From the DW:
“In the SS' Service: Female
guards at Germany's Ravensbrück concentration camp”
(Some female guards were put in
US prisoner of war camps in 1945)
Bad conscience? Regret? Maria
Mandl did not remotely experience either of those. "There was nothing bad about
the camp," said the senior overseer of the all-women's concentration camp
in Ravensbrück, Germany. The 36-year-old was hanged in 1948 after a Krakow
court sentenced her to death as a war criminal. Her career of cruelty is part
of the new exhibition about female concentration camp guards at the memorial
site. Over 140,000 people, mainly women and children, from over 30 countries
were imprisoned in Ravensbrück, 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Berlin,
between 1939 and 1945. The camp was also the main training and recruiting place
for female guards. Some 3,300 of them worked in Ravensbrück. The Austrian Maria
Mandl was exactly what the self-proclaimed proponents of the "master
race" wanted their female guards to be: loyal and merciless. Someone like
Mandl could go places under the perverse hierarchy of the Nazis. In 1942, after
three years in Ravensbrück, she was transferred to work at the death camp
Auschwitz. There, she created the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz that was
forced to play music during prisoner transports and executions. In 1940, after World War II had begun, the
female guards became subsumed under Hitler's elite death squad the SS
(Schutzstaffel, Protection Squadron in English.) The freshly designed and
updated exhibition, "In the SS's Service," first conceived in 2004,
does not shirk from details. The location of the exhibition was also carefully
considered: The old barracks for female camp guards, right next to the former
camp. Only a wall and barbed wire separated the perpetrators from their
victims.
'You are a lady, but I can hit
you' Audio files of the torment and
capricious abuse carried out on the prisoners can also be heard in the exhibition.
Some of the interviews with witnesses are more than 20 years old. Ursula Winska
from Poland, for example, explains in a video how Maria Mandl beat an older
woman especially brutally on a pathway in the camp. When a fellow inmate came
to her aid, she in turn ended up in the bunker. For months after, she was hit
in the face every day, with the mocking comment: "You are a lady, but I
can hit you." There were some female guards who occasionally showed some
humanity. According to another Polish prisoner, Henryka Stanecka, her group of
prisoners were permitted a dip in the lake after finishing a muddy day's work
in a sugar beet field. "One guard even gave us a towel," Stanecka
said.
'Attractive as mindless
assembly line work' The longer the
war went on, the more difficult it became for the Nazis to find volunteer
guards. New staff were recruited through advertisements in newspapers. The
words "concentration camp" did not feature in these job descriptions.
For example, a 1944 advert in the Hannoverscher Kurier read: "Looking for
healthy female workers aged 20-40 for a position in military service."
Compensation was accorded based on tariffs for public servants. Furthermore,
the role promised: "Free accommodation, catering and clothing (uniform)."
Prospects like this were enough for many women to volunteer. One woman
identified only as Waltraut G. was among them. In a 2003 interview, she
explained that she took the job for financial reasons. She was the oldest of
five siblings. "So I really did not think about it for too long, all I
thought was: If I can earn more there then I'll take the job." Anna G.
also had no scruples in taking the job. She found the work in the camp quite
simply "attractive as mindless assembly line work," like in a
factory.
Only some went to trial Apparently, only a very small number of the
guards quit or expressed any kind of opposition. But exhibition curator Simone
Erpel says "we have found no indication that anyone who quit or voiced any
kind of opposition was persecuted in any way. "That is important because
after the war the guards said in their defense, that they would have been
thrown into a concentration camp had they dared to refuse to follow orders, but
we find no indication of that, so it must have been possible for them to make
their own decisions," Erpel says. The majority of female camp guards had
little to fear after the war. Only 77 of them had to stand trial, according to
Erpel, who is also a historian. Death sentences, like in the case of Maria
Mandl, or long prison sentences were rare. Later investigations were mostly
without consequence for those geriatric female camp guards who were still
alive. Most recently, proceedings in eight cases were officially closed in
February 2020 by the German state of Brandenburg, where Ravensbrück is located:
seven because the defendants were unable to be questioned or attend hearings
and one because of a lack of sufficient evidence.
A genuine Nazi uniform? "Not guilty" — that's how the few
female guards whose cases did make it to trial pleaded. As far as the
perpetrators were concerned, that was all that needed to be said. None said
anything that could have helped their victims at all. This chapter of German
case law is now "history" — 75 years after the liberation of the
Ravensbrück camp — according to one state prosecutor, in an interview that can
be heard at the exhibition. There is also a room which deals with "Facts
and Fiction." This looks at the figure of the female camp guard in
literature and film, along with the trade in Nazi memorabilia. Next to the
novel The Reader by Bernhard Schlink, which has been translated into 50
languages and made into a movie with Kate Winslet, you can see a field-gray SS
uniform. "It could be a fake," the accompanying text reads,
explaining the uncertain origin of the piece of clothing — but there is a
female guard's cap that is definitely real. It was given to the Ravensbrück
museum by a former French prisoner.
^ I’ve long known about the Female
SS in the different German Death, Concentration and Labor Camps. I know not
many do so this exhibit will hopefully show them that both Female and Male
Germans were just as die-hard zealot
Nazis and both were capable of committing horrible war crimes. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/ravensbr%C3%BCck-female-concentration-camp-guards/a-54517319
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