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Female guards in Nazi concentration camps

Aufseherin ([ˈaʊ̯fˌzeːəʁɪn], pl. Aufseherinnen) was the position title for a female guard in Nazi concentration camps. Of the 50,000 guards who served in the concentration camps, approximately 5,000 were women.[citation needed] In 1942, the first female guards arrived at Auschwitz and Majdanek from Ravensbrück. The year after, the Nazis began conscripting women because of a shortage of male guards. In the context of these camps, the German position title of Aufseherin translates to (female) "overseer" or "attendant". Later female guards were dispersed to Bolzano (1944–1945), Kaiserwald-Riga (1943–44), Mauthausen (March – May 1945), Stutthof (1942–1945), Vaivara[1] (1943–1944), Vught (1943–1944), and at Nazi concentration camps, subcamps, work camps, detention camps and other posts.

Mugshot of Bergen-Belsen guard Irma Grese
Maria Mandl of Auschwitz
Herta Bothe, in Celle awaiting trial, August 1945
Hermine Braunsteiner of KZ Majdanek

Recruitment edit

Female guards were generally from the lower to middle class[2] and had no relevant work experience; their occupational background varied: one source mentions former matrons, hairdressers, tramcar-conductresses, opera singers or retired teachers.[3] Volunteers were recruited via advertisements in German newspapers asking for women to show their love for the Reich and join the SS-Gefolge ("SS-Retinue", a Schutzstaffel (SS) support and service organisation for women). Additionally, some were conscripted based on data in their SS files. Adolescent enrollment in the League of German Girls acted as a vehicle of indoctrination for many of the women.[4] At one of the post-war hearings, Oberaufseherin Herta Haase-Breitmann-Schmidt, head female overseer, claimed that her female guards were not full-fledged SS women. Consequently, at some tribunals it was disputed whether SS-Helferinnen employed at the camps were official members of the SS, thus leading to conflicting court decisions. Many of them belonged to the Waffen-SS and to the SS-Helferinnen Corps.[5][6]

Supervision levels and ranks edit

Female guards were collectively known as SS-Helferin[clarification needed] (German: "SS Helper women"). The supervisory levels within the SS-Helferin were as follows:

  1. Chef Oberaufseherin, "Chief Senior Overseer" [Ravensbrück]
  2. Lagerführerin, "Camp Leader"
  3. Oberaufseherin, "Senior Overseer"
  4. Erstaufseherin, "First Guard" [Senior Overseer in some satellite camps]
  5. Rapportführerin, "Report Leader"
  6. Arbeitsdienstführerin, "Work Recording Leader"
  7. Arbeitseinsatzführerin, "Work Input Overseers"
  8. Blockführerin, "Block Leader"
  9. Kommandoführerin, "Work Squad Leader" [Senior Overseer in some satellite camps]
  10. Hundeführerin, "Dog Guide Overseer"
  11. Aufseherin, "Overseer"
  12. Arrestführerin, "Arrested Overseer"

Daily life edit

Relations between SS men and female guards are said to have existed in many of the camps, and Heinrich Himmler had told the SS men to regard the female guards as equals and comrades. At the relatively small Helmbrechts subcamp near Hof, Germany, the camp commandant, Wilhelm Dörr, openly pursued a sexual relationship with the head female overseer Herta Haase-Breitmann-Schmidt.

Corruption was another aspect of the female guard culture. Ilse Koch, known as "The Witch of Buchenwald", was married to the camp commandant, Karl Koch. Both were rumored to have embezzled millions of Reichsmark, for which Karl Koch was convicted and executed by the Nazis a few weeks before Buchenwald was liberated by the U.S. Army; however, Ilse was cleared of the charge. Convicted of war crimes, she was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1951.

One apparent exception to the brutal female overseer prototype was Klara Kunig, a camp guard in 1944 who served at Ravensbrück and its subcamp at Dresden-Universelle. The head wardress at the camp pointed out that she was too polite and too kind towards the inmates, resulting in her subsequent dismissal from camp duty in January 1945. Her fate has been unknown since 13 February 1945, the date of the allied firebombing of Dresden.[7]

Camps, names and ranks edit

 
Jenny-Wanda Barkmann, back row right, at the Stutthof concentration camp war crimes trial between 25 April and 31 May 1946, in Gdańsk
 
The execution of guards and Polish kapos of the Stutthof concentration camp on 4 July 1946

Near the end of the war, women were forced from factories in the German Labour Exchange and sent to training centres. Women were also trained on a smaller scale at the camps of Neuengamme;[8] Auschwitz I, II, and III; Flossenbürg (as well as Dresden-Goehle, Holleischen and Zwodau);[9] Gross Rosen (as well as its satellites in Langenbielau,[10] Ober Hohenelbe[11] and Parschnitz); Stutthof,[12] as well as a few at Mauthausen.[13] Most of these women came from the regions around the camps. In 1944, the first female overseers were stationed at the satellite camps belonging to Neuengamme, Dachau,[14] Mauthausen, a very few at Natzweiler-Struthof, and none at the Mittelbau-Dora complex until March 1945.[15]

Twenty-eight Aufseherinnen served in Vught,[16] some at Buchenwald,[17] 60 in Bergen-Belsen, one at Dachau overseeing the brothel,[18] more than 30 in Mauthausen[19] (January 1945–May 1945), 30 at Majdanek,[20] around 200 at Auschwitz and its subcamps,[21] 140 at Sachsenhausen and its subcamps, 158 trained at Neuengamme, 47 trained at Stutthof, compared to 958 who served in Ravensbrück,[22] 561 in the Flossenbürg complex, and over 800 in the Gross Rosen.[23] Many female supervisors were trained and/or worked at subcamps in Germany, Poland, France, Austria, and Czechoslovakia.[24]

  • The head overseer at Allendorf was SS-Oberaufseherin/Erstaufseherin Kaethe Hoern (September 1944–March 1945) while her assistant was SS-Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Hildegard K.;[25] in Auschwitz Oberaufseherin Johanna Langefeld[26] (March 1942–October 1942), Lagerfuehrerin Maria Mandl[21] (October 1942–November 1944), Stellvertetende Oberaufseherin Emma Zimmer[27] (1942–43), Stellvertretende Lagerfuehrerin Margot Dreschel[28] (late 1943–November 1944), Arbeitsdienstfuehrerin Elisabeth Hasse,[29] Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Volkenrath[30] (November 1944–January 1945), and Rapportfuehrerin Irma Grese[31] (1944–of Hungarian Jewish women's compound under Mandl, Dreschel and Hasse), Mandl herself commanded all the SS women within Auschwitz-Birkenau. Grese and Volkenrath were convicted of war crimes and hanged on 13 December 1945; Mandl was hanged on 24 January 1948.
  • At Barth Lagerfuehrerin Irmgard Reissner[32] (1944-April 1945), Oberaufseherin Ruth Neudeck,[33] (March 1945–May 1945), Stellvertretende Lagerfuehrerin Gerda Langner,[34] and Kommandoführerin Gertrud Herrmann,[35] in Belzig head female guard was Hedwig Ullrich[36] (Summer 1944–April 1945).
  • In Bergen-Belsen the three head overseers were Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Volkenrath[30] (February 1945–April 1945), Rapportführerin Hildegard Gollasch,[37] while Herta Ehlert[38] served an additional deputy wardress and Irma Grese[39] (January/February 1945–April 1945) was Kommandoführerin alongside Juana Bormann.[40] At the Gross-Rosen annex camp at Bernsdorf (Bernartice), Maria Mühl[41] was Kommandofuehrerin under Lagerfuehrerin Else Hawlik,[42] who commanded all of the Trautenau Ring labor camps. At the Gross-Rosen annex camp at Breslau-Hundsfeld (Wroclaw Psie Pole) the Kommandofuehrerin was Emilie Kowa[43] and another high female ranking officer-Margarete Schueller.[44]
  • Johanna Wisotzki[45] was Oberaufseherin in Bromberg-Ost (Bydgoszcz East) from June 1944 until January/February 1945 along with Gerda Steinhoff, while Ilse Koch was appointed (unofficially) head female guard at Buchenwald, even though the camp had very few female prisoners. Koch was convicted of war crimes; she committed suicide in Aichach women's prison on 1 September 1967.
  • At Christianstadt, a Gross-Rosen satellite in Silesia, Emilie Harms[46] was in charge of the camp; her assistant was Stellvertretende Kommandofuehrerin Lina Pohl.[46] In the Danzig Holm subcamp Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Gerda Steinhoff[47] was second-in-command of all the female overseers and prisoners (October 1944–December 1944); in the Dora Mittelbau satellite in Gross-Werther, this was handled by Lagerfuhrerin Erna Petermann.[48]
  • At the Ravensbrück/Flossenbürg subcamp at Dresden Universelle, Erstaufseherin Ida Guhl[49] and Erstaufseherin Charlotte Hanakam[49] were chief wardresses (1944–April 1945), and in Flossenbürg subcamp at Dresden-Goehle, this rank was given to several women, including Erstaufseherin Gertrud Schaefer[50] and Margarethe de Hueber[50] (1944); Erstaufseherin Gertrud Becker[51] oversaw the Flossenbürg satellite in Hainichen (October 1944–April 1945), Erstaufseherin Dora Lange[52] and later Erstaufseherin Gertrud Weniger[52] (1944–1945) commanded Oederan.
  • At the Gross-Rosen subcamp in Gabersdorf, Kommandoführerin Charlotte Ressel[53] was chief, and at the main camp Oberaufseherin Jane Bernigau[54] was chief among all of the subcamps women guard personnel (800); in the Grünberg (Zielona Góra) satellite, Lagerführerin Anna Fiebeg (June 1944–January 1945) served as chief overseer, while Stellvetretende Lagerführerinnen Anna Jahn[55] and Hela Milefski Replacement Camp Overseers, Female.
  • At Gräben (Grabina/Strzegom (PL), Kommandofuehrerin Katharina Reimann[56] was head woman guard and Margarete Hentschel[57] was her assistant as a Rapportfuehrerin; in Graeflish-Roehrsdorf, Silesia, Kommandoführerin Gertrud Sauer[58] was in charge of the women's camp; and at the Gruschwitz-Neusalz subcamp of Gross Rosen Helene Obuch (1943–June 1944), then Kommandoführerin Elisabeth Gersch[59] (June 1944–January 1945) was in charge, and at Hamburg-Wandsbek, Oberaufseherin Annemie von der Huelst[60] was in charge, followed by her second-in-command, Kommandoführerin Loni Gutzeit.[61] At Hamburg-Sasel, Kommandofuehrerin Ida Roemer[62] was the head female guard.
  • Helmbrechts was a subcamp of Floßenbürg built near Hof, Germany. Originally, Erstaufseherin Martha Dell' Antonia[63] (Summer 1944–?) served there as head female guard over 22 female guards. In late 1944 she was replaced by the Commandant's (Doerr's) mistress, Herta Haase-Breitmann,[64] who was originally a Kommandofuehrerin.
  • In Holleischen Anna Schmidt, Dora Lange was senior overseer along with Elfriede Tribus.
  • Kratzau II in Czechoslovakia were overseen by Kommandofuehrerin Elsa Hennrich[65] while a certain Denner (or Dinner) commanded Kratzau I; Lenzing by Oberaufseherin Margarete Freinberg(er)[66] (November 1944–May 1945).
  • Majdanek and Lublin-Alterflughafen camps were headed by Oberaufsherin Else Ehrich[20] (October 1942–June 1944), her immediate assistant, Rapportführerin and Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Hermine Braunsteiner,[20] and further deputies Else Weber[67] and Elisabeth Knoblich.[68] Knoblich was nicknamed "Halt die Klappe!" ("Shut up!") and Hermine Braunsteiner was deported from the United States to Germany in 1973 and died in 1999.
  • At the Mittelsteine concentration camp the head overseer was Kommandoführerin Käthe Jenesch[69] and SS-Aufseherinnen Philomena Locker[70] (reportedly sentenced after the War to seven years' imprisonment), Charlotte Neugebauer,[71] and a Fraulein Schneider,[71] (first name unknown). At Merzdorf Erna Rinke[72] was Chief Overseer (Oberaufseherin).
  • In Obernheide, Kommandoführerin Gertrud Heise[73] was chief over seven (known) SS women (September 1944–April 1945), and in Plaszow, Oberaufseherin Elsa Ehrich,[74] Anna Gerwing (as Rapportführerin) and Kommandoführerin Alice Orlowski among another unknown women.
  • Ravensbrück was the central and largest training ground for female guards. The first Oberaufseherin was Margarete Stollberg who organized construction operations at the camp in a very minor capacity until May 1939.[75] Immediately after the camp was opened Johanna Langefeld[75] became SS-Oberaufseherin (May 1939–March 1942) and Emma Zimmer became her deputy, (SS-Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin) (May 1939–October 1942); Maria Mandl also served during this period as an SS-Kommandoführerin (1939–1940)[76] and Ober-Arrestführerin.[75] of the camp bunker (1940–March 1942) while Gertrud Rabestein[77] served as SS-Blockführerin of the Punishment Barrack and SS-Leiterin of the SS-Hundeführerinnen (1939–1941) and Gertrud Ida Schreiter[78] served as an SS-Hundeführerin and SS-Kommandoführerin. After Langefeld was assigned to Auschwitz I during March 1942,[79] Maria Mandl became SS-Oberaufseherin (March 1942–October 1942),[80] followed by Johanna Langefeld, who once again served at Ravensbrück until the summer of 1943.[80] During this period SS-Rapportführerinnen included Else Ehrich (1942)[81] and Margot Dreschel,[82] and Ober-arrestführerin Dorothea Binz, while Erika Boeddeker (1942),[83] Edith Fräde (1942), Sophie Gode,[84] and Wilhelmine Pielen (1942–1943) served as Blockführerinnen and/or Stellvertretende Blockführerinnen. With the creation of Abteilung IIIa, the Labor Department in Ravensbrück, several SS officers were placed in command there, along with SS-Arbeitsdienstführerin Rosel Laurenzen (later married Dürichen)[85] and her assistant, SS-Arbeitseinsatzführerin Gertrud Schöber (later married Steisslinger);[85] during 1943 Laurenzen was relieved from her post and Gertrud Ida Schreiter[86] became SS-Arbeitsdienstführerin. After deputy Leader Emma Zimmer was called to Auschwitz II in October 1942, along with Mandl and Margot Dreschel, Margarete Gallinat became deputy Oberaufseherin under Langefeld.[87] During the summer of 1943, Gallinat was moved as SS-Oberaufseherin to the Vught concentration camp in the Netherlands[88] and Langefeld was arrested by the SS. Camp authorities promoted longtime Aufseherin Anne Klein-Plaubel to Chief Senior Overseer (Chef Oberaufseherin) of Ravensbrck during August 1943, assisted by Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Dorothea Binz and under them were SS-Scharführerin Christel Jankowsky,[89] SS-Ober-arrestführerin Margarete Mewes, and SS-Blockführerinnen Henny Gottwitz[90] (Block 3) and Ulla Jürß (1943–1944). During March 1944 Wilhelmine Pielen returned to Ravensbrück from Neubrandenburg and became assistant to Leader Binz until her transfer to Konigsberg-Neumark during October 1944.[91] During this time, Arbeitsdienstführerin Gertrud Ida Schreiter (born Kaufmann) was the female Leader of the Labor Department, and her second-in-commands were Arbeitseinsatzführerinnen Greta Bösel (born Müller)[92]–in 1944 and a certain Helevead (or Hollevaed) also served in Department IIIa; additionally, Helene Massar was a Kommandoführerin of the sewing shop at the camp until 1945.[93] In the late autumn of 1944, Auschwitz-Birkenau Aufseherin Luise Brunner was installed as Chef Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück.[94] Under Brunner was Oberaufseherin Binz,[91] Arbeitsdienstführerin Schreiter, Arbeitsdienstführerin Ilse Vettermann, Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Else Krippner, SS-Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Wilhelmine Pielen (after her return from Konigsberg-Neumark in February/March 1945-she replaced Krippner) and Arbeitseinsatzführerinnen Greta Bösel and Hollevaed-were around 144 SS-Aufseherinnen (SS-Overseers), including Report Overseers (Rapportführerinnen) Knack,[95] Olga Nickel[95] (who began service prior to the summer of 1942) and Hildegard Knop.[95] The Kommandoführerinnen during 1944/1945 included Elisabeth Kammer,[96] Emma Lankes,[97] Helene Massar,[98] and Hildegard Z[99] while Blockfuhrerinnen were Ulla Jürß {until autumn 1944}, Ruth Neudeck[100] (summer-autumn 1944), Elfriede Mohnecke (spring 1945), Martha Krüger[101] (of Barrack 23), Rosalie Leimböck (until autumn 1944), Margarete Steigüber,[102] Emmi Steinbeck,[103] and Frieda Wötzel-Drehmann (1944). Else Grabner was also the head of the female Ravensbrück subcamp as Oberaufseherin (Chief Wardress), then Lagerleiterin (Camp Leader).[104] Binz and Boesel were convicted of war crimes and hanged on 2 May 1947.
  • Rochlitz was headed by Erstaufseherin Marianne Essmann.[105]
  • In St. Lambrecht it was Jane Bernigau (1942–1944), while at Stutthof there was Oberaufseherin Anna Scharbert promoted to chief female overseer after her time in Ravensbruck, Majdanek and Auschwitz, while at Theresienstadt this was given to Hildegard Neumann and Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Schmidt in the 'Small Fortress' camp.[106]
  • Erstaufseherin Ruth Closius[107] headed Uckermark along with her assistant, SS-Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Elfriede Mohnecke[108] (January 1945–March 1945); Oberaufseherin Margarete Gallinat (Maria) (1943–1944) and later Oberaufseherin Gertrud Weiniger[88] (summer–autumn 1944) oversaw Vught, Kommandofehrerin Susanne Hille was head female guard at Unterluess (or Vuterluss) (September 1944–April 1945). Oberaufseherin Fraulein Schneider, and later Anneliese Unger oversaw the Flossenbürg subcamp at Zwodau[109] (June 1944–May 1945).
  • Dzierżązna, Łódź Voivodeship SS Aufseherin Sydonia Bayer {b. 12 December 1903–tried 6 September 1945; executed Lodz Poland 12 November 1945][110]
  • In researching his maternal German kin, American historian James L. Cabot found that two of his distant relations were overseers – Maria Kleinschmidt, an operative at Neuengamme, and Charlotte Kleinschmidt (née Peters), whose exact camp service is unknown.[111]

Prisoner Olga Lengyel, who in her memoir, Five Chimneys, wrote that selections in the women’s camp were made by SS Aufseherin Elisabeth Hasse and Irma Grese. Other survivors accused Juana Bormann, Elisabeth Volkenrath, Elisabeth Ruppert and Margot Dreschel for the same crimes.[112]

Later events edit

 
Ilse Koch at the U.S. Military Tribunal in Dachau, 1947

In 1996, a story broke in Germany about Margot Pietzner (married name Kunz), a former Aufseherin from Ravensbrück, the Belzig subcamp and a subcamp at Wittenberg. She was originally sentenced to death by a Soviet court, but it was commuted to a life sentence, and she was released in 1956. In the early 1990s, at the age of 74, Pietzner was awarded the title "Stalinist victim" and given 64,350 Deutsche Marks (32,902 Euros). Many historians argued that she had lied and did not deserve the money. She had, in fact, served time in a German prison which was overseen by the Soviets, but she was imprisoned because she had served at three concentration camps.[113]

The only female guard to tell her story to the public was Herta Bothe, who served as a guard at Ravensbrück in 1942, then at Stutthof, Bromberg-Ost subcamp, and finally in Bergen-Belsen. She received ten years' imprisonment and was released in the mid-1950s. In a rare interview recorded in 1999, Bothe was asked if she regretted being a guard in a concentration camp. Her response was, "What do you mean? ... I made a mistake, no... The mistake was that it was a concentration camp, but I had to go to it—otherwise I would have been put into it myself, that was my mistake."[114] Though Bothe claimed that refusal of the position of guard would have seen her placed in the camp herself – an explanation given by many female ex-guards – it was unlikely to have been true, as records from the time showed some new recruits leaving their positions at Ravensbrück, facing no recorded negative consequences for doing so.[115]

In 2006, 84-year-old San Francisco resident Elfriede Rinkel was deported by the US Justice Department to Germany; Rinkel had worked at Ravensbrück from June 1944 to April 1945, and had used an SS-trained dog in the camp. She had hidden her secret for more than 60 years from her family, friends and Jewish-German husband Fred. Rinkel immigrated to the US in 1959 seeking a better life, and had omitted Ravensbrück from the list of residences supplied on her visa application. In Germany, Rinkel did not face criminal charges, with the expiry of the statute of limitations meaning that only murder allegations could be tried after such a length of time.[116] The case continued to be examined until Rinkel's death in 2018.[117]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Petzold, Elfriede, appeared on a 1 November 1947 list of female war criminals held in U.S. custody at Augsburg-Goegingen, Central Komitet, Juridisze Optejlung, Krigsfarbrecher Referat, as a guard in, Grüneberg-Vaivara (Estland).
  2. ^ There were, however, some exceptions. At least four overseers were of aristocratic origin: Annemie von der Huelst and Gertrud von Lonski at Neuengamme and Euphemia von Wielen and Ellen Freifrau von Kettler at Ravensbrück. Brown, Daniel Patrick (2002), The Camp Women. The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System, pp. 226, 242. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer Publishing Ltd.; ISBN 0-7643-1444-0
  3. ^ Feig, Konnilyn G. (1981). Hitler's Death Camps: The Sanity of Madness. Holmes & Meier. ISBN 0-8419-0676-9.
  4. ^ Aroneanu, Eugene (1996). Inside the Concentration Camps: Eyewitness Accounts of Life in Hitler's Death Camps. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-275-95446-3.
  5. ^ Rachel Century, Das SS-Helferinnenkorps Royal Holloway, University of London.
  6. ^ Gerhard Rempel, The SS Female Assistance Corps (in) Hitler's Children: The Hitler Youth and the SS. UNC Press Books, 1989. ISBN 0807842990.
  7. ^ Sarti, Wendy Adele Marie (2011). Women and Nazis: Perpetrators of Genocide and Other Crimes During Hitler's Regime, 1933-1945. Academica Press, p. 35
  8. ^ "Hamburg-Sasel Aufseherin U. E. undertook training courses in Neuengamme for 10 days during September 1944" (PDF). Media.offenses-archiv.de. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
  9. ^ Hedwig Burkl, an SS-Aufseherin at Holleischen, Plauen, Mehltheuer and Venusberg-Gelenau, began her training at Zwodau on October 5, 1944. KZ Mehltheuer: Lippenstift statt Lebensmittel, Pascal Cziborra, p. 84
  10. ^ Leech, Colin Russell. "1st Belsen Trial". Bergenbelsen.co.uk.
  11. ^ Marie Larisch was enlisted by the Lorenz Company during August 1944 and subsequently trained and served at the factory and Gross-Rosen sub-camp in Ober Hohenelbe until April 1945. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Volume I, Part A, Early Camps, Youth Camps, and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA), United States Holocaust Memorial Museum p. 776
  12. ^ According to the 1945 testimony of former Stutthof prisoner Zofia Jackowska, 150 German women from around Danzig were trained at the camp between early August and the middle of November 1944 and following their entry sixty remained in the main camp while the rest were assigned to its subcamps. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Volume I, Part B, Early Camps, Youth Camps, and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA), United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, p. 1476
  13. ^ Elisabeth König went to the Mauthausen concentration camp on January 5, 1945 and was presumably admitted to her duties as an SS-Aufseherin. Im Gefolge der SS: Aufseherinnen des Frauen-KZ Ravensbrück: Begleitband zur Ausstellung, Simone Erpel, p. 177
  14. ^ Thea Therese Miesl, married Wallner, was trained at Ravensbrück for four weeks beginning on October 15, 1944 and afterwards assigned to a Dachau sub-camp in Kaufering, Bavaria. Daniel Patrick Brown, The Camp Women: The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System, p. 177
  15. ^ Ausbeutung, Vernichtung, Öffentlichkeit: Neue Studien Zur Nationalsozialistischen Lagerpolitik, p. 38
  16. ^ "Eight German women and twenty female Dutch nationals served as SS-Aufseherinnen at the Vught/S Herzogenbusch concentration between May 1943 and September 1944; four of the German women, along with being Aufseherinnen also worked in the Kommandant's headquarters as secretaries" (PDF). Pure.uva.nl. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
  17. ^ Der Buchenwald-Report: Bericht über das Konzentrationslager Buchenwald bei Weimar, edited by David A. Hackett, p. 272
  18. ^ Ten female prisoners were selected from Ravensbrück and sent to the Dachau brothel along with one SS-Aufseherin. Four of those women were later selected by SS Dr. Rascher to aid in his medical experiments there. Rascher later wrote to SS Chief Heinrich Himmler: There ensued an enumeration of very curious conditions in the Ravensbrück camp. The conditions described were for the most part confirmed by the three other brothel girls and the woman overseer who accompanied them from Ravensbrück. Bruce L. Danto, John Bruhns, Austin H. Kutscher, The Human Side of Homicide (Westport, CT: Arlington House Publishers, 1978) p. 58
  19. ^ Twenty to thirty SS-Aufseherinnen accompanied a transport of over 2,000 women and children from Ravensbrück to Mauthausen during March 1945; most of the prisoners died during the journey or were killed or died shortly after arrival. David Wingeate Pike, Professor of Contemporary History and Politics David Wingeate Pike, Spaniards in the Holocaust: Mauthausen, Horror on the Danube, p. 189
  20. ^ a b c Elissa Mailänder, Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence: The Majdanek Concentration Camp
  21. ^ a b Andrew Rawson, Auschwitz: The Nazi Solution, p. 57
  22. ^ According to SS-Hauptsturmfuhrer Fritz Suhren, a leading SS officer at Ravensbruck, some 3,500 German women served as SS-Aufseherinnen at one time or another in the camp and/or in its complex of satellite camps. Daniel Patrick Brown, The Beautiful Beast: the Life & Crimes of SS-Aufseherin Irma Grese, p. 3
  23. ^ "Dachau KZ: GROSS-ROSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP - PART 4/6". Dachaukz.blogspot.com. 14 February 2014.
  24. ^ Daniel Patrick Brown, The Camp Women, The Female Auxiliaries who assisted the SS in Running the Concentration Camp System
  25. ^ Kaethe Hoern began her training at Ravensbrück on July 26, 1944 while Hildegard K. became an SS-Aufseherin at the camp during June 1944. Bernd Klewitz, Die Arbeitssklaven der Dynamit Nobel, p. 298
  26. ^ Franciszek Piper, Teresa Świebocka, Danuta Czech, Auschwitz: Nazi Death Camp, p. 49
  27. ^ Nanda Herbermann, The Blessed Abyss: Inmate #6582 in Ravensbrück Concentration Camp for Women, p. 195
  28. ^ Lore Shelley, The Union Kommando in Auschwitz: the Auschwitz Munition Factory through the Eyes of its Former Slave Laborers, p. 365
  29. ^ Henry A. Zeiger, The Case Against Adolf Eichmann
  30. ^ a b Leech, Colin Russell. "1st Belsen Trial". Bergenbelsen.co.uk.
  31. ^ Wacław Długoborski, Franciszek Piper, Auschwitz, 1940–1945: The Establishment and Organization of the Camp, p. 286
  32. ^ Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel, Angelika Königseder, Der Ort des Terrors: Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen, Volume 4, p. 529
  33. ^ Helga Radau, Nichts ist vergessen und niemand: aus der Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers in Barth, p. 34
  34. ^ Helga Radau, Nichts ist vergessen und niemand: aus der Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers in Barth, p. 27
  35. ^ Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel, Angelika Königseder, Der Ort des Terrors: Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen ..., Volume 4, p. 529
  36. ^ Daniel Patrick Brown, The Camp Women: The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System
  37. ^ Daniel Patrick Brown, The Camp Women: The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System, p. 90
  38. ^ Leech, Colin Russell. "1st Belsen Trial". Bergenbelsen.co.uk.
  39. ^ Leech, Colin Russell. "1st Belsen Trial". Bergenbelsen.co.uk.
  40. ^ Leech, Colin Russell. "1st Belsen Trial". Bergenbelsen.co.uk.
  41. ^ Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel, Angelika Königseder, Der Ort des Terrors: Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager. Natzweiler, Groß-Rosen, Stutthof, Volume 6, p. 234
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  54. ^ Jane (Gerda) Bernigau was an SS-Aufseherin in Lichtenburg, Ravensbrück, St. Lambrecht/Mauthausen, and Ravensbrück once again before becoming SS-Oberaufseherin at the Gross-Rosen central camp during the summer of 1944 and lastly at the Reichenau subcamp in early 1945 until the spring. Bella Guttermann, A Narrow Bridge to Life
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  67. ^ While SS-Oberaufseherin Ehrich was on leave from Majdanek/Lublin, Weber filled in as Replacement Senior Overseer. Elissa Mailänder, Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence: The Majdanek Concentration Camp
  68. ^ While SS-Rapportfuhrerin/Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Braunsteiner was on leave from Majdanek/Lublin, Knoblich filled in as Report Overseer. Elissa Mailänder, Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence: The Majdanek Concentration Camp
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See also edit

References edit

  • Aroneanu, Eugene, ed. Inside the Concentration Camps Trans. Thomas Whissen. New York: Praeger, 1996.
  • Brown, Daniel Patrick, The Camp Women. The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2002. ISBN 0-7643-1444-0
  • Hart, Kitty. Return to Auschwitz: The Remarkable Story of a Girl Who Survived the Holocaust. New York: Atheneum, 1983.
  • G. Álvarez, Mónica. "Guardianas Nazis. El lado femenino del mal" (Spanish). Madrid: Grupo Edaf, 2012. ISBN 978-84-414-3240-6
  • Mailänder, Elissa & Patricia Szobar, eds. Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence: The Majdanek Concentration Camp, 1942-1944. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press, 2015.

External links edit

  • Article on female Nazi war criminals

female, guards, nazi, concentration, camps, aufseherin, ˈaʊ, fˌzeːəʁɪn, aufseherinnen, position, title, female, guard, nazi, concentration, camps, guards, served, concentration, camps, approximately, were, women, citation, needed, 1942, first, female, guards, . Aufseherin ˈaʊ fˌzeːeʁɪn pl Aufseherinnen was the position title for a female guard in Nazi concentration camps Of the 50 000 guards who served in the concentration camps approximately 5 000 were women citation needed In 1942 the first female guards arrived at Auschwitz and Majdanek from Ravensbruck The year after the Nazis began conscripting women because of a shortage of male guards In the context of these camps the German position title of Aufseherin translates to female overseer or attendant Later female guards were dispersed to Bolzano 1944 1945 Kaiserwald Riga 1943 44 Mauthausen March May 1945 Stutthof 1942 1945 Vaivara 1 1943 1944 Vught 1943 1944 and at Nazi concentration camps subcamps work camps detention camps and other posts Mugshot of Bergen Belsen guard Irma GreseMaria Mandl of AuschwitzHerta Bothe in Celle awaiting trial August 1945Hermine Braunsteiner of KZ MajdanekContents 1 Recruitment 2 Supervision levels and ranks 3 Daily life 4 Camps names and ranks 5 Later events 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksRecruitment editFemale guards were generally from the lower to middle class 2 and had no relevant work experience their occupational background varied one source mentions former matrons hairdressers tramcar conductresses opera singers or retired teachers 3 Volunteers were recruited via advertisements in German newspapers asking for women to show their love for the Reich and join the SS Gefolge SS Retinue a Schutzstaffel SS support and service organisation for women Additionally some were conscripted based on data in their SS files Adolescent enrollment in the League of German Girls acted as a vehicle of indoctrination for many of the women 4 At one of the post war hearings Oberaufseherin Herta Haase Breitmann Schmidt head female overseer claimed that her female guards were not full fledged SS women Consequently at some tribunals it was disputed whether SS Helferinnen employed at the camps were official members of the SS thus leading to conflicting court decisions Many of them belonged to the Waffen SS and to the SS Helferinnen Corps 5 6 Supervision levels and ranks editFemale guards were collectively known as SS Helferin clarification needed German SS Helper women The supervisory levels within the SS Helferin were as follows Chef Oberaufseherin Chief Senior Overseer Ravensbruck Lagerfuhrerin Camp Leader Oberaufseherin Senior Overseer Erstaufseherin First Guard Senior Overseer in some satellite camps Rapportfuhrerin Report Leader Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin Work Recording Leader Arbeitseinsatzfuhrerin Work Input Overseers Blockfuhrerin Block Leader Kommandofuhrerin Work Squad Leader Senior Overseer in some satellite camps Hundefuhrerin Dog Guide Overseer Aufseherin Overseer Arrestfuhrerin Arrested Overseer Daily life editRelations between SS men and female guards are said to have existed in many of the camps and Heinrich Himmler had told the SS men to regard the female guards as equals and comrades At the relatively small Helmbrechts subcamp near Hof Germany the camp commandant Wilhelm Dorr openly pursued a sexual relationship with the head female overseer Herta Haase Breitmann Schmidt Corruption was another aspect of the female guard culture Ilse Koch known as The Witch of Buchenwald was married to the camp commandant Karl Koch Both were rumored to have embezzled millions of Reichsmark for which Karl Koch was convicted and executed by the Nazis a few weeks before Buchenwald was liberated by the U S Army however Ilse was cleared of the charge Convicted of war crimes she was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1951 One apparent exception to the brutal female overseer prototype was Klara Kunig a camp guard in 1944 who served at Ravensbruck and its subcamp at Dresden Universelle The head wardress at the camp pointed out that she was too polite and too kind towards the inmates resulting in her subsequent dismissal from camp duty in January 1945 Her fate has been unknown since 13 February 1945 the date of the allied firebombing of Dresden 7 Camps names and ranks editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Jenny Wanda Barkmann back row right at the Stutthof concentration camp war crimes trial between 25 April and 31 May 1946 in Gdansk nbsp The execution of guards and Polish kapos of the Stutthof concentration camp on 4 July 1946Near the end of the war women were forced from factories in the German Labour Exchange and sent to training centres Women were also trained on a smaller scale at the camps of Neuengamme 8 Auschwitz I II and III Flossenburg as well as Dresden Goehle Holleischen and Zwodau 9 Gross Rosen as well as its satellites in Langenbielau 10 Ober Hohenelbe 11 and Parschnitz Stutthof 12 as well as a few at Mauthausen 13 Most of these women came from the regions around the camps In 1944 the first female overseers were stationed at the satellite camps belonging to Neuengamme Dachau 14 Mauthausen a very few at Natzweiler Struthof and none at the Mittelbau Dora complex until March 1945 15 Twenty eight Aufseherinnen served in Vught 16 some at Buchenwald 17 60 in Bergen Belsen one at Dachau overseeing the brothel 18 more than 30 in Mauthausen 19 January 1945 May 1945 30 at Majdanek 20 around 200 at Auschwitz and its subcamps 21 140 at Sachsenhausen and its subcamps 158 trained at Neuengamme 47 trained at Stutthof compared to 958 who served in Ravensbruck 22 561 in the Flossenburg complex and over 800 in the Gross Rosen 23 Many female supervisors were trained and or worked at subcamps in Germany Poland France Austria and Czechoslovakia 24 The head overseer at Allendorf was SS Oberaufseherin Erstaufseherin Kaethe Hoern September 1944 March 1945 while her assistant was SS Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Hildegard K 25 in Auschwitz Oberaufseherin Johanna Langefeld 26 March 1942 October 1942 Lagerfuehrerin Maria Mandl 21 October 1942 November 1944 Stellvertetende Oberaufseherin Emma Zimmer 27 1942 43 Stellvertretende Lagerfuehrerin Margot Dreschel 28 late 1943 November 1944 Arbeitsdienstfuehrerin Elisabeth Hasse 29 Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Volkenrath 30 November 1944 January 1945 and Rapportfuehrerin Irma Grese 31 1944 of Hungarian Jewish women s compound under Mandl Dreschel and Hasse Mandl herself commanded all the SS women within Auschwitz Birkenau Grese and Volkenrath were convicted of war crimes and hanged on 13 December 1945 Mandl was hanged on 24 January 1948 At Barth Lagerfuehrerin Irmgard Reissner 32 1944 April 1945 Oberaufseherin Ruth Neudeck 33 March 1945 May 1945 Stellvertretende Lagerfuehrerin Gerda Langner 34 and Kommandofuhrerin Gertrud Herrmann 35 in Belzig head female guard was Hedwig Ullrich 36 Summer 1944 April 1945 In Bergen Belsen the three head overseers were Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Volkenrath 30 February 1945 April 1945 Rapportfuhrerin Hildegard Gollasch 37 while Herta Ehlert 38 served an additional deputy wardress and Irma Grese 39 January February 1945 April 1945 was Kommandofuhrerin alongside Juana Bormann 40 At the Gross Rosen annex camp at Bernsdorf Bernartice Maria Muhl 41 was Kommandofuehrerin under Lagerfuehrerin Else Hawlik 42 who commanded all of the Trautenau Ring labor camps At the Gross Rosen annex camp at Breslau Hundsfeld Wroclaw Psie Pole the Kommandofuehrerin was Emilie Kowa 43 and another high female ranking officer Margarete Schueller 44 Johanna Wisotzki 45 was Oberaufseherin in Bromberg Ost Bydgoszcz East from June 1944 until January February 1945 along with Gerda Steinhoff while Ilse Koch was appointed unofficially head female guard at Buchenwald even though the camp had very few female prisoners Koch was convicted of war crimes she committed suicide in Aichach women s prison on 1 September 1967 At Christianstadt a Gross Rosen satellite in Silesia Emilie Harms 46 was in charge of the camp her assistant was Stellvertretende Kommandofuehrerin Lina Pohl 46 In the Danzig Holm subcamp Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Gerda Steinhoff 47 was second in command of all the female overseers and prisoners October 1944 December 1944 in the Dora Mittelbau satellite in Gross Werther this was handled by Lagerfuhrerin Erna Petermann 48 At the Ravensbruck Flossenburg subcamp at Dresden Universelle Erstaufseherin Ida Guhl 49 and Erstaufseherin Charlotte Hanakam 49 were chief wardresses 1944 April 1945 and in Flossenburg subcamp at Dresden Goehle this rank was given to several women including Erstaufseherin Gertrud Schaefer 50 and Margarethe de Hueber 50 1944 Erstaufseherin Gertrud Becker 51 oversaw the Flossenburg satellite in Hainichen October 1944 April 1945 Erstaufseherin Dora Lange 52 and later Erstaufseherin Gertrud Weniger 52 1944 1945 commanded Oederan At the Gross Rosen subcamp in Gabersdorf Kommandofuhrerin Charlotte Ressel 53 was chief and at the main camp Oberaufseherin Jane Bernigau 54 was chief among all of the subcamps women guard personnel 800 in the Grunberg Zielona Gora satellite Lagerfuhrerin Anna Fiebeg June 1944 January 1945 served as chief overseer while Stellvetretende Lagerfuhrerinnen Anna Jahn 55 and Hela Milefski Replacement Camp Overseers Female At Graben Grabina Strzegom PL Kommandofuehrerin Katharina Reimann 56 was head woman guard and Margarete Hentschel 57 was her assistant as a Rapportfuehrerin in Graeflish Roehrsdorf Silesia Kommandofuhrerin Gertrud Sauer 58 was in charge of the women s camp and at the Gruschwitz Neusalz subcamp of Gross Rosen Helene Obuch 1943 June 1944 then Kommandofuhrerin Elisabeth Gersch 59 June 1944 January 1945 was in charge and at Hamburg Wandsbek Oberaufseherin Annemie von der Huelst 60 was in charge followed by her second in command Kommandofuhrerin Loni Gutzeit 61 At Hamburg Sasel Kommandofuehrerin Ida Roemer 62 was the head female guard Helmbrechts was a subcamp of Flossenburg built near Hof Germany Originally Erstaufseherin Martha Dell Antonia 63 Summer 1944 served there as head female guard over 22 female guards In late 1944 she was replaced by the Commandant s Doerr s mistress Herta Haase Breitmann 64 who was originally a Kommandofuehrerin In Holleischen Anna Schmidt Dora Lange was senior overseer along with Elfriede Tribus Kratzau II in Czechoslovakia were overseen by Kommandofuehrerin Elsa Hennrich 65 while a certain Denner or Dinner commanded Kratzau I Lenzing by Oberaufseherin Margarete Freinberg er 66 November 1944 May 1945 Majdanek and Lublin Alterflughafen camps were headed by Oberaufsherin Else Ehrich 20 October 1942 June 1944 her immediate assistant Rapportfuhrerin and Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Hermine Braunsteiner 20 and further deputies Else Weber 67 and Elisabeth Knoblich 68 Knoblich was nicknamed Halt die Klappe Shut up and Hermine Braunsteiner was deported from the United States to Germany in 1973 and died in 1999 At the Mittelsteine concentration camp the head overseer was Kommandofuhrerin Kathe Jenesch 69 and SS Aufseherinnen Philomena Locker 70 reportedly sentenced after the War to seven years imprisonment Charlotte Neugebauer 71 and a Fraulein Schneider 71 first name unknown At Merzdorf Erna Rinke 72 was Chief Overseer Oberaufseherin In Obernheide Kommandofuhrerin Gertrud Heise 73 was chief over seven known SS women September 1944 April 1945 and in Plaszow Oberaufseherin Elsa Ehrich 74 Anna Gerwing as Rapportfuhrerin and Kommandofuhrerin Alice Orlowski among another unknown women Ravensbruck was the central and largest training ground for female guards The first Oberaufseherin was Margarete Stollberg who organized construction operations at the camp in a very minor capacity until May 1939 75 Immediately after the camp was opened Johanna Langefeld 75 became SS Oberaufseherin May 1939 March 1942 and Emma Zimmer became her deputy SS Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin May 1939 October 1942 Maria Mandl also served during this period as an SS Kommandofuhrerin 1939 1940 76 and Ober Arrestfuhrerin 75 of the camp bunker 1940 March 1942 while Gertrud Rabestein 77 served as SS Blockfuhrerin of the Punishment Barrack and SS Leiterin of the SS Hundefuhrerinnen 1939 1941 and Gertrud Ida Schreiter 78 served as an SS Hundefuhrerin and SS Kommandofuhrerin After Langefeld was assigned to Auschwitz I during March 1942 79 Maria Mandl became SS Oberaufseherin March 1942 October 1942 80 followed by Johanna Langefeld who once again served at Ravensbruck until the summer of 1943 80 During this period SS Rapportfuhrerinnen included Else Ehrich 1942 81 and Margot Dreschel 82 and Ober arrestfuhrerin Dorothea Binz while Erika Boeddeker 1942 83 Edith Frade 1942 Sophie Gode 84 and Wilhelmine Pielen 1942 1943 served as Blockfuhrerinnen and or Stellvertretende Blockfuhrerinnen With the creation of Abteilung IIIa the Labor Department in Ravensbruck several SS officers were placed in command there along with SS Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin Rosel Laurenzen later married Durichen 85 and her assistant SS Arbeitseinsatzfuhrerin Gertrud Schober later married Steisslinger 85 during 1943 Laurenzen was relieved from her post and Gertrud Ida Schreiter 86 became SS Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin After deputy Leader Emma Zimmer was called to Auschwitz II in October 1942 along with Mandl and Margot Dreschel Margarete Gallinat became deputy Oberaufseherin under Langefeld 87 During the summer of 1943 Gallinat was moved as SS Oberaufseherin to the Vught concentration camp in the Netherlands 88 and Langefeld was arrested by the SS Camp authorities promoted longtime Aufseherin Anne Klein Plaubel to Chief Senior Overseer Chef Oberaufseherin of Ravensbrck during August 1943 assisted by Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Dorothea Binz and under them were SS Scharfuhrerin Christel Jankowsky 89 SS Ober arrestfuhrerin Margarete Mewes and SS Blockfuhrerinnen Henny Gottwitz 90 Block 3 and Ulla Jurss 1943 1944 During March 1944 Wilhelmine Pielen returned to Ravensbruck from Neubrandenburg and became assistant to Leader Binz until her transfer to Konigsberg Neumark during October 1944 91 During this time Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin Gertrud Ida Schreiter born Kaufmann was the female Leader of the Labor Department and her second in commands were Arbeitseinsatzfuhrerinnen Greta Bosel born Muller 92 in 1944 and a certain Helevead or Hollevaed also served in Department IIIa additionally Helene Massar was a Kommandofuhrerin of the sewing shop at the camp until 1945 93 In the late autumn of 1944 Auschwitz Birkenau Aufseherin Luise Brunner was installed as Chef Oberaufseherin at Ravensbruck 94 Under Brunner was Oberaufseherin Binz 91 Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin Schreiter Arbeitsdienstfuhrerin Ilse Vettermann Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Else Krippner SS Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Wilhelmine Pielen after her return from Konigsberg Neumark in February March 1945 she replaced Krippner and Arbeitseinsatzfuhrerinnen Greta Bosel and Hollevaed were around 144 SS Aufseherinnen SS Overseers including Report Overseers Rapportfuhrerinnen Knack 95 Olga Nickel 95 who began service prior to the summer of 1942 and Hildegard Knop 95 The Kommandofuhrerinnen during 1944 1945 included Elisabeth Kammer 96 Emma Lankes 97 Helene Massar 98 and Hildegard Z 99 while Blockfuhrerinnen were Ulla Jurss until autumn 1944 Ruth Neudeck 100 summer autumn 1944 Elfriede Mohnecke spring 1945 Martha Kruger 101 of Barrack 23 Rosalie Leimbock until autumn 1944 Margarete Steiguber 102 Emmi Steinbeck 103 and Frieda Wotzel Drehmann 1944 Else Grabner was also the head of the female Ravensbruck subcamp as Oberaufseherin Chief Wardress then Lagerleiterin Camp Leader 104 Binz and Boesel were convicted of war crimes and hanged on 2 May 1947 Rochlitz was headed by Erstaufseherin Marianne Essmann 105 In St Lambrecht it was Jane Bernigau 1942 1944 while at Stutthof there was Oberaufseherin Anna Scharbert promoted to chief female overseer after her time in Ravensbruck Majdanek and Auschwitz while at Theresienstadt this was given to Hildegard Neumann and Oberaufseherin Elisabeth Schmidt in the Small Fortress camp 106 Erstaufseherin Ruth Closius 107 headed Uckermark along with her assistant SS Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Elfriede Mohnecke 108 January 1945 March 1945 Oberaufseherin Margarete Gallinat Maria 1943 1944 and later Oberaufseherin Gertrud Weiniger 88 summer autumn 1944 oversaw Vught Kommandofehrerin Susanne Hille was head female guard at Unterluess or Vuterluss September 1944 April 1945 Oberaufseherin Fraulein Schneider and later Anneliese Unger oversaw the Flossenburg subcamp at Zwodau 109 June 1944 May 1945 Dzierzazna Lodz Voivodeship SS Aufseherin Sydonia Bayer b 12 December 1903 tried 6 September 1945 executed Lodz Poland 12 November 1945 110 In researching his maternal German kin American historian James L Cabot found that two of his distant relations were overseers Maria Kleinschmidt an operative at Neuengamme and Charlotte Kleinschmidt nee Peters whose exact camp service is unknown 111 Prisoner Olga Lengyel who in her memoir Five Chimneys wrote that selections in the women s camp were made by SS Aufseherin Elisabeth Hasse and Irma Grese Other survivors accused Juana Bormann Elisabeth Volkenrath Elisabeth Ruppert and Margot Dreschel for the same crimes 112 Later events edit nbsp Ilse Koch at the U S Military Tribunal in Dachau 1947In 1996 a story broke in Germany about Margot Pietzner married name Kunz a former Aufseherin from Ravensbruck the Belzig subcamp and a subcamp at Wittenberg She was originally sentenced to death by a Soviet court but it was commuted to a life sentence and she was released in 1956 In the early 1990s at the age of 74 Pietzner was awarded the title Stalinist victim and given 64 350 Deutsche Marks 32 902 Euros Many historians argued that she had lied and did not deserve the money She had in fact served time in a German prison which was overseen by the Soviets but she was imprisoned because she had served at three concentration camps 113 The only female guard to tell her story to the public was Herta Bothe who served as a guard at Ravensbruck in 1942 then at Stutthof Bromberg Ost subcamp and finally in Bergen Belsen She received ten years imprisonment and was released in the mid 1950s In a rare interview recorded in 1999 Bothe was asked if she regretted being a guard in a concentration camp Her response was What do you mean I made a mistake no The mistake was that it was a concentration camp but I had to go to it otherwise I would have been put into it myself that was my mistake 114 Though Bothe claimed that refusal of the position of guard would have seen her placed in the camp herself an explanation given by many female ex guards it was unlikely to have been true as records from the time showed some new recruits leaving their positions at Ravensbruck facing no recorded negative consequences for doing so 115 In 2006 84 year old San Francisco resident Elfriede Rinkel was deported by the US Justice Department to Germany Rinkel had worked at Ravensbruck from June 1944 to April 1945 and had used an SS trained dog in the camp She had hidden her secret for more than 60 years from her family friends and Jewish German husband Fred Rinkel immigrated to the US in 1959 seeking a better life and had omitted Ravensbruck from the list of residences supplied on her visa application In Germany Rinkel did not face criminal charges with the expiry of the statute of limitations meaning that only murder allegations could be tried after such a length of time 116 The case continued to be examined until Rinkel s death in 2018 117 Notes edit Petzold Elfriede appeared on a 1 November 1947 list of female war criminals held in U S custody at Augsburg Goegingen Central Komitet Juridisze Optejlung Krigsfarbrecher Referat as a guard in Gruneberg Vaivara Estland There were however some exceptions At least four overseers were of aristocratic origin Annemie von der Huelst and Gertrud von Lonski at Neuengamme and Euphemia von Wielen and Ellen Freifrau von Kettler at Ravensbruck Brown Daniel Patrick 2002 The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System pp 226 242 Atglen Pa Schiffer Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7643 1444 0 Feig Konnilyn G 1981 Hitler s Death Camps The Sanity of Madness Holmes amp Meier ISBN 0 8419 0676 9 Aroneanu Eugene 1996 Inside the Concentration Camps Eyewitness Accounts of Life in Hitler s Death Camps Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 275 95446 3 Rachel Century Das SS Helferinnenkorps Royal Holloway University of London Gerhard Rempel The SS Female Assistance Corps in Hitler s Children The Hitler Youth and the SS UNC Press Books 1989 ISBN 0807842990 Sarti Wendy Adele Marie 2011 Women and Nazis Perpetrators of Genocide and Other Crimes During Hitler s Regime 1933 1945 Academica Press p 35 Hamburg Sasel Aufseherin U E undertook training courses in Neuengamme for 10 days during September 1944 PDF Media offenses archiv de Retrieved 19 March 2022 Hedwig Burkl an SS Aufseherin at Holleischen Plauen Mehltheuer and Venusberg Gelenau began her training at Zwodau on October 5 1944 KZ Mehltheuer Lippenstift statt Lebensmittel Pascal Cziborra p 84 Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Marie Larisch was enlisted by the Lorenz Company during August 1944 and subsequently trained and served at the factory and Gross Rosen sub camp in Ober Hohenelbe until April 1945 Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume I Part A Early Camps Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA United States Holocaust Memorial Museum p 776 According to the 1945 testimony of former Stutthof prisoner Zofia Jackowska 150 German women from around Danzig were trained at the camp between early August and the middle of November 1944 and following their entry sixty remained in the main camp while the rest were assigned to its subcamps Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume I Part B Early Camps Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA United States Holocaust Memorial Museum p 1476 Elisabeth Konig went to the Mauthausen concentration camp on January 5 1945 and was presumably admitted to her duties as an SS Aufseherin Im Gefolge der SS Aufseherinnen des Frauen KZ Ravensbruck Begleitband zur Ausstellung Simone Erpel p 177 Thea Therese Miesl married Wallner was trained at Ravensbruck for four weeks beginning on October 15 1944 and afterwards assigned to a Dachau sub camp in Kaufering Bavaria Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 177 Ausbeutung Vernichtung Offentlichkeit Neue Studien Zur Nationalsozialistischen Lagerpolitik p 38 Eight German women and twenty female Dutch nationals served as SS Aufseherinnen at the Vught S Herzogenbusch concentration between May 1943 and September 1944 four of the German women along with being Aufseherinnen also worked in the Kommandant s headquarters as secretaries PDF Pure uva nl Retrieved 19 March 2022 Der Buchenwald Report Bericht uber das Konzentrationslager Buchenwald bei Weimar edited by David A Hackett p 272 Ten female prisoners were selected from Ravensbruck and sent to the Dachau brothel along with one SS Aufseherin Four of those women were later selected by SS Dr Rascher to aid in his medical experiments there Rascher later wrote to SS Chief Heinrich Himmler There ensued an enumeration of very curious conditions in the Ravensbruck camp The conditions described were for the most part confirmed by the three other brothel girls and the woman overseer who accompanied them from Ravensbruck Bruce L Danto John Bruhns Austin H Kutscher The Human Side of Homicide Westport CT Arlington House Publishers 1978 p 58 Twenty to thirty SS Aufseherinnen accompanied a transport of over 2 000 women and children from Ravensbruck to Mauthausen during March 1945 most of the prisoners died during the journey or were killed or died shortly after arrival David Wingeate Pike Professor of Contemporary History and Politics David Wingeate Pike Spaniards in the Holocaust Mauthausen Horror on the Danube p 189 a b c Elissa Mailander Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence The Majdanek Concentration Camp a b Andrew Rawson Auschwitz The Nazi Solution p 57 According to SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Fritz Suhren a leading SS officer at Ravensbruck some 3 500 German women served as SS Aufseherinnen at one time or another in the camp and or in its complex of satellite camps Daniel Patrick Brown The Beautiful Beast the Life amp Crimes of SS Aufseherin Irma Grese p 3 Dachau KZ GROSS ROSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP PART 4 6 Dachaukz blogspot com 14 February 2014 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who assisted the SS in Running the Concentration Camp System Kaethe Hoern began her training at Ravensbruck on July 26 1944 while Hildegard K became an SS Aufseherin at the camp during June 1944 Bernd Klewitz Die Arbeitssklaven der Dynamit Nobel p 298 Franciszek Piper Teresa Swiebocka Danuta Czech Auschwitz Nazi Death Camp p 49 Nanda Herbermann The Blessed Abyss Inmate 6582 in Ravensbruck Concentration Camp for Women p 195 Lore Shelley The Union Kommando in Auschwitz the Auschwitz Munition Factory through the Eyes of its Former Slave Laborers p 365 Henry A Zeiger The Case Against Adolf Eichmann a b Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Waclaw Dlugoborski Franciszek Piper Auschwitz 1940 1945 The Establishment and Organization of the Camp p 286 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 4 p 529 Helga Radau Nichts ist vergessen und niemand aus der Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers in Barth p 34 Helga Radau Nichts ist vergessen und niemand aus der Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers in Barth p 27 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 4 p 529 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 90 Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 234 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 411 Isabell Sprenger Gross Rosen ein Konzentrationslager in Schlesien p 271 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 254 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 231 a b Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 271 Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume I Part B Early Camps Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA United States Holocaust Memorial Museum p 1440 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 7 p 308 a b Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 4 p 100 a b Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 4 p 90 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Volume 4 p 133 a b Pascal Cziborra Frauen im KZ Moglichkeiten und Grenzen der historischen Forschung am Beispiel des KZ Flossenburg und seiner Aussenlager pp 87 88 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 195 Jane Gerda Bernigau was an SS Aufseherin in Lichtenburg Ravensbruck St Lambrecht Mauthausen and Ravensbruck once again before becoming SS Oberaufseherin at the Gross Rosen central camp during the summer of 1944 and lastly at the Reichenau subcamp in early 1945 until the spring Bella Guttermann A Narrow Bridge to Life Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 328 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Volume 6 p 320 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 111 Leech Colin Russell 1st Belsen Trial Bergenbelsen co uk Barbara Rylko Bauer A Polish Doctor in the Nazi Camps My Mother s Memories of Imprisonment pp 162 163 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 226 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 99 Hans Ellger Zwangsarbeit und weibliche Uberlebensstrategien die Geschichte der Frauenaussenlager des Konzentrationslagers Neuengamme 1944 45 p 340 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 58 Grunde PDF in German Retrieved 2017 05 20 Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Volume 6 p 367 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System p 77 While SS Oberaufseherin Ehrich was on leave from Majdanek Lublin Weber filled in as Replacement Senior Overseer Elissa Mailander Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence The Majdanek Concentration Camp While SS Rapportfuhrerin Stellvertretende Oberaufseherin Braunsteiner was on leave from Majdanek Lublin Knoblich filled in as Report Overseer Elissa Mailander Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence The Majdanek Concentration Camp Wolfgang Benz Barbara Distel Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Volume 6 p 393 Angelika Konigseder Der Ort des Terrors Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager Natzweiler Gross Rosen Stutthof Volume 6 p 342 a b Jan Kosinski Niemieckie obozy koncentracyjne i ich filie p 313 Filie obozu koncentracyjnego Gross Rosen informator p 53 Hartmut Muller Die Frauen von Obernheide judische Zwangsarbeiterinnen in Bremen 1944 1945 Halina Nelken And Yet I Am Here p 216 a b c Stefan Hordler Dokumentations und Gedenkort KZ Lichtenburg Konzeption einer neuen p 132 Stefan Hordler Dokumentations und Gedenkort KZ Lichtenburg Konzeption einer neuen p 132 Helga Schwarz Gerda Szepansky und dennoch bluhten Blumen Frauen KZ Ravensbruck Dokumente Berichte Gedichte und Zeichnungen vom Lageralltag 1939 1945 p 62 Rainer SzczesiakNationalsozialistische Zwangslager im Raum Neubrandenburg p 217 Sarah Helm Ravensbruck Life and Death in Hitler s Concentration Camp for Women a b Nanda Herbermann The Blessed Abyss Inmate 6582 in Ravensbruck Concentration Camp for Women Kathrin Kompisch Taterinnen Frauen im Nationalsozialismus p 201 Anna Molnar Hegedus As The Lilacs Bloomed Jack Gaylord Morrison Ravensbruck Everyday Life in a Women s Concentration Camp 1939 45 p 92 Nanda Herbermann Hester Baer Elizabeth Roberts Baer The Blessed Abyss Inmate 6582 in Ravensbruck Concentration Camp for Women p 141 a b 1 permanent dead link Simone Erpel Im Gefolge der SS Aufseherinnen des Frauen KZ Ravensbruck Begleitband zur Ausstellung p 62 She is mentioned in Staffs of the German Concentration Camps No VII Ravensbruck Women s Concentration Camp and Uckermark Sub Camp as GALINAT S S woman Deputy Supervisor since January 1943 Accused of ill treatment causing death of prisoners torture and murder Legal tools org Retrieved 19 March 2022 a b Mensen macht en mentaliteiten achter prikkeldraad een historischsociologische studie van concentratiekamp Vught 1943 1944 PDF Pure uva nl Retrieved 19 March 2022 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women p 127 ICC Legal Tools record Staffs of the German Concentration Camps Officials Mentioned in UNWCC Legal tools org a b ICC Legal Tools record Staffs of the German Concentration Camps Officials Mentioned in UNWCC Legal tools org Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women p 46 Bernhard Strebel Das KZ Ravensbruck Geschichte eines Lagerkomplexes p 205 Bernhard Strebel Das KZ Ravensbruck Geschichte eines Lagerkomplexes p 72 a b c Johannes Schwartz 2003 Rezension zu B Strebel Das KZ Ravensbruck ISBN 9783506701237 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women p 133 Barbara Degen Das Herz schlagt in Ravensbruck die Gedenkkultur der Frauen p 169 Bernhard Strebel Das KZ Ravensbruck Geschichte eines Lagerkomplexes p 205 Ulrike Weckel Edgar Wolfrum Bestien und Befehlsempfanger Frauen und Manner in NS Prozessen nach 1945 p 127 Bernhard Strebel Das KZ Ravensbruck Geschichte eines Lagerkomplexes p 469 Pia Gerber Erwerbsbeteiligung von deutschen und auslandischen Frauen 1933 1945 in Deutschland Entwicklungslinien und Aspekte politischer Steuerung der Frauenerwerbstatigkeit im Nationalsozialismus p 44 Daniel Patrick Brown The Camp Women p 220 STEINBECK Emmi was referenced as Wardress of Block 21 or 22 Very cruel United Nations War Crimes Commission UNWCC Staffs of the German Concentration Camps Officials Mentioned in UNWCC Records No VII Ravensbruck Women s Concentration Camp and Uckermarck Sub Camp Female guards in Nazi concentration camps fold3 com accessed 22 December 22 2014 Die Tater Kz rochlitz jimdofree com Retrieved 19 March 2022 Theresienstadt Lexikon Rundgang durch das Gestapogefangnis Kleine Festung Ghetto theresienstadt info Simone Erpel Zwischen Vernichtung und Befreiung das Frauen Konzentrationslager Ravensbruck in der letzten Kriegsphase Kathrin Kompisch Taterinnen Frauen im Nationalsozialismus p 188 Norbert Aas Sinti und Roma im KZ Flossenburg und in seinen Aussenlagern Wolkenburg und Zwodau p 58 Female Nazi war criminals Capitalpunishmentuk org Retrieved 19 March 2022 Brown 2002 p 140 SS Female Overseers in Auschwitz Degob org Retrieved 19 March 2022 NDR Aufseherinnen im KZ Ravensbruck Ich bin unschuldig www ndr de in German Retrieved 2022 09 08 Dreykluft Friederike 2004 Holokaust TV mini series Germany MPR Film und Fernsehproduktion Nazi Ravensbruck camp How ordinary women became SS torturers BBC News 18 January 2021 Harding Luke 21 September 2006 Shameful secret of the Nazi camp guard who married a Jew The Guardian Retrieved April 22 2014 Vasagar Jeevan 9 August 2013 Six German women investigated over Auschwitz crimes The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 August 2013 Retrieved April 22 2014 See also editSS Totenkopfverbande Concentration camp personnelReferences editAroneanu Eugene ed Inside the Concentration Camps Trans Thomas Whissen New York Praeger 1996 Brown Daniel Patrick The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System Atglen Pa Schiffer Publishing Ltd 2002 ISBN 0 7643 1444 0 Hart Kitty Return to Auschwitz The Remarkable Story of a Girl Who Survived the Holocaust New York Atheneum 1983 G Alvarez Monica Guardianas Nazis El lado femenino del mal Spanish Madrid Grupo Edaf 2012 ISBN 978 84 414 3240 6 Mailander Elissa amp Patricia Szobar eds Female SS Guards and Workaday Violence The Majdanek Concentration Camp 1942 1944 East Lansing MI Michigan State University Press 2015 External links editArticle on female Nazi war criminals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Female guards in Nazi concentration camps amp oldid 1176794988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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