RADwJ Non-District Assignment Duty Station Badge

SKU: 80.GOR.03.02.05.02.002

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  • RADwJ Non-District Assignment Duty Station Badge (Camp School version) Obverse
  • RADwJ Non-District Assignment Duty Station Badge (Camp School version) Reverse
  • RADwJ Non-District Assignment Duty Station Badge (Camp School version) Detail

Attributes

  • country
    Germany
  • date of institution
    November 1, 1936

History


The RAD (Reichsarbeitsdienst = Reich Labour Service) was officially established on June 26, 1935 as the sole, and compulsory, labour service of Germany. Its purposes were to help the economy, curb unemployment, and indoctrinate its members with the NSDAP ideology, as well as play its part in militarising the German population.

The FAD (Freiwilliger Arbeitsdienst = Voluntary Labour Service) was the precursor of the RAD in the early 1930s. Official uniform regulations were first introduced on October 1, 1933, with modifications made in July 1934. It is also known as NSAD (Nationalsozialistischer Arbeitsdienst = National Socialist Labour Service).

The earliest uniforms were a not entirely successful attempt at standardisation. They gave way to a second wave of FAD uniforms that, when the RAD was established, experienced no significant changes.

The Reichsarbeitsdienst der weiblichen Jugend (RADwJ, Reich Labour Service of Female Youths) was the female branch of the RAD. It was smaller than the male branch. In accordance with the place of a woman within the nationalsocialist ideology, the tasks the young women were assigned were chosen to prepare them for a domestic life of caring and nurturing. They included, for example, light farm work, taking care of the young, the old, and the sick, and organising entertaining events. While outwardly organised in a similar manner as the male branch, including the wear of uniforms, the RADwJ was much less militarised.

The Duty Station Badge for members of the RADwJ was introduced on November 1, 1936. It is in the form of a brown shield with a black outer and gold-coloured inner border for Higher Leaders, a silver-coloured one for Lower Leaders, and a white one for Non-Leader ranks. On the shield is the RADwJ emblem and underneath a Roman numeral for the district of the member. This number is in the same colour scheme as the inner border. An exception are the members on the Staff of the Reichsleitung who had no numbers at all. The badge was worn on the upper left sleeve.

Some badges signify membership in a school, for example a Bezirksschule (BS, district school). These badges are similar to the ones for the male branch of the RAD. Letters are always Roman ones. When they feature more than one, they often have a small diamond-shaped hyphen in between. Sometimes they feature additional numbers underneath.

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Versions

  • Price

    $65 USD

  • Composition

  • Inscription

  • Size

  • Maker

  • Version Remarks

    This specimen was worn by a RADwJ Leader. "LS" stands for Lagerschule (camp school).

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