Did Nazis force professional women like teachers, doctors, and attorney, to be prostitutes, or did the Nazi's simply require current prostitutes to work for the Germans?
During the Nazi regime, women from various backgrounds, including some professional women such as teachers, doctors, and attorneys, faced severe repression and were often forced into traditional gender roles. However, the state's approach to prostitution during this time involved different elements.
The Nazi regime did implement policies that sought to control and regulate prostitution rather than specifically forcing professional women into prostitution. The regime viewed prostitution as a necessary evil and sought to manage it for the supposed benefit of soldiers and to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Consequently, existing sex workers were often coerced or regulated under state control, rather than the Nazis specifically targeting professional women to become prostitutes.
Instead, the regime imposed strict societal norms that limited women's roles primarily to motherhood and domestic responsibilities, while also criminalizing or persecuting those who deviated from these roles. Some women may have been economically forced into sex work due to increasing poverty and the oppressive economic conditions of the time, but this was not a systematic program targeting professional women.
Overall, while the Nazis did enforce policies that involved prostitution, the portrayal of the regime systematically forcing professional women into sex work is not an accurate reflection of the historical reality.


