This Auschwitz Nazi Forced Prisoners to Say “Thank You” After Torture: Execution of August Bogusch

Winter of 1943, occupied Poland. Amidst the bone- chilling cold of Eastern Europe, a freight train rumbles into the Avitz station, screeching with a deathly whistle that tears through a night thick with the smell of ashes. The box car doors fly open. Thousands of human beings step down into the roaring shouts of guards and the clanking iron chains of ferocious dogs.
Stepping out from the darkness is August Bogous, an elderly SS officer bearing the cold eyes of a tyrant. With just a single flick of his finger right here on this platform, the fate of tens of thousands of people is instantly sealed. Either forced labor to the point of utter exhaustion or straight into the gas chambers.
Two years ago, he arrived here as merely an anonymous guard transferred from Bukinvault. But now he holds the dark power over life and death, becoming a notorious block leader in this hell on earth. Moving from the deadly platform into the barracks, this sadist continues to establish a sick rule of execution. He forces prisoners to lie on a wooden structure, repeatedly delivering 25 fatal whiplashes into their flesh.
The victims must steal themselves to count each of those bruising blows out loud in German. a single mistake and the loop of hell restarts from zero. And when their flesh is torn and bones broken, the final thing they are forced to do is stand up, bow, and say thank you to the very man who just tortured them.
Few know that before becoming an architect of pain under the shadow of the swastika, the man now trampling on his fellow human beings was once a cler, a diligent office worker who had a peaceful life in Lublin. What happened inside the mind of an ordinary man to turn him into a sadistic monster that went far beyond even the most brutal orders from Berlin? And after all, when the Nazi Empire collapses, will the net of justice catch this cold-blooded perpetrator, or will he find a way to escape? Let us unroll the dark dossier and search for the
answer to the mysterious journey of depravity of August Bogous right now. The origins and rise of the SS organization. Before becoming a cog that spread terror, August Bogos once possessed a completely harmless, even dull record. Born on August 5th, 1890 in Lublin under the German Empire, this young man chose the path of an office secretary, a quiet cler making friends with ledger books and desks.
In June 1921, he married Eujenei Mandel, building a model middle-class household. That ordinary life is the clearest proof showing that the ultimate evil in history often does not originate from innate monsters, but from ordinary people who voluntarily allow themselves to be corrupted when facing dark times. The turning point that pushed this aging secretary into the darkness occurred in October 1932 when he joined the Nazi party NSDAP.
Just half a year later, in April 1933, Bogous took a crucial step, standing in the ranks of the SS. This rapid shift reflects the wave of fanaticism sweeping through Germany, where diligent bureaucrats were willing to trade their conscience for a position in the new power system. To understand the true nature of the machine that weaponized Bogous, it is necessary to look back at the history of the SS Shut Stafle protection squads.
Founded in April 1925 with a modest scale, the original mission of the SS was merely to protect the security of Adolf Hitler at political rallies. However, this force operated on a foundation of unconditional iron discipline. Every member had to swear an oath of absolute loyalty to the furer personally. For SS soldiers, the orders of superiors stood above both the law and human morality.
The fierce expansion of the SS was tied to the milestone of January 1929 when Hinrich Himmler took command. Fueled by insane ambition, Himmler drastically expanded this organization in both size and strength, turning the SS into a true state within a state. As soon as the Nazis seized power in 1933, deluding themselves as the racial elite, the SS force was trusted by Hitler to handle the foremost responsibility, isolating, removing, and eventually taking the lives of all political opposition factions along with racial
groups deemed enemies of the regime. It was this systematic ideology of violence that led the SS into the phase of large-scale atrocities. From 1939, this organization directly took responsibility for solving the Jewish question only to push it to a climax in 1941 by coordinating and operating the final solution.
The Holocaust genocide aimed at wiping out all Jews across the entire European continent. Standing in the ranks of the SS since 1933 transformed August Bogous from a harmless secretary into a deadly tool ready to execute the most brutal acts in the name of Nazi ideology. The first stop Bukhanvald concentration camp. The rise of the SS organization officially paved the way for August Bogous to enter the system of death camps where he began to learn how to normalize daily violence.
In August 1939, exactly one month before Nazi Germany ignited World War II, Bogous received orders to deploy to Bukinvald. Established in July 1937, this was one of the largest and most notorious camps located right within German borders, operating as a factory for destroying the bodies of prisoners on an industrial scale.
The bloody status of Bukinvald was tied to the events of Crystal Knock which took place from November 9th to November 10th, 1938. During that fateful night, the SA paramilitary forces cooperated with crowds of German civilians to frantically loot and destroy Jewish businesses, homes, hospitals, and schools. Immediately after the riot, the SS and German police organized the arrest of nearly 30,000 Jewish men.
10,000 of them were crammed onto trains and sent straight to Bukhenwalt. As soon as they stepped through the gates, these miserable people were subjected to an extraordinarily brutal preemptive beating by the camp administration. The consequence was that more than 250 Jewish prisoners died right on the spot from injuries too severe from this initial mistreatment.
The entire structure of Bukinvald was designed to completely wipe out the human will to resist. The main camp area was isolated by a high voltage electrified barbed wire fence system, dense watchtowers, and a network of automatic machine gun centuries, always ready to open fire and shatter anyone with intentions of escaping.
The greatest terror here was the solitary confinement bunker block named the bunker located right at the entrance of the main camp which was specifically used to imprison, starve, and brutally torture prisoners to death. Outside the dark dungeon complex, this machinery of destruction included 33 cramped wooden barracks, disinfection areas, a brothel, and a crerematorium that was constantly burning to handle the corpses of the dead.
The composition of prisoners held at Bukinvald was highly diverse, but occupying a large number in the early phase were political prisoners, those who dared to stand up in opposition to the Nazi regime. A prime example was Ernst Thalman, chairman of the Communist Party of Germany. Thalman was arrested in 1933, transferred through multiple prisons before being held for long years at Bukinvald and was shot to death by the SS force here in August 1944.
In addition to political prisoners and Jews, Bukinvald was also the place where the lives of repeat offenders, Jehovah’s Witnesses, the Cinti, the Roma, and deserters from the German military were buried. During his time of service here, August Bogous directly participated in supervising and forcing these groups of prisoners to labor to the point of utter exhaustion.
Making himself familiar with the daily operational violence of the SS guards, he left Bukinvald in January 1941 to transfer to a new and more fierce hell. The departure of Bogous took place right before a group of Nazi doctors and scientists launched a brutal medical experimentation program, injecting bacteria and testing chemicals directly on the living bodies of prisoners.
Going through a highly organized school of violence like Bkhenvald perfected the cruel skills of Bogush, preparing him for his next steps up the bloody ladder of power at Avitz. the pinnacle of cruelty, the Awitz hell. Leaving Bookenvald, the criminal journey of August Bogos officially reached its peak when he set foot in occupied Poland.
On January 27th, 1941, Bogush reported for duty at Ashvitz. Beginning as a perimeter guard, he quickly rose to the position of block leader thanks to his devotion to enforcing iron discipline. Here, the former Clark completely transformed into a butcher, standing tall in the midst of hell on earth. He nurtured an extreme racial hatred, continuously insulting the native prisoners with degrading names such as Polish pigs or bandits.
In the horrifying memories of surviving witnesses, Bogos personified a stupid, greedy man full of petty and sneaky schemes. He was ready to blackmail and force prisoners to hand over their belongings or serve his illicit needs. Anyone who dared to refuse or simply delayed would face an immediate disciplinary report from Bogosh to push them into severe punishments.
He turned the whip into a ritualistic sadistic pleasure. With the leather whip in his hand, he forced victims to lie on a special wooden structure called the goat and repeatedly delivered 25 fatal lashes. The sickening part was that Bogush always performed this flesh tearing act with a bright smile on his face.
each subsequent blow being stronger and more painful than the last. While blood and flesh splattered, the prisoner had to steal themselves to count each lash out loud in German. A single whimper that flawed the pronunciation or a miscounted number would restart the torture loop from zero. When the beating ended, those bleeding bodies still had to struggle to stand straight, bow their heads, and say, “Thank you,” in German, to the very man who had just tortured them.
For those prisoners who irritated him, Bogush would throw them into block 11, the notorious penal company directly managed by the sadist Otto Maul. In this isolated sector, prisoners had to perform backbreaking labor to the point of exhaustion and endure continuous reigns of blows from SS men. A prime example was the case of a Polish female prisoner who was grabbed by the collar by Bogous and dragged violently into Block 11 to receive whiplashes simply because she secretly accepted a small amount of food from civilians while
working outside the camp. Not only limiting himself to physical torture, Bogous was also a master of psychological terror. He continuously punched and kicked prisoners directly in the face without any reason. During an execution, when a Jew was hanged for an escape attempt, Bogush forced the other prisoners to stand rigid and watch the death up close as a deterrent.
When someone showed resistance, he immediately rushed over and smashed the victim’s face with a punch. The brutality of Bogous reached a mass destruction scale when he was assigned monitoring duties at the railway platform area. Here he directly conducted the selection process for prisoners stepping down from the freight trains.
With a cold flick of his finger, Bogous packed the weak, the elderly, the sick, and the Jews onto trucks to be sent straight into the cyclon B gas chambers. Throughout the process of unloading and escorting the victims, he proved to be extremely aggressive by continuously beating and kicking the starving bodies to force them to move faster.
The notoriety of this butcher surpassed the barbed wire fence of the concentration camp to the extent that the Polish underground resistance conducted an inabsentia trial, sentenced him to death, and broadcast it widely on the radio from London. However, the butcher did not have to pay for his crimes immediately. He continued to prolong his chain of bestial behaviors on the final paths of retreat.
The migration in the snow and the final destination, Guzen Camp. The net of justice closed in on Avitz in mid January 1945 when the artillery fire of the Soviet Red Army roared right outside the camp walls. To erase the traces of their atrocities, the SS command ordered an emergency evacuation, forcing nearly 60,000 prisoners to enter the death marches heading west.
The victims had to walk continuously in record-breaking freezing weather without supplies or warm clothing. On January 21st, 1945, August Bogous joined the guard team directly, escorting a group of 300 prisoners moving along the 70 km long journey to Vojis. Throughout the trip, he continuously used his whip to beat the walking skeletons and ordered his subordinates to shoot dead on the spot anyone who collapsed from exhaustion or starvation.
As a result, 100 lives in the convoy were shot dead and left behind on the roadside before the remaining survivors reached the destination. After this bloody journey, Bogush was transferred repeatedly through the M camp in Norway, returned to Bukinvault for a short time before stopping at Gusen in February 1945. Guzen was a notorious subc camp belonging to the Mounten concentration camp system located on Austrian soil established in May 1940 due to its location close to large stone quaries.
This site operated as an independent entity with its own prisoner numbering system, death registry and SS guard battalion. Living and working conditions here were so terrible that more than half of the registered inmates lost their lives. From December 1940, a large crerematorium was built inside the camp to continuously handle the corpses.
By 1943, Gusen prisoners were turned into a forced labor force serving the defense industry of Germany. By the end of 1944, around 6,000 people had to work tirelessly in 18 massive workshops to produce rifles, submachine guns, and aircraft engines. Although production pressure helped prisoners receive slightly increased food rations to maintain their labor capacity when the Allied bombings intensified in 1944, the camp management forced thousands of people underground to dig a system of mountain tunnels to serve as secret
weapons factories under the strict supervision of men like Bogush. In early 1945, Gusen turned into a giant human dumping ground, receiving the stream of refugee prisoners fleeing from collapsed camps like Avitz, Gross Rosen, and Saxenhausen, pushing the camp scale to its peak with more than 26,000 people in February 1945, the majority of whom were Jews.
This severe overcrowding led to a catastrophic humanitarian crisis when up to more than 10,000 prisoners died between January and May 1945, including 4,500 people who were shipped back to the main Mortousen camp to wait for death. The cruelty reached a state of frenzy in April when the Kappos, the prisoners who acted as henchmen, followed the orders of the SS and used clubs to beat hundreds of their fellow human beings to death.
At the same time, in a final massacre operation, the SS to 65 sick prisoners into a sealed barrack and released poison gas to suffocate them all to death. In the early days of May 1945, the Nazi leadership in the upper Austria region even planned to trick the entire number of surviving prisoners into the underground tunnel systems of the weapons factory and detonate explosives to bury them all alive.
However, the rapid collapse of the fascist front prevented this insane plan from being executed, closing the final chapter in the chain of criminal behaviors of August Bogous at the concentration camps. The collapse and justice served. On May 5th, 1945, the dark days at the Gusen camp officially came to an end when soldiers of the United States military entered to liberate the camp.
The scene that unfolded before the Allied forces was a giant mass grave in the truest sense of the word with more than 20,000 prisoners clinging to life in a state of utter exhaustion and extreme starvation. In the chaos of the day of freedom, the anger suppressed for so many years exploded into a wave of vigilante violence.
The survivors rushed to attack, beating to death on the spot the Capos and Barrack elders, the traitors who had once aided the SS guards in torturing their fellow human beings. Historical statistics show that out of a total of more than 60,000 prisoners ever registered and detained at Gusen, up to 35,000 people remained forever in this land.
For August Bogous, the days of swaggering with a whip to decide the lives of others closed along with the collapse of the swastika symbol. He was captured by Allied forces during his attempt to hide and was quickly escorted and handed over to the Polish authorities to face the law. In November 1947, the Awitz war crimes trial opened in the city of Krakco.
After a month of trial with ironclad evidence and testimonies filled with the blood and tears of eyewitnesses, all of Baguchia’s sophistry was shattered. On December 22nd, 1947, the Supreme National Tribunal of Poland declared a death sentence by hanging for August Boush. On January 28th, 1948, the sentence was publicly executed.
The butcher paid for his crimes at the age of 57. And just as history recorded, there were no tears shed for the man who once found pleasure in the pain of tens of thousands of his fellow human beings. The criminal record of August Bogous is not merely the story of a sadistic individual, but a profound warning about how easily an ordinary person can lose their humanity when placed into a system that promotes evil.
His initially harmless civil servant background is the clearest proof, showing that the boundary between an exemplary citizen and a mass murderer is actually extremely fragile without the filter of morality and conscience. Silence or indifference towards small injustices is the most fertile ground to sew the seeds for great humanitarian disasters in the future.
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