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Coordinates: 49°44′08″N 12°21′21″E / 49.73556°N 12.35583°E / 49.73556; 12.35583

File:Flossenbürg by A. Kryszczak - Plan without legend.jpg

Hand-drawn plan of the Flossenbürg concentration camp by Stefan Kryszczak, a survivor of the camp.

Flossenburg

General view of Flossenbürg concentration camp after liberation in April 1945

File:Flossenbürg by A. Kryszczak - Transport żywności (crop).jpg

"Food transport (Essenträgers)" – drawing by Stefan Kryszczak

File:Flossenbürg by A. Kryszczak - Przed blokiem XXIII (crop).jpg

"In front of block 23" - drawing by Stefan Kryszczak

Flossenbuerg Trial

Father Lelere, a former prisoner, testifies at the trial of former camp personnel on 21 June 1946

Flossenbuerg 17

Crematorium at Flossenbürg

Konzentrationslager Flossenbürg was a Nazi concentration camp built in May 1938 by the Schutzstaffel (SS) Economic-Administrative Main Office at Flossenbürg, in the Upper Palatinate region of Bavaria, Germany, near the border with Czechoslovakia. Until its liberation in April 1945, more than 96,000 prisoners passed through the camp. About 30,000 died there.[1]

History[]

Pre–World War II[]

Before World War II, Flossenbürg was a men's camp primarily for "antisocial" or "criminal" prisoners. The camp's site was chosen so that the inmates could be used as slave labor to quarry the granite found in the nearby hills. The quarries belonged to the SS-owned and -operated German Earth and Stone Works (DEST) company. On March 24, 1938, SS authorities determined a site near the small town of Flossenbürg to be suitable for the establishment of a concentration camp due to its potential for extracting granite for construction purposes.

During World War II[]

During World War II, most of the inmates sent to Flossenbürg, or to one of about 100 sub-camps, came from the German-occupied eastern territories. The inmates in Flossenbürg were housed in 16 huge wooden barracks, its crematorium was built in a valley straight outside the camp. In September 1939, the SS transferred 1,000 political prisoners to Flossenbürg from Dachau.

In 1941 to 1942, about 1,500 Polish prisoners, mostly members of the Polish resistance, were deported to Flossenbürg. In July 1941, SS guards shot 40 Polish prisoners at the SS firing range outside the Flossenbürg concentration camp. Between February and September 1941 the SS executed about one-third of the Polish political prisoners deported to Flossenbürg.

During World War II, the German army turned tens of thousands of Soviet prisoners over to the SS for execution. More than 1,000 Soviet prisoners of war were executed in Flossenbürg by the end of 1941. The SS also established a special camp for a load of Soviet prisoners of war within Flossenbürg. Executions of Soviet prisoners of war continued sporadically through 1944. Soviet prisoners of war in Mülsen St. Micheln, a subcamp of Flossenbürg, staged an uprising and mass escape attempt on 1 May 1944. They set their bunks on fire and killed some of the camp's Kapos, prisoner trustees who carried out SS orders. SS guards crushed the revolt and none of the prisoners escaped. Almost 200 prisoners died from burns and wounds sustained in the uprising. The SS transferred about 40 leaders of the revolt to Flossenbürg itself, where they were later executed in the camp jail.

There were over 4,000 prisoners in the main camp of Flossenbürg in February 1943. More than half of these prisoners were political prisoners (mainly Soviet, Czech, Dutch, and German). Almost 800 were German criminals, more than 100 were homosexuals, and 7 were Jehovah's Witnesses.

During the war, prisoner forced labor became increasingly important in German arms production. As a result, the Flossenbürg camp system expanded to include approximately 100 subcamps concentrated mainly around armaments industries in southern Germany and western Czechoslovakia.

On 1 September 1944, Flossenbürg became a training camp for extremely large numbers of female guards (Aufseherinnen) who were recruited by force from factories all over Germany and Poland. All together, over 500 women were trained in the camp and in time went on to its subcamps. Women matrons staffed the Flossenbürg subcamps, such as Dresden Ilke Werke, Freiberg, Helmbrechts, Holleischen, Leitmeritz, Mehltheuer, Neustadt (near Coburg), Nürnberg-Siemens, Oederan, and Zwodau, and it is known that six SS women (SS-Helferinnenkorps) staffed the Gundelsdorf subcamp in Czechoslovakia.

By 1945, there were almost 40,000 inmates held in the whole Flossenbürg camp system, including almost 11,000 women. Inmates were made to work in the Flossenbürg camp quarry and in armaments making. Underfeeding, sickness, and overwork was rife among the inmates, and with the harshness of the guards, this treatment killed thousands of inmates.[2]

It is estimated that between April 1944 and April 1945, more than 1500 death sentences were carried out there. To this end, six new gallows hooks were installed. In the last months the rate of daily executions overtook the capacity of the crematorium. As a solution, the SS began stacking the bodies in piles, drenching them with gasoline, and setting them alight. Incarcerated in what was called the "Bunker," those who had been condemned to death were kept alone in dark rooms with no food for days until they were executed.

Amongst the Allied military officers executed at Flossenbürg were Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent Gustave Daniel Alfred Biéler (executed 6 September 1944). As Germany's defeat loomed, a number of the SOE agents whom the SS had tortured repeatedly in order to extract information, were executed on the same day. On 29 March 1945 13 SOE agents were hanged, including Jack Charles Stanmore Agazarian and Brian Rafferty. Together with his deputy General Hans Oster, military jurist General Karl Sack, theologian Rev. Dietrich Bonhoeffer[3] and Ludwig Gehre, Wilhelm Canaris was humiliated before witnesses and then executed on April 9, 1945. At the time of his execution, Canaris had been decorated with the Iron Cross First and Second Class, the Silver German Cross, the Cross of Honor and the Wehrmacht's Twelve and Twenty-Five Year Long-Service Ribbons. On 1 August 2007 a memorial was unveiled at Flossenbürg to the memory of the seven members of the German resistance who had conspired to assassinate Hitler and who were executed on April 9, 1945.

Notable inmates[]

  • Prince Philipp, Landgrave of Hesse, served as Governor of Hesse-Kassel as a member of the Nazi Party. He later fell out with the Party and was imprisoned at Flossenbürg in September 1943. Great-grandson of Queen Victoria.
  • Wilhelm Franz Canaris, head of the Abwehr (military intelligence service) 1935–1944 and member of the German Resistance.
  • Hans Oster, deputy head of the Abwehr under Canaris and a primary plotter against Hitler.
  • Kurt Schumacher, future head of SPD.
  • Dmitry Karbyshev, Red Army general, in 1943–1944.
  • Ignacy Oziewicz, the first commandant of Narodowe Sily Zbrojne.
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German Lutheran pastor and theologian, supporter of anti-Hitler conspiracy.
  • Rudolf Viest and Ján Golian, Slovak Generals and commanders of Slovak National Uprising were probably executed in Flossenbürg.
  • Bertram James ("Jimmy" James), RAF, survivor of the Great Escape.
  • Marian P. Opala, later served as Chief Justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
  • Josef Kohout, homosexual inmate and subject of the book Die Männer mit dem rosa Winkel (The Men With the Pink Triangle).

Death march and liberation[]

Flossenbürg April 9 1945 Memorial

Memorial to members of German resistance executed on 9 April 1945

In early April 1945, as American forces were approaching the camp, the SS staged a perfunctory "trial" and executed General Hans Oster, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, Rev. Dr. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Dr. Karl Sack, Dr. Theodor Strünck and General Friedrich von Rabenau, who were involved in the 20 July plot against Adolf Hitler or previous plots against Hitler, along with the French Resistance worker Simone Michel-Lévy, who had managed to organize an uprising in the camp. On 20 April 1945, they began the forced evacuation of 22,000 inmates, including 1,700 Jews, leaving behind only those too sick to walk. On the death march to the Dachau concentration camp, SS guards shot any inmate too sick to keep up.[4] Before they reached Dachau, more than 7,000 inmates had been shot or had collapsed and died.

By the time the U.S. Army freed the camp on April 23, 1945, more than 30,000 inmates had died at Flossenbürg. Troops from the 2nd Cavalry Group, Mechanized,[5] the 90th Infantry Division and the 97th Infantry Division[6][7] found about 1,600 ill and weak prisoners, mostly in the camp's hospital barracks. Members of the army's Counter-Intelligence Corps, including Ib Melchior,[8] Anthony Hecht[9] and Robie Macauley,[10] conducted extensive interviews with survivors to gather evidence for the 1946 Flossenbürg War Crimes Trial.

Camp commanders[]

Aftermath[]

Flossenbürg Trial[]

TAL DES TODES, Gesamtansicht

Tal des Todes (Valley of the Dead) with memorials

The Flossenbürg War Crimes Trial took place in Dachau, Germany, from June 12, 1946 until January 22, 1947.

An American military tribunal tried 46 former staff from Flossenbürg concentration camp for crimes of murder, torturing, and starving the inmates in their custody. All but 5 of the defendants were found guilty, 15 of whom were condemned to death, 11 were given life sentences, and 14 were jailed for terms of 1 to 30 years.

Holocaust museum[]

On 22 July 2007, the sixty-second anniversary of the camp's liberation, a Holocaust museum was opened at Flossenbürg. The ceremony was attended by 84 former inmates, in addition to the president of Ukraine, Viktor Yushchenko, whose father was among the camp's inmates during World War II for five months.[1]

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Flossenbürg Memorial", Dateline World Jewry, World Jewish Congress, September 2007
  2. Joseph A. Rehyansky, "Flossenburg," National Review, June 25, 1976, pp. 678–9.
  3. Eric Metaxas, Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy, Thomas Nelson; (April 20, 2010), ISBN 978-1-59555-138-2.
  4. Fischer, Benno. Death March: April 15, 1945 - Aprl 24, 1945. United States Holocaust Museum Media Archive, RG-02.039. Republished as "Death March," edited by Peter Heigl, Nuremberg, 2011.
  5. Flossenbürg
  6. "Robert W. Hacker, "Knocking the Lock Off the Gate at the Flossenbürg Concentration Camp; April 23, 1945," excerpted from Robert W. Hacker: Flossenbürg Concentration Camp, Phoenix 2000, unpublished manuscript. Flossenbürg memorial archive". 97thdivision.com. http://www.97thdivision.com/flossenberg4.html. Retrieved 2012-05-17. 
  7. "Memories of the chaplain to the US 97th Infantry Division at the online Museum of the division in WWII". 29 May 2011. http://www.97thdivision.com/chaplain.html. 
  8.  Ib Melchior . "Ib Melchior, ''Case By Case: A U.S. Army Counterintelligence Agent in World War II,'' ISBN 0-595-00393-1". IUniverse (June 14, 2000). http://www.amazon.com/Case-U-S-Conterintelligence-Agent-World/dp/0595003931/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1303221583&sr=1-2. Retrieved 2012-05-17. 
  9. "Anthony Hecht, obituary". Breakoutofthebox.com. http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/AnthonyHecht.htm. Retrieved 2012-05-17. 
  10. Macauley R. "Who Should Mourn?" The New York Times, Letters to the Editor, August 8, 1976.

Literature[]

  • Pascal Cziborra. KZ Flossenbürg. Gedenkbuch der Frauen. Memorial Book of the Women. Lorbeer Verlag. Bielefeld. 2007 ISBN 978-3-938969-03-8
  • Kindle eBook, DEATH MARCH OF THE JEWS FROM THE CONCENTRATION CAMP AT FLOSSENBUERG, 1945, 2011

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Flossenbürg concentration camp and the edit history here.
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