salomon Eiger. See Engelking,
Leociak, The Warsaw Ghetto. A Guide to the Perished City, p. 395.
492 See Doc. 39.