Buchenwald concentration camp: Difference between revisions
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==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
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[[Image:The Remains of Buchenwald in Winter.jpg|thumb|Picture taken in winter of area where prisoner huts once were]] |
[[Image:The Remains of Buchenwald in Winter.jpg|thumb|Picture taken in winter of area where prisoner huts once were]] |
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After the liberation, between [[1945]] and [[1950]] the camp was administered by the [[Soviet Union]] and served as a ''Special Camp'' of the [[NKVD]]. Initially used for housing German war criminals, with time it was converted into a standard detention site for political prisoners and opposition to Soviet rule. |
After the liberation, between [[1945]] and [[1950]] the camp was administered by the [[Soviet Union]] and served as a ''Special Camp No. 2'' of the [[NKVD]]. Initially used for housing German war criminals, with time it was converted into a standard detention site for political prisoners and opposition to Soviet rule. |
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Some of the inmates held there were WWII inmates of the same camp. |
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Between 1945 and 1950, 28,455 prisoners, including 1,000 women, where held by the Soviet Union at Buchenwald. Prisoners consisted of political prisoners, Nazi perpetrators, Hitler Youth leaders and members, as well as a large number people imprisoned due to identity confusion and arbitrary arrests. |
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In 1950 it was passed to the civilian authorities and in [[1958]] the first monument to commemorate the dead was erected there. |
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The Soviets would not allow mail or visitation to prisoners. They also would not attempt to determine the guilt of any individual prisoner. |
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In all, 7,113 prisoners would die at the camp while in the Soviet Union's control. The dead where buried in mass graves by the rail yard and no notification was sent to family members upon death. |
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On January 16, 1950 the camp was passed to the civilian authorities of the [[GDR]] and included 2,415 prisoners. In October 1950, it was decreed that the camp would be torn down. The main gate, crematorium and two guard towers escaped demolition. All prisoner barracks and other buildings where demolished. Foundations of some of the buildings still exist and many others have been rebuilt. According to the Buchenwald Memorial web site, "''the combination of obliteration and preservation was dictated by a specific concept for interpreting the history of Buchenwald Concentration Camp.''" |
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The first monument was erected days after the initial liberation. Built to be completely temporary, it was built by the prisoners and was made of wood. The second monument to commemorate the dead was erected there in [[1958]] by the GDR near the mass Graves. Inside the camp, there is a living monument in the place of the first monument and is kept at skin temperature year round. |
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==Well-known prisoners== |
==Well-known prisoners== |
Revision as of 16:06, 23 January 2006
Buchenwald concentration camp was a Nazi concentration camp established on Ettersberg Hill near Weimar, Thuringia, Germany, in July 1937. The name "Buchenwald" is German for "beech forest", as the camp was located in Buchenwald forest. The prisoners were used as slave labour in local armament factories.
The first commandant was Karl Otto Koch, who ran the camp from 1937 to 1941. His second wife, Ilse Koch, became notorious as "The Witch of Buchenwald" ("Die Hexe von Buchenwald", and informally "The Bitch of Buchenwald"), for her streak of cruelty. Karl Otto Koch was tried and executed by the Nazi authorities for forgery and embezzlement in April 1945, whilst Ilse was sentenced to life imprisonment by the post-war German authorities, committing suicide in her cell in 1967.
Although not technically an extermination camp, mass killings of prisoners of war took place at Buchenwald, and many inmates died during medical experiments, or fell victim to arbitrary acts perpetrated by the SS guards.
The camp was also the site of large-scale testing of vaccines for epidemic typhus in 1942 and 1943, all in all testing 729 inmates, around 280 of whom died. Because of their long association in cramped quarters in Block 46, the bacterium killed more and infection lasted longer than typhus in healthy adults.
The camp was evacuated by the Nazis as Allied troops approached the area, and the U.S. 3rd Army assumed control of the camp on 11 April, 1945.
After the departure of Allied troops, the Soviet occupation forces used the infrastructure of the camp from 1945 to 1950, re-naming it "Special Camp 2". It was used to house German prisoners, and Soviet records indicate that over 7,000 died.
Female prisoners and overseers
The number of women prisoners held in Buchenwald was about 200 to 1000. The first female inmates were twenty political prisoners and two female SS guards (Aufseherin) who arrived in Buchenwald from Ravensbrück to serve in the camp's brothel in 1941. Later the SS fired the two SS women on duty in the brothel because they were accused of corruption, and their positions were replaced by SS men.
The majority of women prisoners, however, arrived in 1944 and 1945 from other camps, i.e. Auschwitz, Ravensbrück and Bergen-Belsen. Most of these women were Jewish. Only one barrack was set aside for the female prisoners, and this was overseen by the female Blockführerin, Franziska Hoengesberg. Many of the women prisoners were later shipped out to one of Buchenwald's many female subcamps in Sömmerda, Buttelstedt, Mühlhausen, Gotha, Gelsenkirchen, Essen, Lippstadt, Weimar, Magdeburg and Penig, to name a few.
When the Buchenwald camp was evacuated, the SS sent the male prisoners to other camps, and the 500 remaining women (including one of the secret annex members who lived with Anne Frank, "Mrs. van Daan" -- her real name was Auguste van Pels) were taken by train and foot to the Theresienstadt camp and ghetto in Czechoslovakia. Many, including van Pels, died sometime between April 1945 and May 1945. Because the female prisoner population at Buchenwald was comparatively small, the SS only trained female overseers at the camp and "assigned" them to one of the female subcamps. 23 known female guards were trained in the camp.
Ilse Koch served as head supervisor (Oberaufseherin) of 22 other female guards and hundreds of women prisoners in the main camp. Today 20 female SS guards are known by name; Maria Balkenhol, Elisabeth Baessler, Elli Ebert (who served at Buchenwald and Ravensbruck), Frieda Friedrichs (who served at Buchenwald, Magdeburg and Comthurey), Karoline Geulen, Elisabeth Hirsemann, Franziska Hoengesberg, Maria Isert, Frieda Jahnke, Elisabeth Max, Elfriede Motzkuhn, Else Purucker (who served in Buchenwald and Taucha), Charlotte Rafoth, Lieschen Rech, Wilhelmina Sadrinna, Martha Schaefer (who first served at Flossenbürg then Buchenwald), Irmtraut Sell, Emma Theissen (who served at Buchenwald and then Essen subcamp), and Amalie WildeTemplate:Fn. Eventually, more than 530 women served as guards in the vast Buchenwald system of subcamps and external commands across Germany. Only twenty-three women served in Buchenwald, compared to over 7,000 men.
Aftermath
After the liberation, between 1945 and 1950 the camp was administered by the Soviet Union and served as a Special Camp No. 2 of the NKVD. Initially used for housing German war criminals, with time it was converted into a standard detention site for political prisoners and opposition to Soviet rule.
Between 1945 and 1950, 28,455 prisoners, including 1,000 women, where held by the Soviet Union at Buchenwald. Prisoners consisted of political prisoners, Nazi perpetrators, Hitler Youth leaders and members, as well as a large number people imprisoned due to identity confusion and arbitrary arrests.
The Soviets would not allow mail or visitation to prisoners. They also would not attempt to determine the guilt of any individual prisoner.
In all, 7,113 prisoners would die at the camp while in the Soviet Union's control. The dead where buried in mass graves by the rail yard and no notification was sent to family members upon death.
On January 16, 1950 the camp was passed to the civilian authorities of the GDR and included 2,415 prisoners. In October 1950, it was decreed that the camp would be torn down. The main gate, crematorium and two guard towers escaped demolition. All prisoner barracks and other buildings where demolished. Foundations of some of the buildings still exist and many others have been rebuilt. According to the Buchenwald Memorial web site, "the combination of obliteration and preservation was dictated by a specific concept for interpreting the history of Buchenwald Concentration Camp."
The first monument was erected days after the initial liberation. Built to be completely temporary, it was built by the prisoners and was made of wood. The second monument to commemorate the dead was erected there in 1958 by the GDR near the mass Graves. Inside the camp, there is a living monument in the place of the first monument and is kept at skin temperature year round.
Well-known prisoners
- Konrad Adenauer, Former mayor of Cologne, later first Chancellor of West Germany
- Jean Améry writer
- Conrad Baars, Catholic psychiatrist
- Bruno Bettelheim child psychologist
- Józef Biniszkiewicz, Polish socialist politician
- Léon Blum French politician, former head of the French government
- Bolesław Fichna, Polish right-wing politician and lawyer
- Georges Mandel French politician, former Minister of the Interior
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer protestant theologician and prominent member of the Confessing Church
- Rudolf Breitscheid, former member of the SPD and leader of its faction in the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic before the Nazi seizure of power in 1933
- Robert Clary French actor, Corporal Louis LeBeau on the television series Hogan's Heroes
- Seweryn Franciszek Czetwertyński-Światopełk, Polish politician
- Maurice Halbwachs French sociologist, died in the camp in 1945
- Curt Herzstark
- Heinrich Eduard Jacob, German writer
- Józef Kachel, Scout leader, head of the pre-war Związek Harcerstwa Polskiego in Germany
- Imre Kertész writer, 2002 Nobel Prize in Literature recipient
- Israel Meir Lau, Former Chief Rabbi of Israel
- Artur London, senior Czech communist and writer, future government minister
- Jan Łangowski, Polish social worker and politician active among the Polish diaspora in Germany
- Hélie Denoix de Saint Marc, member of the French resistance, later involved in an attempted putsch against the French government
- Mafalda Maria Elisabetta of Savoy Princess of Italy, daughter of King Victor Emmanuel III and Elena Petrovich of Montenegro.
- Franciszek Myśliwiec, Polish politician and social worker
- Jura Soyfer, Austrian poet and dramatist
- Ernst Thälmann, leader of the Communist Party of Germany
- Ernst Wiechert, German writer
- Elie Wiesel, French-American writer, 1986 Nobel Peace Prize recipient
Footnotes
Template:FnbAll the information on these female overseers came from Daniel Patrick Brown's book THE CAMP WOMEN The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Concentration Camp System.
Literature:
- Bodo Ritscher: Das sowjetische Speziallager Nr. 2 1945-1950. Katalog zur ständigen historischen Ausstellung. Wallstein, Göttingen 1999.
- Volkhard Knigge und Bodo Ritscher: Totenbuch. Speziallager Buchenwald 1945-1950. Stiftung Gedenkstätten Buchenwald und Mittelbau Dora, Weimar 2003.