Dachau Concentration Camp
Dachau, the first Nazi
concentration camp, opened in 1933, shortly after Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)
became chancellor of Germany. Located in southern Germany, Dachau was initially
a camp for political prisoners; however, it eventually evolved into a death
camp where countless thousands of Jews died from malnutrition, disease and
overwork or were executed. In addition to Jews, the camp’s prisoners included
members of other groups Hitler considered unfit for the new Germany, including
artists, intellectuals, the physically and mentally handicapped and
homosexuals. With the advent of World War II (1939-45), some able-bodied Dachau
prisoners were used as slave labor to manufacture weapons and other materials
for Germany’s war efforts. Additionally, some Dachau detainees were subjected
to brutal medical experiments by the Nazis. U.S. military forces liberated
Dachau in late April 1945.
Nazi Germany’s First
Concentration Camp : Adolf Hitler became
chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933, and in March of that year, Heinrich
Himmler announced the first Nazi concentration camp, which opened in the town
of Dachau, just outside Munich, a major city in southern Germany. The camp initially
housed political prisoners, and its first group of detainees consisted
primarily of socialists and communists. Hilmar Wäckerle (1899-1941), an
official in the “Schutzstaffel” (a Nazi paramilitary organization commonly
known as the SS), served as the first commandant of Dachau.
Did you know? In 1965, a memorial
site was created on the grounds of the former Dachau concentration camp. Today,
visitors can tour some of the camp's historic buildings and access a library
and special exhibits containing materials related to Dachau's history.
From the start, camp detainees
were subjected to harsh treatment. On May 25, 1933, Sebastian Nefzger
(1900-33), a Munich schoolteacher, was beaten to death while imprisoned at
Dachau. The SS administrators who operated the camp claimed that Nefzger had
committed suicide, but an autopsy disclosed that he likely lost his life due to
asphyxiation or strangulation. The Munich public prosecutor summarily indicted
Wäckerle and his underlings on a murder charge. The prosecutor was immediately
overruled by Hitler, who issued an edict stating that Dachau and all other
concentration camps were not subject to German law as it applied to German
citizens. SS administrators alone would run the camps and hand out punishment
as they saw fit. That June, Theodor Eicke (1892-1943) replaced Wäckerle as
Dachau commandant. Eicke immediately released a set of regulations for the
camp’s daily operation. Prisoners deemed guilty of rule breaking were to be
brutally beaten. Those who plotted to escape or espoused political views were
to be executed on the spot. Prisoners would not be allowed to defend themselves
or protest this treatment. Eicke’s regulations served as a blueprint for the
operation of all concentration camps in Nazi Germany.
Dachau Expansion: Late 1930s : In November 1938, the prohibitive measures
against German Jews that had been instituted since Hitler came to power took a
violent and deadly turn during “Kristallnacht” (“Crystal Night” or “Night of
Broken Glass”). On the evening of November 9, synagogues in Germany and Austria
were burned and Jewish homes, schools and businesses were vandalized. Over
30,000 Jews were arrested and dispatched to Dachau and the Buchenwald and
Sachsenhausen concentration camps. Nearly 11,000 Jews ended up in Dachau. In
the fall of 1939, at the start of World War II, Dachau’s prisoners were
relocated to Buchenwald and the concentration camps at Mauthausen and
Flossenbuerg. For the time being, Dachau was used as a training site for
members of the newly established “Waffen-SS,” an elite SS combat unit whose
troops also helped run concentration camps. By early 1940, Dachau had been
reconverted into a concentration camp. Conditions at the camp were brutal and
overcrowded. The facility had been designed to house some 6,000 detainees, but
the population continued to rise and by 1944 approximately 30,000 prisoners
were packed into the camp. The main camp eventually expanded to include a
series of subcamps, located around southern Germany and Austria, where
able-bodied prisoners were used as slave labor to manufacture weapons and other
materials for Germany’s efforts in World War II.
The Dachau Detainees: At the dawn of World War II, Hitler came to
believe that restricting the daily activities of Jews in Germany and the
countries annexed by the Nazis would not resolve what he considered to be his
“Jewish problem.” Nor would isolated acts of violence against Jews serve a
purpose. Instead, the chancellor determined that the sole solution would be the
elimination of every European Jew. Also set for extermination were members of
any group considered by Hitler to be ill-equipped to reside in the new Germany.
Among them were artists, intellectuals and other independent thinkers;
communists, Jehovah’s Witnesses and others who were ideologically opposed to
the Nazi Party; homosexuals and others who were viewed as sexually deviant;
Gypsies; the physically and mentally handicapped; and anyone else considered to
be racially or physically impure. (Between 1941 and 1944, several thousand sick
and handicapped Dachau prisoners were sent to a Nazi “euthanasia” center in
Hartheim, Austria, where they were put to death by exposure to lethal gas). Several
thousand Catholic clergy members were also incarcerated at Dachau. One was
Titus Brandsma (1881-1942), a Carmelite cleric, philosopher, writer, teacher
and historian as well as an avowed anti-Nazi. Brandsma arrived at Dachau in
June 1942, and died the following month after being given a lethal injection.
In 1985, he was beatified by Pope John Paul II (1920-2005). Michał Kozal
(1893-1943), a Polish priest, arrived at Dachau in 1941, and for two years, he
attended to the spiritual needs of his fellow prisoners. In January 1943, Kozal
perished from a lethal injection. Pope John Paul II beatified him in 1987.
Death and Medical Experiments: Over the years of its operation, from 1933
to 1945, thousands of Dachau prisoners died of disease, malnutrition and
overwork. Thousands more were executed for infractions of camp rules. Starting
in 1941, thousands of Soviet prisoners of war were sent to Dachau then shot to
death at a nearby rifle range. In 1942, construction began at Dachau on Barrack
X, a crematorium that eventually consisted of four sizeable ovens used to
incinerate corpses. With the implementation in 1942 of Hitler’s “Final
Solution” to systematically eradicate all European Jews, thousands of Dachau
detainees were moved to Nazi extermination camps in Poland, where they died in
gas chambers. The Nazis also used Dachau prisoners as subjects in brutal
medical experiments. For example, inmates were obligated to be guinea pigs in a
series of tests to determine the feasibility of reviving individuals immersed
in freezing water. For hours at a time, prisoners were forcibly submerged in
tanks filled with ice water. Some prisoners died during the process.
The Liberation of Dachau: April
29, 1945: In April 1945, just prior to
the liberation of Dachau by the Allied forces, the SS ordered approximately
7,000 prisoners to embark on a six-day-long death march to Tegernsee, located
to the south. Those unable to maintain a steady marching pace were shot by SS
guards. Other marchers died from starvation or physical exhaustion. On April
29, 1945, the United States military entered Dachau, where they found thousands
of mostly emaciated prisoners. The U.S. soldiers also discovered several dozen
train cars loaded with rotting corpses. Meanwhile, those who survived the
Tegernsee death march were freed by American troops on May 2. During the entire
time in which Dachau served as a concentration camp and death camp, over
200,000 prisoners were cataloged as having passed through its gates. An
inestimable number, running into the thousands, were never registered, making
it impossible to know exactly how many people were imprisoned at Dachau and how
many died there.
Dachau Concentration Camp
Memorial: The Dachau Concentration Camp
Memorial Site, which stands on the site of the original camp, opened to the
public in 1965. It is free to enter and thousands of people visit Dachau each
year to learn about what happened there and remember those who were imprisoned
and died during the Holocaust.
https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/dachau
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.