In the Shadow of Horror, SS Guardians Frolic (1 Viewer)

jazzeum

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This was in today's New York Times.

****

Last December, Rebecca Erbelding, a young archivist at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, opened a letter from a former United States Army intelligence officer who said he wanted to donate photographs of Auschwitz he had found more than 60 years ago in Germany.

Ms. Erbelding was intrigued: Although Auschwitz may be the most notorious of the Nazi death camps, there are only a small number of known photos of the place before its liberation in 1945. Some time the next month, the museum received a package containing 16 cardboard pages, with photos pasted on both sides, and their significance quickly became apparent.

As Ms. Erbelding and other archivists reviewed the album, they realized they had a scrapbook of sorts of the lives of Auschwitz’s senior SS officers that was maintained by Karl Höcker, the adjutant to the camp commandant. Rather than showing the men performing their death camp duties, the photos depicted, among other things, a horde of SS men singing cheerily to the accompaniment of an accordionist, Höcker lighting the camp’s Christmas tree, a cadre of young SS women frolicking and officers relaxing, some with tunics shed, for a smoking break.

In all there are 116 pictures, beginning with a photo from June 21, 1944, of Höcker and the commandant of the camp, Richard Baer, both in full SS regalia. The album also contains eight photos of Josef Mengele, the camp doctor notorious for participating in the selections of arriving prisoners and bizarre and cruel medical experiments. These are the first authenticated pictures of Mengele at Auschwitz, officials at the Holocaust museum said.

The photos provide a stunning counterpoint to what up until now has been the only major source of preliberation Auschwitz photos, the so-called Auschwitz Album, a compilation of pictures taken by SS photographers in the spring of 1944 and discovered by a survivor in another camp. Those photos depict the arrival at the camp of a transport of Hungarian Jews, who at the time made up the last remaining sizable Jewish community in Europe. The Auschwitz Album, owned by Yad Vashem, the Israeli Holocaust museum, depicts the railside selection process at Birkenau, the area where trains arrived at the camp, as SS men herded new prisoners into lines.

The comparisons between the albums are both poignant and obvious, as they juxtapose the comfortable daily lives of the guards with the horrific reality within the camp, where thousands were starving and 1.1 million died.

For example, one of the Höcker pictures, shot on July 22, 1944, shows a group of cheerful young women who worked as SS communications specialists eating bowls of fresh blueberries. One turns her bowl upside down and makes a mock frown because she has finished her portion.

On that day, said Judith Cohen, a historian at the Holocaust museum in Washington, 150 new prisoners arrived at the Birkenau site. Of that group, 21 men and 12 women were selected for work, the rest transported immediately to the gas chambers.

Those killings were part of the final frenetic efforts of the Nazis to eliminate the Jews of Europe and others deemed undesirable as the war neared its end. That summer the crematoriums broke down from overuse and some bodies had to be burned in open pits. A separate but small group of known preliberation photos were taken clandestinely of those burnings.

Auschwitz was abandoned and evacuated on Jan. 18, 1945, and liberated by Soviet forces on Jan. 27. Many of the Höcker photos were taken at Solahütte, an Alpine-style recreation lodge the SS used on the far reaches of the camp complex alongside the Sola River.

Though they as yet have no plans to exhibit the Höcker album photos, curators at the Holocaust Memorial Museum have created an online display of them on the museum’s Web site (ushmm.org) that will be available this week. In many cases they have contrasted the Höcker images with those from the Auschwitz Album. In one, SS women alight from a bus at Solahütte for a day of recreation; meanwhile, in a picture from the Auschwitz Album taken at about the same time, haggard and travel-weary women and children get off a cattle car at the camp.

Museum curators have avoided describing the album as something like “monsters at play” or “killers at their leisure.” Ms. Cohen said the photos were instructive in that they showed the murderers were, in some sense, people who also behaved as ordinary human beings. “In their self-image, they were good men, good comrades, even civilized,” she said.

Sarah J. Bloomfield, the museum’s director, said she believed that other undiscovered caches of photos or documents concerning the Holocaust existed in attics and might soon be lost to history.

The donor, who had asked to remain anonymous, was in his 90s when he contacted the museum, and he died this summer. He told the museum’s curators that he found the photo album in a Frankfurt apartment where he lived in 1946.

The photos of the Auschwitz Album were discovered by Lili Jacob, a Hungarian Jew who was deported in May 1944 to Auschwitz, near Krakow in Poland. She was transferred to another camp, Dora-Mittelbau in Germany, where she discovered the pictures in a bedside table in an abandoned SS barracks.

She was stunned to recognize pictures of herself, her rabbi and her brothers aged 9 and 11, both of whom she later discovered had been gassed immediately after arrival.

Höcker fled Auschwitz before the camp’s liberation. When he was captured by the British he was carrying false documents identifying him as a combat soldier. After the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann in Israel, West German authorities tracked down Höcker in Engershausen, his hometown, where he was working as a bank official.

He was convicted of war crimes and served seven years before his release in 1970, after which he was rehired by the bank. Höcker died in 2000 at 89.

***

If you have access to the New York Times, go to this link for an interesting photo slide show.
 

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Really interesting story and link. Thanks for posting Brad.
 
James,

I thought it was interesting as well. I assume you were able to open the link. Sometimes you have to be an online subscriber (free of charge) to do so.
 
Brad that was quite a story, I don't know how those people slept at night after what they had done. I remember when I was about 8 or 9, there was a documentry on our PBS channel called, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. I remember how traumatised I was hearing the storyies and seeing the stills of the Holocaust. I always use to think, if I was a GI back then, I would have shot every German I came across, after seeing that kind of horror. Then I would get angry at the Jewish people for letting that happen to them. Then as I got older, I realised there really wasn't much they could do, they were scared and starving, they had nowhere to go, I later learned, no one even helped them, even when they found out these things were happening. I still get angry at the German people of that time, for not speaking out, some had to know what was going on, heck, they were taking stills and moving pictures of their crimes. I can't believe we let so many of those Nazi get into our country, I will never forget about that horror, and I pray for those lost souls every time I see those gruesome photos. That is truely one of mankinds biggest disgraces, thanks for the story. Mike
 
Modwalls,

At this time, don’t forget that in the 1930 nationalism and anti-Semite was at the highest pic. The Nazis wasn’t alone and they received a lot help from others nationalities and ethnics to eliminate the Jews. A lot of people knew what was happening with then, even the allies. :rolleyes:
 
There are many interesting books on the subject including this recent one: The Years of Extermination: Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939-1945 by Saul Friedlander (second of a two volume series). One of the interesting aspects of the holocaust was how actively many of the occupied countries cooperated with the Nazis while some of Germany's own allies refused. The conduct of the French and Poles being particularly disgraceful. Italy, however, under Mussolini did not turn the Italian Jews over to the Germans and it was only after the German occupation of that country that they were sent to the concentration camp. A similar occurence - I believe - in Hungary another partner of Germany.

The only way the holocaust could happen - in my opinion - is if the participants believed their victims were something less than human. Hitler, for example, often compared the Jews to a parasite or disease. So it does not surprise me to see that many Germans were seemingly at ease with their involvement since that is what they believed. The explanation is less difficult to understand when you recollect that the mandatory segregation of black citizens existed in many US states into the 1960's. A concept that is shocking today, but was widely accepted not so long ago.
 
Combat,

A VERY thought provoking post - thanks.
Having just travelled from Germany, I can advise that modern people in that country are simply the nicest people one can possibly meet. It's such a shame for them that their grandfathers were led down the garden path by such monsters.

Best Regards
HtheH
 
Combat,

A VERY thought provoking post - thanks.
Having just travelled from Germany, I can advise that modern people in that country are simply the nicest people one can possibly meet. It's such a shame for them that their grandfathers were led down the garden path by such monsters.

Best Regards
HtheH

HarryTheHeid,

Intersting to note that you're in Klaipeda, which was one of those stalking horse pretexts the Nazis used to guilt-trip British and French inter-War politicians regarding the Versailles settlement.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaipėda_Region

Unsurprisingly enough, following the expulsion of remaining Germans after WWII it allowed many far right politicans (de facto closet Nazis) the pretence of nursing a legitimate grievance, which was an insult to the distinction between victim and perpetrator in WWII.
 
HarryTheHeid,

Intersting to note that you're in Klaipeda, which was one of those stalking horse pretexts the Nazis used to guilt-trip British and French inter-War politicians regarding the Versailles settlement.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaipėda_Region

Unsurprisingly enough, following the expulsion of remaining Germans after WWII it allowed many far right politicans (de facto closet Nazis) the pretence of nursing a legitimate grievance, which was an insult to the distinction between victim and perpetrator in WWII.

I'm aware of what you're referring to CannonFodder and thanks for the info. To be perfectly honest. I feel just a wee bit "uncomfortable" here. While the Lithuanians are nice people to your face, I think they could be VERY Anti-Semitic given half a chance. While I'm a dyed-in-the-wool Presbyterian, I do feel that there's no need for those views in this day and age....or any other, for that matter......
 
Brad that was quite a story, I don't know how those people slept at night after what they had done. I remember when I was about 8 or 9, there was a documentry on our PBS channel called, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. I remember how traumatised I was hearing the storyies and seeing the stills of the Holocaust. I always use to think, if I was a GI back then, I would have shot every German I came across, after seeing that kind of horror. Then I would get angry at the Jewish people for letting that happen to them. Then as I got older, I realised there really wasn't much they could do, they were scared and starving, they had nowhere to go, I later learned, no one even helped them, even when they found out these things were happening. I still get angry at the German people of that time, for not speaking out, some had to know what was going on, heck, they were taking stills and moving pictures of their crimes. I can't believe we let so many of those Nazi get into our country, I will never forget about that horror, and I pray for those lost souls every time I see those gruesome photos. That is truely one of mankinds biggest disgraces, thanks for the story. Mike

As I read your post Mike, all I could think is that some responses are universal. Your post reflected my feelings and experiences exactly, and I couldn't have said it better. The one thing I would add is that the photos of these scum enjoying themselves while women and children were brutalized and murdered only yards away makes me sick. The truth of the old quote about "man's inhumanity to man" never had a better illustration.
 
Poetic Justice...from a 21 September article here in Phoenix (Mesa):

"MESA, Ariz. -Nathan Gasch and Martin Hartmann lived next door to each other for four years in a quiet retirement community called Leisure World.

You can tell where Gasch had been six decades earlier by the tattooed number on his arm. Gasch could see where Hartmann had been when he walked into his neighbor’s house and a picture of him wearing a Nazi hat on the wall.

Gasch, a survivor of the Auschwitz concentration camp, saw the picture soon after he first moved in, when Hartmann and his wife invited him to their house in Mesa, east of Phoenix.

"I just walked out of the room," said Gasch, a soft-spoken 84-year-old with a Polish accent.

But he didn’t notify authorities.

"Maybe I was too childish," he said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I figured we were living in a community here. I just let it go."

Hartmann, 88, was forced to move back to Germany last month, after investigators tracked the man’s history through immigration records, old rosters and other documents, said Jaclyn Lesch, U.S. Department of Justice spokeswoman.

"His wife lied about where she was born to not raise questions," Lesch said, "and (Hartmann) said he worked in a cantina."

During World War II, Hartmann had been an armed SS guard at Germany’s Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where prisoners were forced into slave labor, subjected to horrific medical experimentation and tortured. Thousands died of starvation, disease, exhaustion and murder.

Born in Romania, Hartmann immigrated to the United States in 1955 and became a citizen in 1961, according to the Justice Department. He joined the SS Death’s Head Guard Battalion at Sachsenhausen in July 1943 and served with the Nazis until the end of the war.

"Here was a fellow person who was living in this country, enjoying the generosity of this country and it is unbelievable that it took this long," said Judy Searle, president of the Phoenix Holocaust Survivors Association. "Holocaust survivors live with the horror every single day of their lives.... Here is a person who is living very nicely."

Lesch said officials don’t have jurisdiction to bring criminal charges against Hartmann and the 106 others like him who have been located by the government since 1979. They can, however, revoke citizenship.

In a settlement agreement reached last month, Hartmann admitted to serving as an armed SS guard and personally assisting in Nazi-directed persecution. He agreed to leave the country and knew he would not be allowed to return, officials said.

Gasch is sure Hartmann knew he was a Holocaust survivor. His tattoo from Auschwitz is still visible on his left arm.

"They must have seen I had my number," he said.

Gasch said he was shocked when he heard Hartmann had been deported, but not sorry."

"He was one of them."

~Beaufighter
 
I had the privilege although it was certainly no pleasure to be given a conducted tour of Lidice by one of the few survivors. Its an experience that has stuck with me for over 30 years.
The village of Lidice was destroyed by the Germans and its inhabitants shot, except for few “Aryan-like” children who were deported to Germany, for its “complicity” in the assassination of Heydrich.
 
The New Yorker has just published an article about the Hocker photo album. Unfortunately, the online version does not contain the article but it does contain some additional photos not shown in the N.Y. Times link.

Karl Hocker was the camp adjutant but unfortunately no witnesses were available (so to speak) when he was tried by the German authorities for war crimes in 1963 to indicate that he was involved in the selection process. Otherwise, he might have been executed or been imprisoned for life.
 
Lili Jacob, a Hungarian Jewish woman who survived the death camps at Auschwitz-Birkenau, donated to the Holocaust Museum in Israel, Yad Vashem, a photo album she found after the war. This found album contained pictures that shocked Jacob. They were taken by SS photographers at the time she and her family were unloaded from the transports and sorted. These pictures are the last images that Jacob has of her family. Her two younger brothers, her maternal grandparents, her sister, and her parents. She was the sole survivor among her large and extended family. She was 18 and according to Dr. Josef Mengele, fit to work, so she was selected to live.

The Karl Hocker pictures and the Lili Jacob pictures have been scientifically examined and it has been determined that a picture in the Jacob album is that of the back of Hocker at the selection point. In his hands is the hooked cane that was used to sort people, left or right.

My friends these kinds of events are not stopping. The Balkens, Darfar, Ruwanda, and across the globe more Hocker's are still sorting. I am not hopefull for humanity or justice.
 
The National Geographic Channel ran a program about this last night. I've taped it but haven't watched it yet.
 
I watched it. Stephen King is not the authority when it comes to horror.
 
Every time I look at my son and daughter (my wife is Jewish) I thank the greatest generation for stopping those monsters before they could finish the job. Every last one of them should be roasting on an anal spit in hell.
 

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