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Josef Albert Meisinger

Josef Albert Meisinger (14 September 1899 – 7 March 1947), also known as the "Butcher of Warsaw", was an SS functionary in Nazi Germany. He held a position in the Gestapo and was a member of the Nazi Party. During the early phases of World War II Meisinger served as commander of Einsatzgruppe IV in Poland. From 1941 to 1945 he worked as liaison for the Gestapo at the German embassy in Tokyo. He was arrested in Japan in 1945, convicted of war crimes and was executed in Warsaw, Poland.

Josef Albert Meisinger
Nickname(s)"The Butcher of Warsaw"
Born14 September 1899
Munich, German Empire
Died7 March 1947(1947-03-07) (aged 47)
Mokotów Prison, Warsaw, Polish People's Republic
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Allegiance German Empire
 Nazi Germany
Service/branchMunich Police 1922–1933
Gestapo 1933–1945
Years of service1916-1919, 1933–1945
RankStandartenführer
Commands heldEinsatzgruppe IV
Commander of the State Police in Warsaw
Battles/warsWorld War I
World War II
AwardsIron Cross
Josef Albert Meisinger (second row, second from the right) during his trial before the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw.

Early life edit

Meisinger was born in Munich, the son of Josef and Berta Meisinger; he enlisted on 23 December 1916 and served during World War I in the 230th Minenwerfer Company (a type of short-range mortar), 22nd Bavarian Pioneer Battalion in the 30th Bavarian Reserve Division. After being wounded in battle he was awarded the Iron Cross and the Bavarian Military Merit Cross. On 18 January 1919 he attained the rank of Vizefeldwebel (senior sergeant), and on 19 April 1919 he entered the Freikorps under Franz Ritter von Epp, with whom he fought against the Soviet Republic of Bavaria. On 1 October 1922 he began working at the Munich Police Headquarters. As leader of the III Platoon of the II Company of the Freikorps Oberland, he took part in the Hitlerputsch on 8–9 November 1923.[1]

He was inducted on 5 March 1933 into the SS and then into the Bavarian Political Police on 9 March 1933, thus coming into official contact with Heinrich Müller, Franz Josef Huber and Reinhard Heydrich (with whom he had served in the Freikorps). At that point in time, Heinrich Himmler was chief of the Munich Police and Heydrich was commander of Department IV, the political police.[2] Meisinger became a member of the Nazi Party on 1 May 1933. He received the Blood Order Medal of the Nazi Party on 9 November 1933.

Nazi career edit

On 20 April 1934, Meisinger was promoted to SS-Obertruppführer. Heydrich was appointed chief of the Gestapo on 22 April 1934. Immediately thereafter, Heydrich transferred to its Berlin office and took with him trusted colleagues: Heinrich Müller (Gestapo), Franz Josef Huber and Meisinger, referred to as the Bajuwaren-Brigade (Bavarian Brigade).[3] On 9 May, Meisinger was promoted to SS-Untersturmführer (2nd lieutenant) in the Dezernat II 1 H and II H 1, which had the following tasks:

  • Uncovering of opponents of Adolf Hitler within the Nazi Party
  • Prosecution of homosexuals[4]
  • Prosecution of cases of abortion
  • Prosecution of cases of intimate relations between Jews and non-Jews.

On 24 June 1934, he went to hear Erich Klausener at the Catholic Congress in Berlin and informed Heydrich that Klausener had made anarchist statements. On 30 June 1934, Klausener was shot by SS officer Kurt Gildisch in his office at the Prussian transportation ministry.[5] After the war, Walter Schellenberg the former head of the foreign intelligence section of the SD in the RHSA, described Meisinger as:

One of the most evil creatures among Heydrich's bunch of thugs and he carried out the vilest of his orders...He was a frightening individual, a large, coarse-faced man with a bald head and an incredibly ugly face. However, like many men of his type, he had drive and energy and an unscrupulous sort of cleverness...As a result of his long police experience he knew a good deal about the workings and methods of the Comintern.[6]

Role in the Blomberg–Fritsch Affair edit

From 1936 to 1938 Meisinger was a leader in the Gestapo in charge of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion (Reichszentrale zur Bekämpfung der Homosexualität und Abtreibung) in the Gestapo Central Headquarters in the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo).[7] During this period he was promoted to SS-Obersturmbannführer (lieutenant colonel). In early 1938 Adolf Hitler, Hermann Göring and Himmler wanted to dispose of Field Marshal Werner von Blomberg, a conservative member of the army's high command and Hitler's Minister of Defense. Meisinger's investigation revealed that Blomberg's wife, Erna Gruhn, had been a prostitute with a police record and once posed for pornographic photos. Blomberg was forced to resign.[8]

In 1936 Meisinger had uncovered allegations of homosexuality made against the Commander-in-Chief of the Army Colonel General Werner von Fritsch. A file was prepared and Heydrich passed the information on to Hitler. Hitler chose to dismiss the allegations and ordered Heydrich to destroy the file. However, he did not do so.[8]

In late January 1938, Göring wanted to dispose of von Fritsch as he did not want Fritsch to become the successor to Blomberg and thus his superior. Heydrich resurrected the old file on Fritsch. Meisinger saw it as an opportunity for advancement, since he knew that Himmler and the SS regarded homosexuals as a danger to the regime.[9] However, Meisinger's police work was judged to be sloppy and Heydrich and Müller were dissatisfied. At one point, Meisinger and Huber interrogated Otto Schmidt, a notorious criminal whose Berlin gang specialized in the blackmail of homosexuals.[10] Schmidt identified von Fritsch as a man whom he had witnessed engaging in homosexual acts in 1933.[11] When Meisinger provided a photograph of Fritsch on which was clearly printed Fritsch's name, title and military rank, Schmidt jumped at the chance to advance himself by slandering the general.[12][13] Heydrich resubmitted the updated von Fritsch file to Hitler.[14] Werner Best, in describing this incident, called Meisinger "a primitive man with clumsy methods". It was eventually determined that von Fritsch had been confused with Rittmeister Achim von Frisch. The accusations against Fritsch broke down in court and members of the German officer corps were appalled at Fritsch's treatment. Meisinger's career in the Gestapo was almost terminated.[15]

Activities in Poland edit

As a consequence of Meisinger's and his agency's failure, he and others were replaced, transferred for disciplinary reasons or dismissed.[16] In 1938 he was transferred to work in the archives of the principal SD office, but by September 1939 he was appointed Deputy Commander of the Einsatzgruppe IV in Poland. On 1 January 1940, after promotion to SS-Standartenführer (colonel), Meisinger was appointed Commander of the State Police in the Warsaw District, replacing Lothar Beutel who had been denounced for corruption.

Meisinger proceeded to apply brutal force against Poles, mostly those of Jewish descent. As part of the German AB-Aktion in Poland, he authorized the Palmiry massacre, the mass shooting of 1,700 people in the forest near Palmiry.[17] As a reprisal for the murder of a Polish policeman, he ordered the execution of 55 Jewish residents on 22 November 1939, and on 20 December, the execution of 107 Poles as a reprisal for the murder of two Germans.[18] Meisinger became so notorious that he was called the "Butcher of Warsaw"[19] (although this sobriquet was also given to SS-Gruppenführer Heinz Reinefarth). According to Schellenberg, his atrocities in Warsaw even appalled his superiors: "I had collected a huge file which proved him to be so utterly bestial and corrupt as to be practically inhuman...At this stage...Heydrich intervened: Meisinger knew too much, and Heydrich managed to prevent the trial from taking place."[20] Heydrich's appeal to Himmler saved Meisinger from court-martial and possible execution. He was sent to Tokyo as a means of keeping him at arm's length until the dust had settled.[21]

During his trial in 1947 Meisinger stated that he was not in Warsaw after October 1940, but it is likely that he participated in the creation of the Warsaw Ghetto.[22]

Activities in Shanghai and Japan edit

From 1 April 1941 to May 1945 Meisinger acted as Gestapo liaison connecting leaders and particular agents of the SD at the German Embassy in Tokyo.[23] His duties included seeking out enemies of the Third Reich within the German community, using various informants. He was also the SD liaison officer to the Japanese Secret Intelligence Service. One of his tasks in Japan was the observation of the secret Soviet agent Richard Sorge (who was under suspicion in Berlin) but Meisinger soon became Sorge's constant drinking companion and, unwittingly, one of Sorge's best sources of information.[24][25]

In 1941 Meisinger tried to influence the Japanese to exterminate approximately 18,000–20,000 Jews who had escaped from Austria and Germany and who were living in Japanese-occupied Shanghai.[26] His proposals included the creation of a concentration camp on Chongming Island in the delta of the Yangtze,[27] or starvation on freighters off the coast of China.[28] The Japanese admiral responsible for overseeing Shanghai would not yield to pressure from Meisinger; however, the Japanese built a ghetto in the neighborhood of Hongkew[29] which had already been planned by Tokyo in 1939: a slum with about twice the population density of Manhattan. The ghetto was strictly isolated by Japanese soldiers under the command of the Japanese official Kano Ghoya,[30] and Jews could only leave it with special permission. Some 2,000 of them died in the Shanghai Ghetto during the wartime period.[31]

Arrest, trial and conviction edit

On 6 September 1945 Meisinger surrendered to two war correspondents, Clark Lee of the INS and Robert Brumby of MBS, at the Fujiya Hotel in Hakone, Kanagawa.[19] The reporters drove him to the Yokohama headquarters of the Counter-Intelligence Corps where Meisinger turned himself in.[32] He was held in the Yokohama Jail[33][34] where he underwent intensive questioning for two weeks before being transferred to U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower's headquarters in Frankfurt.[35] In November 1945, under the escort of Lt. Col. Jennis R. Galloway, and Major James W. McColl, both of the 441st CIC detachment, he was flown to Washington, D.C. for questioning on his involvement in the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto.[36]

In 1946 he was extradited to Poland. In Warsaw on 17 December 1946 he was charged, together with Ludwig Fischer (Nazi Governor of the Warsaw District), Max Daume (Acting Commander of the Ordnungspolizei in Warsaw), and Ludwig Leist (Nazi Plenipotentiary Governor of the City of Warsaw) of Nazi crimes.[37] The trials took place between 17 December 1946 and 24 February 1947. On 3 March 1947 the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw sentenced Meisinger to death, and on 7 March he was executed in Warsaw's Mokotów Prison.[38]

References edit

  1. ^ Josef Albert Meisinger
  2. ^ Longerich, Peter, Heinrich Himmler: A Life, Oxford University Press, 2011, p. 149. ISBN 978-0-19-959232-6
  3. ^ Gerwarth, Robert, Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich, Yale University Press, 2011, p. 76, ISBN 978-0-300-11575-8
  4. ^ Meisinger and the Gay Holocaust
  5. ^ Hoffmann, Peter, Hitler's Personal Security: Protecting the Führer 1921-1945, Da Capo Press, 2000 [1979], p. 49, ISBN 978-0-30680-947-7
  6. ^ Walter Schellenberg, The Labyrinth: Memoirs of Walter Schellenberg, Hitler's Chief of Counterintelligence, Da Capo Press, 1956; ISBN 0306809273, pp. 160–161.
  7. ^ Jörg Hutter, Die Rolle der Polizei bei der Schwulen- und Lesbenverfolgung im Nationalsozialismus, in: "Schwule, Lesben, Polizei", Dobler, Jens (HG.), Verlag rosa Winkel, Berlin 1996.
  8. ^ a b Gerwarth, Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich, p. 116
  9. ^ Josef Meisinger on "Combating Homosexuality as a Political Task" (April 5–6, 1937)
  10. ^ Gerwarth, Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich, p. 117
  11. ^ Plant, Richard, The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War Against Homosexuals. Macmillan, 1988, p. 141. ISBN 978-0-8050-0600-1
  12. ^ Deutsch, Harold Charles, Hitler and His Generals: The Hidden Crisis, January–June 1938, U of Minnesota Press, 1974, p. 141. ISBN 978-0-8166-0649-8
  13. ^ Karl-Heinz Janssen and Fritz Tobias, Der Sturz der Generale: Hitler und die Blomberg-Fritsch-Krise 1938, Munich 1994 ISBN 3-406-38109-X.
  14. ^ Gerwarth, Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich, pp. 116–117
  15. ^ Janssen, p. 95.
  16. ^ Janssen, p. 160.
  17. ^ Wildt, Michael, Generation des Unbedingten, Studienausgabe. Hamburg, 2003, p. 478. ISBN 978-3-930908-87-5
  18. ^ Eta Harich-Schneider, Charaktere und Katastrophen, Ullstein, 1978, p. 203. ISBN 978-3-550-07481-3
  19. ^ a b "Swiss Neutral Claims Nazis are Still on the Loose in Japan," Spartanburg Herald-Journal, May 12, 1946, p. A5.
  20. ^ Schellenberg, 1956: pp. 160–161.
  21. ^ Schellenberg, 1956: p. 161.
  22. ^ Freyeisen, Astrid, Shanghai und die Rolle dês Deutschen Reichs, Königshausen und Neumann, 2000, p. 466.
  23. ^ Whymant, Robert, Stalin's Spy: Richard Sorge and the Tokyo Espionage Ring, I. B. Tauris, 1996, p. 144. ISBN 978-1-86064-044-5
  24. ^ Piekalkiewicz, Janusz, World History of Espionage: Agents, Systems, Operations, # National Intelligence Book Center (1998), p. 369. ISBN 978-3-517-00849-3
  25. ^ Whymant, p. 144.
  26. ^ Marvin Tokayer and Mary Swartz, The Fugu Plan: The Untold Story Of The Japanese And The Jews During World War II, Gefen Publishing House Ltd, 2004. ISBN 9652293296
  27. ^ O'Neill, Mark, "A Saved Haven: Plans to rejuvenate Shanghai's rundown former Jewish ghetto will celebrate the district's role as a sanctuary during the Second World War", South China Morning Post, August 1, 2006; Features: Behind the News; p. 11.
  28. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-23. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  29. ^ Patrick E. Tyler, "Jews Revisit Shanghai, Grateful Still that it Sheltered Them." New York Times, June 29, 1994.
  30. ^ Heppner, Ernest G., "Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai (review)" 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, in Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, Volume 19, Number 3, Spring 2001, pp. 160–161.
  31. ^ Heppner, Ernest G. Shanghai Refuge – A Memoir of the World War II Jewish Ghetto, 1995.
  32. ^ Lee, Clark, One Last Look Around, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1947, pp. 125–30.
  33. ^
  34. ^ "War Criminal 'Cry-Baby': German Held in Yokohama," The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW: 1842–1954), 5 October 1945, p. 1.
  35. ^ Frank Kelley and Cornelius Ryan, STAR-SPANGLED MIKADO, Robert M. McBride & Co., New York, 1947.
  36. ^ "The 'Butcher of Warsaw' Arrives in California," New York Times, Nov 16, 1945; p. 9
  37. ^ " Representatives of Jewish Community Asked to Testify at Trial of Nazi Rulers of Warsaw," Jewish Telegraphic Agency, December 19, 1946.
  38. ^ Prosecution of Nazi Crimes in Poland in 1939–2004 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • Meisinger and the Gay Holocaust

josef, albert, meisinger, september, 1899, march, 1947, also, known, butcher, warsaw, functionary, nazi, germany, held, position, gestapo, member, nazi, party, during, early, phases, world, meisinger, served, commander, einsatzgruppe, poland, from, 1941, 1945,. Josef Albert Meisinger 14 September 1899 7 March 1947 also known as the Butcher of Warsaw was an SS functionary in Nazi Germany He held a position in the Gestapo and was a member of the Nazi Party During the early phases of World War II Meisinger served as commander of Einsatzgruppe IV in Poland From 1941 to 1945 he worked as liaison for the Gestapo at the German embassy in Tokyo He was arrested in Japan in 1945 convicted of war crimes and was executed in Warsaw Poland Josef Albert MeisingerNickname s The Butcher of Warsaw Born14 September 1899Munich German EmpireDied7 March 1947 1947 03 07 aged 47 Mokotow Prison Warsaw Polish People s RepublicCause of deathExecution by hangingAllegiance German Empire Nazi GermanyService wbr branchMunich Police 1922 1933Gestapo 1933 1945Years of service1916 1919 1933 1945RankStandartenfuhrerCommands heldEinsatzgruppe IVCommander of the State Police in WarsawBattles warsWorld War I World War IIAwardsIron CrossJosef Albert Meisinger second row second from the right during his trial before the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw Contents 1 Early life 2 Nazi career 2 1 Role in the Blomberg Fritsch Affair 2 2 Activities in Poland 2 3 Activities in Shanghai and Japan 3 Arrest trial and conviction 4 References 5 External linksEarly life editMeisinger was born in Munich the son of Josef and Berta Meisinger he enlisted on 23 December 1916 and served during World War I in the 230th Minenwerfer Company a type of short range mortar 22nd Bavarian Pioneer Battalion in the 30th Bavarian Reserve Division After being wounded in battle he was awarded the Iron Cross and the Bavarian Military Merit Cross On 18 January 1919 he attained the rank of Vizefeldwebel senior sergeant and on 19 April 1919 he entered the Freikorps under Franz Ritter von Epp with whom he fought against the Soviet Republic of Bavaria On 1 October 1922 he began working at the Munich Police Headquarters As leader of the III Platoon of the II Company of the Freikorps Oberland he took part in the Hitlerputsch on 8 9 November 1923 1 He was inducted on 5 March 1933 into the SS and then into the Bavarian Political Police on 9 March 1933 thus coming into official contact with Heinrich Muller Franz Josef Huber and Reinhard Heydrich with whom he had served in the Freikorps At that point in time Heinrich Himmler was chief of the Munich Police and Heydrich was commander of Department IV the political police 2 Meisinger became a member of the Nazi Party on 1 May 1933 He received the Blood Order Medal of the Nazi Party on 9 November 1933 Nazi career editOn 20 April 1934 Meisinger was promoted to SS Obertruppfuhrer Heydrich was appointed chief of the Gestapo on 22 April 1934 Immediately thereafter Heydrich transferred to its Berlin office and took with him trusted colleagues Heinrich Muller Gestapo Franz Josef Huber and Meisinger referred to as the Bajuwaren Brigade Bavarian Brigade 3 On 9 May Meisinger was promoted to SS Untersturmfuhrer 2nd lieutenant in the Dezernat II 1 H and II H 1 which had the following tasks Uncovering of opponents of Adolf Hitler within the Nazi Party Prosecution of homosexuals 4 Prosecution of cases of abortion Prosecution of cases of intimate relations between Jews and non Jews On 24 June 1934 he went to hear Erich Klausener at the Catholic Congress in Berlin and informed Heydrich that Klausener had made anarchist statements On 30 June 1934 Klausener was shot by SS officer Kurt Gildisch in his office at the Prussian transportation ministry 5 After the war Walter Schellenberg the former head of the foreign intelligence section of the SD in the RHSA described Meisinger as One of the most evil creatures among Heydrich s bunch of thugs and he carried out the vilest of his orders He was a frightening individual a large coarse faced man with a bald head and an incredibly ugly face However like many men of his type he had drive and energy and an unscrupulous sort of cleverness As a result of his long police experience he knew a good deal about the workings and methods of the Comintern 6 Role in the Blomberg Fritsch Affair edit Main article Blomberg Fritsch Affair From 1936 to 1938 Meisinger was a leader in the Gestapo in charge of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion Reichszentrale zur Bekampfung der Homosexualitat und Abtreibung in the Gestapo Central Headquarters in the Sicherheitspolizei SiPo 7 During this period he was promoted to SS Obersturmbannfuhrer lieutenant colonel In early 1938 Adolf Hitler Hermann Goring and Himmler wanted to dispose of Field Marshal Werner von Blomberg a conservative member of the army s high command and Hitler s Minister of Defense Meisinger s investigation revealed that Blomberg s wife Erna Gruhn had been a prostitute with a police record and once posed for pornographic photos Blomberg was forced to resign 8 In 1936 Meisinger had uncovered allegations of homosexuality made against the Commander in Chief of the Army Colonel General Werner von Fritsch A file was prepared and Heydrich passed the information on to Hitler Hitler chose to dismiss the allegations and ordered Heydrich to destroy the file However he did not do so 8 In late January 1938 Goring wanted to dispose of von Fritsch as he did not want Fritsch to become the successor to Blomberg and thus his superior Heydrich resurrected the old file on Fritsch Meisinger saw it as an opportunity for advancement since he knew that Himmler and the SS regarded homosexuals as a danger to the regime 9 However Meisinger s police work was judged to be sloppy and Heydrich and Muller were dissatisfied At one point Meisinger and Huber interrogated Otto Schmidt a notorious criminal whose Berlin gang specialized in the blackmail of homosexuals 10 Schmidt identified von Fritsch as a man whom he had witnessed engaging in homosexual acts in 1933 11 When Meisinger provided a photograph of Fritsch on which was clearly printed Fritsch s name title and military rank Schmidt jumped at the chance to advance himself by slandering the general 12 13 Heydrich resubmitted the updated von Fritsch file to Hitler 14 Werner Best in describing this incident called Meisinger a primitive man with clumsy methods It was eventually determined that von Fritsch had been confused with Rittmeister Achim von Frisch The accusations against Fritsch broke down in court and members of the German officer corps were appalled at Fritsch s treatment Meisinger s career in the Gestapo was almost terminated 15 Activities in Poland edit As a consequence of Meisinger s and his agency s failure he and others were replaced transferred for disciplinary reasons or dismissed 16 In 1938 he was transferred to work in the archives of the principal SD office but by September 1939 he was appointed Deputy Commander of the Einsatzgruppe IV in Poland On 1 January 1940 after promotion to SS Standartenfuhrer colonel Meisinger was appointed Commander of the State Police in the Warsaw District replacing Lothar Beutel who had been denounced for corruption Meisinger proceeded to apply brutal force against Poles mostly those of Jewish descent As part of the German AB Aktion in Poland he authorized the Palmiry massacre the mass shooting of 1 700 people in the forest near Palmiry 17 As a reprisal for the murder of a Polish policeman he ordered the execution of 55 Jewish residents on 22 November 1939 and on 20 December the execution of 107 Poles as a reprisal for the murder of two Germans 18 Meisinger became so notorious that he was called the Butcher of Warsaw 19 although this sobriquet was also given to SS Gruppenfuhrer Heinz Reinefarth According to Schellenberg his atrocities in Warsaw even appalled his superiors I had collected a huge file which proved him to be so utterly bestial and corrupt as to be practically inhuman At this stage Heydrich intervened Meisinger knew too much and Heydrich managed to prevent the trial from taking place 20 Heydrich s appeal to Himmler saved Meisinger from court martial and possible execution He was sent to Tokyo as a means of keeping him at arm s length until the dust had settled 21 During his trial in 1947 Meisinger stated that he was not in Warsaw after October 1940 but it is likely that he participated in the creation of the Warsaw Ghetto 22 Activities in Shanghai and Japan edit From 1 April 1941 to May 1945 Meisinger acted as Gestapo liaison connecting leaders and particular agents of the SD at the German Embassy in Tokyo 23 His duties included seeking out enemies of the Third Reich within the German community using various informants He was also the SD liaison officer to the Japanese Secret Intelligence Service One of his tasks in Japan was the observation of the secret Soviet agent Richard Sorge who was under suspicion in Berlin but Meisinger soon became Sorge s constant drinking companion and unwittingly one of Sorge s best sources of information 24 25 In 1941 Meisinger tried to influence the Japanese to exterminate approximately 18 000 20 000 Jews who had escaped from Austria and Germany and who were living in Japanese occupied Shanghai 26 His proposals included the creation of a concentration camp on Chongming Island in the delta of the Yangtze 27 or starvation on freighters off the coast of China 28 The Japanese admiral responsible for overseeing Shanghai would not yield to pressure from Meisinger however the Japanese built a ghetto in the neighborhood of Hongkew 29 which had already been planned by Tokyo in 1939 a slum with about twice the population density of Manhattan The ghetto was strictly isolated by Japanese soldiers under the command of the Japanese official Kano Ghoya 30 and Jews could only leave it with special permission Some 2 000 of them died in the Shanghai Ghetto during the wartime period 31 Arrest trial and conviction editOn 6 September 1945 Meisinger surrendered to two war correspondents Clark Lee of the INS and Robert Brumby of MBS at the Fujiya Hotel in Hakone Kanagawa 19 The reporters drove him to the Yokohama headquarters of the Counter Intelligence Corps where Meisinger turned himself in 32 He was held in the Yokohama Jail 33 34 where he underwent intensive questioning for two weeks before being transferred to U S General Dwight D Eisenhower s headquarters in Frankfurt 35 In November 1945 under the escort of Lt Col Jennis R Galloway and Major James W McColl both of the 441st CIC detachment he was flown to Washington D C for questioning on his involvement in the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto 36 In 1946 he was extradited to Poland In Warsaw on 17 December 1946 he was charged together with Ludwig Fischer Nazi Governor of the Warsaw District Max Daume Acting Commander of the Ordnungspolizei in Warsaw and Ludwig Leist Nazi Plenipotentiary Governor of the City of Warsaw of Nazi crimes 37 The trials took place between 17 December 1946 and 24 February 1947 On 3 March 1947 the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw sentenced Meisinger to death and on 7 March he was executed in Warsaw s Mokotow Prison 38 References edit Josef Albert Meisinger Longerich Peter Heinrich Himmler A Life Oxford University Press 2011 p 149 ISBN 978 0 19 959232 6 Gerwarth Robert Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich Yale University Press 2011 p 76 ISBN 978 0 300 11575 8 Meisinger and the Gay Holocaust Hoffmann Peter Hitler s Personal Security Protecting the Fuhrer 1921 1945 Da Capo Press 2000 1979 p 49 ISBN 978 0 30680 947 7 Walter Schellenberg The Labyrinth Memoirs of Walter Schellenberg Hitler s Chief of Counterintelligence Da Capo Press 1956 ISBN 0306809273 pp 160 161 Jorg Hutter Die Rolle der Polizei bei der Schwulen und Lesbenverfolgung im Nationalsozialismus in Schwule Lesben Polizei Dobler Jens HG Verlag rosa Winkel Berlin 1996 a b Gerwarth Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich p 116 Josef Meisinger on Combating Homosexuality as a Political Task April 5 6 1937 Gerwarth Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich p 117 Plant Richard The Pink Triangle The Nazi War Against Homosexuals Macmillan 1988 p 141 ISBN 978 0 8050 0600 1 Deutsch Harold Charles Hitler and His Generals The Hidden Crisis January June 1938 U of Minnesota Press 1974 p 141 ISBN 978 0 8166 0649 8 Karl Heinz Janssen and Fritz Tobias Der Sturz der Generale Hitler und die Blomberg Fritsch Krise 1938 Munich 1994 ISBN 3 406 38109 X Gerwarth Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich pp 116 117 Janssen p 95 Janssen p 160 Wildt Michael Generation des Unbedingten Studienausgabe Hamburg 2003 p 478 ISBN 978 3 930908 87 5 Eta Harich Schneider Charaktere und Katastrophen Ullstein 1978 p 203 ISBN 978 3 550 07481 3 a b Swiss Neutral Claims Nazis are Still on the Loose in Japan Spartanburg Herald Journal May 12 1946 p A5 Schellenberg 1956 pp 160 161 Schellenberg 1956 p 161 Freyeisen Astrid Shanghai und die Rolle des Deutschen Reichs Konigshausen und Neumann 2000 p 466 Whymant Robert Stalin s Spy Richard Sorge and the Tokyo Espionage Ring I B Tauris 1996 p 144 ISBN 978 1 86064 044 5 Piekalkiewicz Janusz World History of Espionage Agents Systems Operations National Intelligence Book Center 1998 p 369 ISBN 978 3 517 00849 3 Whymant p 144 Marvin Tokayer and Mary Swartz The Fugu Plan The Untold Story Of The Japanese And The Jews During World War II Gefen Publishing House Ltd 2004 ISBN 9652293296 O Neill Mark A Saved Haven Plans to rejuvenate Shanghai s rundown former Jewish ghetto will celebrate the district s role as a sanctuary during the Second World War South China Morning Post August 1 2006 Features Behind the News p 11 Jane Shlensky Considering Other Choices Chiune Sugihara s Rescue of Polish Jews North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics Durham NC 2003 p 6 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 23 Retrieved 2010 08 03 Patrick E Tyler Jews Revisit Shanghai Grateful Still that it Sheltered Them New York Times June 29 1994 Heppner Ernest G Strange Haven A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai review Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine in Shofar An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies Volume 19 Number 3 Spring 2001 pp 160 161 Heppner Ernest G Shanghai Refuge A Memoir of the World War II Jewish Ghetto 1995 Lee Clark One Last Look Around Duell Sloan and Pearce 1947 pp 125 30 International First Haul Time Magazine Sept 24 1945 War Criminal Cry Baby German Held in Yokohama The Sydney Morning Herald NSW 1842 1954 5 October 1945 p 1 Frank Kelley and Cornelius Ryan STAR SPANGLED MIKADO Robert M McBride amp Co New York 1947 The Butcher of Warsaw Arrives in California New York Times Nov 16 1945 p 9 Representatives of Jewish Community Asked to Testify at Trial of Nazi Rulers of Warsaw Jewish Telegraphic Agency December 19 1946 Prosecution of Nazi Crimes in Poland in 1939 2004 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editMeisinger and the Gay Holocaust Heinz Eberhard Maul Japan und die Juden Studie uber die Judenpolitik des Kaiserreiches Japan wahrend der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus 1933 1945 Doctoral Dissertation Bonn 2000 Rheinischen Friedrich Wilhelms Universitat Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Josef Albert Meisinger amp oldid 1161596919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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