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Dachau Massacre – Execution of Nazi Guards during Dachau Liberation Reprisals – World War 2

Dachau Massacre – Execution of Nazi Guards during Dachau Liberation Reprisals – World War 2

Sunday, the 29th of April 1945, one week before  the end of World War II in Europe. The U.S.   Seventh Army’s 45th Infantry Division liberates  Dachau – the first regular concentration camp   built by the Nazi government. The soldiers smell  not only human excrement but also decaying bodies   causing many of them to cry or vomit as they  find piles of impossibly malnourished corpses,   more than 30 railroad cars filled with thousands  of dead bodies, and 30 thousand survivors,   most of them severely emaciated, who look like  walking skeletons. Thousands of them are sick  

and would die from typhus epidemics and starvation  during the months following the camp’s liberation.  The shocked and angered soldiers as well as  prisoners who survived years of humiliation   and abuse by their Nazi tormentors, want  revenge and the brutal response is to come. After Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of  Germany on the 30th of January 1933, the National   Socialists used an array of terror measures to  establish a dictatorship in the German Reich.  

The major purpose of the earliest concentration  camps during the 1930s was to incarcerate and   intimidate the leaders of political, social, and  cultural movements that the Nazis perceived to   be a threat to the survival of the regime.  In the concentration camps the prisoners   lived in constant fear of the brutal  treatment and terror exerted by the SS.

One such camp was Dachau, situated near Munich,   which was established in March 1933 and  became the first Nazi concentration camp.   The first prisoner transports arrived  in the camp on the 22nd of March 1933. In October the same year, Dachau’s  commandant, Theodor Eicke,   introduced a system of regulations which  inflicted brutal punishments on prisoners   for the slightest offenses.

 Eicke ensured  that the Dachau camp served as a model for   all later concentration camps. It also  became a training center or “a school of   violence “for SS guards who were deployed  throughout the concentration camp system. During the first year, the camp had a capacity of   5,000 prisoners.

 Initially the internees were  primarily German Communists, Social Democrats,   trade unionists, and other political opponents  of the Nazi regime. However, over time,   other groups were also interned at Dachau, such  as Jehovah’s Witnesses, Roma and Sinti people,   homosexuals, repeat criminal offenders  as well as so called “asocials” whom   the regime incarcerated because they could  not, or would not, find gainful employment.

During the early years relatively few Jews were  interned in Dachau and then only usually because   they belonged to one of the above groups  or had completed prison sentences after   being convicted for violating the 1935 Nuremberg  Laws which put Nazi ideas about race into law.  In early 1937, the SS, using prisoner labor,   began construction of a large complex of  buildings on the grounds of the original camp.  

Prisoners were forced to do this work, starting  with the destruction of the old munitions factory,   under terrible conditions. The construction was  officially completed in mid-August 1938 and the   camp remained essentially unchanged  until the end of the war in 1945. The number of Jewish prisoners at Dachau rose  with the increased persecution of Jews.

 On the   10–11 November 1938, in the aftermath of the  Kristallnacht, when Jewish homes, businesses,   synagogues, hospitals and schools were ransacked  by the Nazi SA and German civilians, almost 11,000   Jewish men were interned there. Most of the men in  this group were released after incarceration of a   few weeks to a few months, many after proving they  had made arrangements to emigrate from Germany.

The camp was divided into two  sections—the camp area and the   crematoria area. The camp area consisted  of 32 barracks, including one for clergy   imprisoned for opposing the Nazi regime  and one reserved for medical experiments. The camp administration was located in the  gatehouse at the main entrance.

 The camp area   had a group of support buildings, containing the  kitchen, laundry, showers, and workshops, as well   as a prison block called the Bunker. Detention  in the bunker was a method that enabled the SS   to isolate rebellious and defiant prisoners as  well as confine and expose them to harsher prison   conditions outside the reach of their fellow  prisoners as well as to torture or murder them.

The courtyard between the prison and  the central kitchen was used for the   summary execution of prisoners.  An electrified barbed-wire fence,   a ditch, and a wall with seven  guard towers surrounded the camp. After the Second World War began on the 1st  of September 1939, living conditions for the   prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp  drastically worsened.

 The murderous working   conditions, the insufficient rations, and  a lack of hygiene facilities in the camp   led to a soaring death rate. From 1940 more  and more prisoners were transported to the   Dachau concentration camp from countries  occupied by the German armed forces. The crematorium area was constructed  next to the main camp in 1942.

 It   included the old crematorium and the  new crematorium with a gas chamber.   However, there is no credible evidence that  this gas chamber was used to murder human   beings. Instead, prisoners underwent so called  “selection” and those who were judged too sick or   weak to continue working were sent to the Hartheim  “euthanasia” killing center near Linz in Austria.  

More than 2,500 Dachau prisoners were murdered  in the gas chambers at Hartheim. In addition,   mass executions by shooting took place, first  in the bunker courtyard and later in a specially   designed SS shooting range. Thousands of Dachau  prisoners were murdered there, including at least   4,000 Soviet prisoners of war following  the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941.

Beginning in 1942, German physicians performed  medical experiments on the prisoners in Dachau.   Physicians and scientists from the Luftwaffe –  German Air Force – and the German Experimental   Institute for Aviation conducted high-altitude and  hypothermia experiments, as well as experiments to   test methods of making seawater potable.

 These  efforts aimed to aid German pilots who conducted   bombing raids or who were downed in icy waters.  German scientists also carried out experiments to   test the efficacy of pharmaceuticals against  diseases like malaria and tuberculosis.   Hundreds of prisoners died or were permanently  disabled as a result of these experiments. Dachau prisoners were also used as forced  laborers.

 They were employed in the operation   of the camp, in various construction projects, and  in small handicraft industries established in the   camp. They built roads, worked in gravel pits, and  drained marshes. All under terrible conditions.  During the war, forced labor using concentration  camp prisoners became increasingly important   to German armaments production.

 In the summer and fall of 1944,   to increase war production, satellite  camps under the administration of   Dachau were established near armaments  factories throughout southern Germany.   Dachau alone had some 140 subcamps, mainly  in southern Bavaria where prisoners worked   almost exclusively in armaments works.  Thousands of them were worked to death.

As Allied forces advanced toward Germany,  the Germans began to move prisoners from   concentration camps near the front to prevent  the capture of intact camps and their prisoners.   Transports from the evacuated camps in the east  arrived continuously at Dachau, resulting in a   dramatic deterioration of conditions.

 With more  than 30,000 prisoners the camp was dramatically   overcrowded. Barracks built to house 200  prisoners were jammed with more than 1,600. After days of travel, with little or no food or  water, the prisoners arrived weak and exhausted,   often near death. Due to overcrowding, poor  sanitary conditions, insufficient provisions,   and the weakened state of the prisoners,  a typhus epidemic swept through Dachau,  killing 100-200 prisoners a day.

 Of some 41,500 persons who lost their   lives between 1933 and 1945, over one-third  died during the final six months of the war. At the end of April 1945, the SS also began  evacuating prisoners from the Dachau concentration   camp to prevent their liberation by Allied troops.  At least 25,000 prisoners from the Dachau camp   system were sent on exhausting foot marches in  the direction of Tyrol or taken away in freight   trains. During these so-called death marches, the  Germans shot anyone who could no longer continue.  

Many also died of starvation,  hypothermia, or exhaustion.  Several thousand prisoners died in the process. On the 29th of April 1945, the  Dachau main camp was liberated   by units of the 45th Infantry division. Before the US soldiers arrived in Dachau,   the camp’s commandant Martin Weiss had already  fled.

 However, there were still SS guards left in   the camp and Nazi guards in the camp’s gate tower  even foolishly fired upon the liberators. But   when the American soldiers opened fire in return,  they came down with their hands held in the air.  After the SS guards surrendered, the US  troops further expected the camp. However,   none of their prior combat experiences  prepared them for what lay ahead.  

The first clue that something  was terribly wrong was the smell. As they neared the camp, the American  soldiers found more than 30 railroad   cars filled with bodies in various states  of decomposition. It was a moment when   they understood the origin of the smell.  It was the overpowering stench of death.

Inside the camp they found even  more dead bodies, often naked,   lying where they had fallen in the last few  hours or days before the camp’s liberation.   Sometimes the bodies were stacked  on top of one another like firewood. For many soldiers, seeing these atrocities  gave the war a new meaning.

 They realized   that they were not just fighting an enemy,  but they were fighting pure evil itself. The Nazis had tried to cremate  as many of these bodies as they   could before abandoning Dachau, but  there were simply too many of them. One soldier later remembered: “Everywhere  you turn is just the horror of bodies,   and people near death or in a state of complete  decrepitude that you cannot even process it.”.

While many of the American  soldiers broke down in sobs,   others were filled with rage, anger and hatred. When four German officers emerged from  the woods holding up a white handkerchief,   one US lieutenant marched  them into one of the box cars,   which were littered with corpses,  and shot them with a pistol.  

When the mortally wounded Germans cried out in  agony, another American officer finished the job. Later, it only got worse. After the US soldiers ordered the SS guards  to line up along the wall in the coal   yard by the guard tower, Lieutenant  Walsh yelled “Let them have it” and   the US soldiers opened fire with rifles,  pistols, and the 30 Caliber machine gun.  

After a 30-second flurry of gunfire,  the Nazi guards were killed on the spot. However, even this was not the end. The prisoners themselves, many of them tortured  and treated as nothing but animals all these   years, also got their revenge.

 While all the  prisoners had lost at least some family members,   some of them had to watch their wives being  abused and raped. Others witnessed shooting   competitions in which SS members threw  small children in the air while others   shot at them. Others saw their friends die  of starvation or during the death marches   which occurred shortly before the liberation.

 Some inmates swore to all that was sacred to them,   that if they could ever kill their SS guards,  they would not hesitate. And they kept their word.   When the prisoners caught the SS guards,  one of them elbowed one or two prisoners   out of his way. The prisoners knocked  the guards down and killed them all.  Several other SS men and kapos were beaten  to death by the prisoners with their bare   fists as well as with sticks and shovels.

  Another soldier witnessed how an inmate was   stomping on an SS trooper’s face until, as  he later claimed, there was not much left. There were some SS guards who had changed  their uniforms for camp clothing. However,   they were recognized and lynched on the spot. While all this was happening, fellow  prisoners and American soldiers alike   often stood motionless, watching coldly and  without sympathy, as revenge was exacted.  

As one soldier later said “We stood aside and  watched while these guards were beaten to death,   beaten so badly that their bodies were  ripped open and innards protruded. We   watched with less feeling than if a dog were  being beaten. In truth, it might be said that   we were completely without feeling. Deep anger  and hate had temporality numbed our emotions.”.

Upon finding a dog kennel with German Shepherds  and Doberman Pinschers, the soldiers shot many of   the animals. Rumors circulated that the Germans  had fed political prisoners to these dogs. Later, American troops forced the German  citizens of the town of Dachau to come   to the camp to see for themselves the  conditions there and to help to bury   the dead bodies.

 Many local residents were  shocked about the experience and claimed that   they had no knowledge of the atrocities  that had been going on there for years. To this day it is unclear how many SS guards were   killed but it is estimated that  the number is between 30 and 50. Because General Patton, then  military governor of Bavaria,   dismissed all the charges, nobody has ever  stood trial before the court for this reprisal.

Out of over 200 thousand people who  were imprisoned in Dachau and in the   numerous subsidiary camps during its 12  years existence between 1933 and 1945,   nearly 42 000 people were murdered. Thanks for watching the World History  Channel be sure to like And subscribe   and click the Bell notification  icon so you don’t miss our next   episodes we thank you and we’ll  see you next time on the channel.