This is how the Nazi GUARD ABUSED and T0RTURED people in the CONCENTRATION CAMPS: Anneliese Kohlmann

Yeah, fighter. Without a doubt, existence in the concentration camps was a constant torture, especially for the women. During each day, the prisoners were pushed to the limits of their strength by horrors almost impossible to understand through reason. Just imagine being stripped naked, deprived of food, and suffering from the impossibility of rest and overwork, and the beatings, insults, and spitting that became the obligatory stop before the extermination ovens and gas chambers.
As if this were not enough, there were exceptional cases that could arouse the obsessive persecution of the camp guards themselves. Such was the case of Anala Coleman, a concentration camp guard who gave free reign to her sexual orientation as a vehicle for all kinds of depravity. It was common for her to seek the satisfaction of her desires to turn into the sexual domination of the bodies of the youngest Jewish inmates.
These innocent girls had to endure the dehumanization Coleman inflicted on them in order to survive hell. That’s why today in this new installment of military history, we’ll delve into the disturbing story of this woman who acted out her sadistic fantasies and desires for domination by degrading the most defenseless prisoners in the concentration camps where she worked.
minus. Torture, abuse, and mistreatment were what camp guards like Analisa Coleman endured to keep their jobs, which required certain psychological qualities. But what drove a girl like her to become a bloodthirsty monster? Anelise Coleman was born on March 1st, 1921 in the port city of Hamburg, Germany.
Her father, Gayorg Coleman, provided her with a home and gave her an upbringing based on strict discipline. This echoed not only the German ethos of that historical moment, but also the values inherent to the Masonic doctrine Gayorg professed. During her childhood, she was educated under the principles of the League of German Girls, the female branch of the Hitler Youth.
The ideology of this organization established a monolithic role for women summarized in the motto of the three Ks, Kinder, COucha, Kircha, Children, Kitchen, Church. In the literal German sense of the word, what was the deeper meaning of this motto? What consequences did it have on the lifestyles of women at that time? They aimed to train women to become good mothers and mothers who would provide Hitler with as many children as possible for his Third Reich.
Inside of this group, girls also learned domestic roles and jobs such as how to keep a good house and cookery whilst the boys joined the Hitler Youth where they completed military drills. After serving as a cook for the German Red Cross, Analisa joined the National Socialist German Workers Party on April 1st, 1940.
In those early months of World War II, she was 19 years old and quickly caught the nationalist fervor that resonated in the streets. Her fledgling political affiliation opened the door to new job opportunities, leading her to a civilian job as a tram driver, which she held for 4 years. Later, her life would require her to put into practice all the values instilled in her during her training period.
Years later, on November 4th, 1944, as the conflration was in its final stages, Analisa Coleman began serving in the SS Women’s Auxiliary Force. She received only one week of training to do so. This kind of exception became common when the Third Reich began to glimpse the possibility of its defeat. Broadly speaking, superiors sought to instill in the new recruit that in the concentration camp, they should treat particularly badly the particularly unfortunate people.
Coleman was appointed to become an Alserin or female guard inside of the Newamar concentration camp. Specifically, she first worked at the New Grabin sub camp where over 500 women prisoners were kept close to her hometown of Hambor. In the Nigrain sub camp, Coleman’s role consisted of supervising the inmates as they dug anti-tank ditches.
From this early position in command, Ana Lisa’s deepest inclinations, such as her ambivalent attraction to women, came to light. What fascinated her about the girls imprisoned in the camps was precisely their weakness and the fact that their survival was subordinated to their whims. Analisa found it exciting to have absolute control over the beauty of these girls who begged her to preserve their lives and those of their families.
She would often despise the older captives to the extreme, taking advantage of their age and forcing them to perform impossible tasks, then severely punishing them for their exasperating ineptitude, all the while providing favors and care for the younger ones. At that time, five guards were known for their harassment, and among them was Analisa Coleman.
A few weeks after the fall of Berlin in March 1945, Coleman was transferred to the Tstack Hamburg forced labor sub camp. Only four months had passed since Analisa’s arrival at Nigrain. But turbulent times called for desperate measures. There she would further her fondness for kicking women whom she herself would throw to the ground simply for the pleasure of witnessing the pain in their eyes and hearing their indistinguishable pleas from their howls of suffering.
When they fell unconscious, she would seek out others to continue the pleasure. Analise Coleman did not go unnoticed during her stay at Tstack Hamburg. On numerous occasions, he engaged in truly violent scenes, such as when he beat a woman so viciously that the power of his fists deformed her face, leaving her with no human appearance.
The unfortunate woman lay unconscious on the cold floor, while gushes of blood flowed from her mouth and bruised hands until they covered the entire floor. Furthermore, on another occasion, Coleman took a stick and took his revenge on a prisoner who was beaten until her arms were purple with swelling.
Each impact on her made a dry sound, denoting how her physicality resisted until it gave way, and the blood began to emit the crackling sound of splashes that stained Analise’s hard face crimson. Moreover, not even the pregnant women could appease his overwhelming fury. One was slapped with such cruelty that her face remained swollen for a full week.
If she did indeed give birth to a child after such a beating, it’s likely that child was frightened by the appearance the woman’s face took on after Analisa’s fury. She kicked other pregnant women until they lay unconscious on the floor. The worst these victims could do was wake up since that would attract Anaisa’s attention, who would return to finish the murky reprimand she had already begun.
If Ana Lisa caught an inmate trying to steal even a tiny slice of bread, she would beat her with at least 30 blows of the cane. The space between each one seemed to last an eternity since the pain they caused was unspeakable. Not to mention that Analise increased the intensity of each blow, aiming for the last to be fatal.
During one incident, Colon punished a female prisoner to 30 lashes for stealing a small piece of bread. She did this a number of times and also sexually assaulted a number of young Jewish girls. During this time, Coleman also managed to gain the trust of some young girls whom he later harassed and caused irreparable harm.
Vera Fuksova from Czechoslovakia witnessed these incidents. By chance, she passed through the same concentration camps as Anaisa, so she was able to witness her entire abominable journey. According to her, the guard made contact with a Jewish girl named Helen Summer, who was manipulated by Coleman into maintaining a curious relationship with her.
It should be noted that the latter’s decisions could have repercussions on the life or death of any of the inmates. At night, Summer was visited by Coleman, who took the opportunity to shower her with caresses until dawn. This practice became a habit over the course of several months. Helen’s docsility is explained by the fact that she was looking after her mother who was also imprisoned in the extermination camp.
Coleman’s closeness implied despite her domination a certain security advantage for Helen and her mother. In any case, it is likely that Anaisa truly fell under the girl’s charms given that the German woman had expressed a desire to continue the relationship with the captive in Prague after the war was over. In the detention centers, relationships of this nature were not as unusual as one might think.
Sexual exploitation of prisoners of both sexes was commonplace by the guards at these facilities. The inmates vulnerable state led them to accept the food, medicine, and shelter the Nazis offered them in exchange for intimate encounters. These violations were another example of the German subjugation of their inferiors whose human dignity was not recognized in any sense.
During those days, during Analisa Coleman’s stay in the Tak Hamburg sub camp, extraordinary events occurred. But also in March 1945, the prisoners at the sub camps were being sent on death marches to places such as Berg and Bellson. And during one transport, a prisoner train was hit by an air raid, killing a number of prisoners.
Over the course of the month, thousands of people were transported to get away from the front lines and to avoid them falling into Soviet hands. And along with the death marches and transports, many SS guards and staff also went. The death marches were long marches undertaken by prisoners under extremely adverse weather conditions, including sub-zero temperatures along with a lack of water, rest, and food.
Camp inmates were forced to participate. Those who could not endure the pace collapsed and were left to their fate or were shot within moments. The longest death marches occurred during the harsh winter of 1944 to 1945 when Soviet troops fought the Nazis for Poland. Upon taking up positions at the Bergen Bellson camp, Analisa Coleman was repeatedly tasked with guarding the transport of women contingents headed to the extermination center.
So much so that on April 8th, 1945, foreseeing the outcome of the war and the failure of her compatriots, Anaisa chose to implement a strategy she had already planned. When she returned from the TF stack sub camp, she asked the Bergen Bellson commandant if she would be allowed to stay there to talk with a supposed cousin, referring to Hela Summer.
The officer’s response was negative, and she immediately distanced herself from him. Coleman was running out of escape options except for one which made Ana desert her job. At full speed, the former guard headed back to her hometown, Hamburg. At her parents’ house, she procured a bicycle, which she rode for 10 hours toward Berg and Bellson.
After completing the journey, she waited there for a shift change and then obtained a prisoner’s uniform to identify herself as such. Coleman’s goal was to find Helin and escape together to Prague. In this way, she would evade reprisals from both her German comrades and the allies who were increasingly approaching the territory. Here, she tried to pass herself off as a prisoner of Bellson to evade capture once the camp was liberated, but it did not take long before she was discovered.
Within two days, she was recognized and arrested and then was forced to take part in the huge cleanup operation along with other guards at Bellson. The British troops who liberated the Bergen Bellson camp urged the former German guards to work on digging mass graves to store the bodies of those they had executed in cold blood.
Among them was Analisa Coleman and together they did this work while awaiting trial at Chella Prison, Germany. The trial took place in June 1946, where various witnesses attested to the gruesome abuses Analisa had perpetrated against the Jewish women captive in the camps. Coleman’s alibi was based on the fact that she had indeed done so, albeit to spare them the worst torture inflicted by the male guards.
She also clarified that many female prisoners had appreciated her, receiving extra food rations from her. Although this last point was true, the accused did so for more gruesome purposes than mere altruism. Analisa Coleman pleaded with those judging her for mercy. She argued that she had only served as a guardian for 5 months and that furthermore, she had not murdered any of the children in her care.
Analise’s mother asserted that her 25-year-old daughter hated her job and became depressed when she was on vacation at the family home. Therefore, the court sentenced her to just two years in prison for all the harm she had caused to innocent people. The sentence never even went into effect as she had already been in prison since her arrest at Bergen Bellson.
So, on the same day of her sentencing, she was released. She was never heard from again. Although there were rumors that she moved to West Berlin in 1965, there was never any evidence that she started a family or that she had shown any remorse for her countless crimes. The conclusions regarding the outcome of Analisa Coleman’s life are devastating.
She would stay in Hamburg for a number of years and then she moved to West Berlin and died at the age of 56 inside of the German capital. What is bizarre is the fact that Anala Coleman escaped without any real punishment. She was an evil woman who would happily and violently rain down hell with her whip and her verdict was no real justice for her victims.
Get out. The question raised by the story about Anaisa Coleman highlights the importance given to sexual orientation in Nazi Germany. Before the court, she pleaded that the short time she had spent as a guard in the camps and the fact that she had not executed anyone be taken into account.
At no point did the question of her sexuality come into play. This was due to the fact that while the country’s penal code only punished homosexual men, homosexual women were relegated to a legal vacuum. This lack of definition was supported by the national socialist concept of the female gender. By serving the Third Reich, Anaisa had fulfilled her duties as a wife to the furer.
Furthermore, since lesbians were assigned a passive role in sexual relations, they were not considered worthy of prosecution. In contrast, men who did not actively engage in fornication were considered truly degenerate and open to any reprimand. In a way, the active masculine role Anaisa played in dominating her prisoners was amply rewarded.
Women weren’t imprisoned for their sexuality, although if they didn’t conform to the expected way of life, they could be punished by default for other reasons. Being Jewish, Roma, antisocial, politically persecuted, or professional criminals, Coleman was never immune to Nazi law. Quite the opposite. Upper class Aryan lesbians were able to adapt to the demands, while the more humble fell prey to Nazi repressive measures.
This was the dynamic Analisa experienced and made her inmates respect in the most horrifying ways imaginable. Now, after learning about the trials and tribulations the prisoners under Analisa Coleman’s care went through, it’s time to say goodbye. Thank you very much for being with us until the end.
We look forward to seeing you again in our next installment.