I am not a historian, but from what I know, there are quite a few documentation centers taking care of these primary sources. Do you need them as original documents or are reproductions, e. g. photographies or transcripts, fine, too?
dokumentarchiv is also a very interesting source, providing historical documents starting from 1800: http://www.documentarchiv.de/wr/1920/nsdap-programm.html
Dear Yves, thank you very much for responce and addresses. Just I need not the original documents, rather depends me on sources to work. I have in English the collections of documents, but I need them in German. With greetings. Jacek
(4) Not sure this is of help, but in the link below you will find the digital copies of the Nazi's newspaper Sozialistische Arbeiter Zeitung for the years 1931 through 1933
You should also look into the Nuremburg Race laws. A copy in German is not difficult to find through a simple search. I am sure you realise that the SS-directed actions used euphemisms that you will need to be thoroughly familiar with them in German as only in the rarest cases did a document spell out exactly what was done that was of criminal nature.
It depends on region you are investigating. For example in Lithuania there were published special reports of Nazzi policy on the Holocaust (Stahlecker report). As well many orders issued in German during the war for public use.
Yes Simonas, you have right. "Regionalization" is very important but i need the German documents rather for the illustration of "the Language's Problem of Holocaust", it means what kind of concepts and terms Nazis have used for "naming" the Jewish extermination. H. Arendt, for instance, affirms, that there was language of lie, that there was camouflage, which had to cover the genocide both physically (really), as well as morally. I am sure, that it should be necessary to analyze notions and terms has used by Nazis in original.
The Israeli Police compiled a large collection of such documents during its investigation of Adolph Eichman. These are kept at thr Israeli National Archives, under "Beuro 06". There is a chance that some documents are available online - please checkhttp://www.archives.gov.il/ArchiveGov_eng.
There is a Russian-German project for digitalization of documents of the German secret services (1912-1945) that were confiscated during the war and transferred to the Russian archives (Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History (RGASPI, Fond 458, Series 9).
Also the most meticulous documentary study of holocaust documentation was done by Raul Hilberg who unfortunately passed away a few years ago. His work is particularly noteworthy because he dealt also with many seemingly banal documents to show the enormity and complexity of the machinery that facilitated the destruction of European Jewry.