Oradour-sur-Glane Massacre
On 10 June 1944, four days after
D-Day, the village of Oradour-sur-Glane in Haute-Vienne in Nazi-occupied France
was destroyed when 643 civilians, including non-combatant men, women, and
children, were massacred by a German Waffen-SS company as collective punishment
for Resistance activity in the area including the capture and subsequent
execution of Waffen SS Sturmbannfuhrer Helmut Kämpfe, who an informant claimed
had been burned alive in front of an audience. Kämpfe was a highly decorated
commander in the 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich.
The Germans murdered everyone
they found in the village at the time, as well as people brought in from the
surrounding area. The death toll includes people who were merely passing by in
the village at the time of the SS company's arrival. Men were brought into
barns and sheds where they were shot in the legs and doused with gasoline
before the barns were set on fire. Women and children were herded into a church
that was set on fire; those who tried to escape through the windows were
machine-gunned. Extensive looting took place.
All in all, 643 individuals are
recorded to have been murdered. The death toll includes 17 Spanish citizens, 8
Italians, and 3 Poles.
Six people escaped the massacre.
The last living survivor, Robert Hébras, known for his activism for
reconciliation between France, Germany, and Austria, died on 11 February 2023,
aged 97. He was 18 years old at the time of the massacre.
The village was never rebuilt. A completely new village was built nearby after the war. President Charles de Gaulle ordered that the ruins of the old village be maintained as a permanent memorial and museum.
Background In February
1944, the 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich was stationed in the Southern French
town of Valence-d'Agen, north of Toulouse, waiting to be resupplied with new
equipment and fresh troops. Following the Normandy landings in June 1944, the
division was ordered north to help stop the Allied advance. One of its units
was the 4th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment "Der Führer". Its staff
included regimental commander SS-Standartenführer Sylvester Stadler,
SS-Sturmbannführer Adolf Diekmann commanding the 1st Battalion and
SS-Sturmbannführer Otto Weidinger, Stadler's designated successor who was with
the regiment for familiarisation. Command passed to Weidinger on 14 June. Early
on the morning of 10 June 1944, Diekmann informed Weidinger that he had been
approached by two members of the Milice, a paramilitary force of the Vichy
Regime. They claimed that a Waffen-SS officer was being held prisoner by the
French Resistance in Oradour-sur-Vayres, a nearby village. The captured officer
was claimed to be SS-Sturmbannführer Helmut Kämpfe, commander of the 2nd SS
Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion (also part of the Das Reich division). Kämpfe
was captured by the Maquis du Limousin the day before while traveling in a
German army vehicle marked as an ambulance protected by the Geneva Convention.
Massacre On 10 June,
Diekmann's battalion sealed off Oradour-sur-Glane and ordered everyone within
to assemble in the village square to have their identity papers examined. This
included six non-residents who happened to be bicycling through the village
when the SS unit arrived. The women and children were locked in the church, and
the village was looted. The men were led to six barns and sheds, where machine
guns were already in place. According to a survivor's account, the SS men then
began shooting, aiming for the victims' legs. When they were unable to move,
the SS men covered them with fuel and set the barns on fire. Only six men
managed to escape. One of them was later seen walking down a road and was shot
dead. In all, 190 of the men died.
Burning of women and children
in the church The SS men next proceeded to the church and placed an
incendiary device beside it. When it was ignited, women and children tried to
escape through the doors and windows, only to be met with machine-gun fire. 247
women and 205 children died in the attack. The only survivor was 47-year-old
Marguerite Rouffanche. She escaped through a rear sacristy window, followed by
a young woman and child. All three were shot, two of them fatally. Rouffanche
crawled to some pea bushes and remained hidden overnight until she was found
and rescued the next morning. About twenty villagers had fled Oradour-sur-Glane
as soon as the SS unit had appeared. That night, the village was partially
razed.
Several days later, the survivors
were allowed to bury the 643 dead inhabitants of Oradour-sur-Glane who had been
killed in just a few hours. Adolf Diekmann said the atrocity was in retaliation
for the partisan activity in nearby Tulle and the kidnapping and murder of SS
commander Helmut Kämpfe, who was burned alive in a field ambulance with other
German soldiers. Amongst the men of the town killed were three priests who
worked in the parish. It was also reported that the SS troops desecrated the
church, including deliberately scattering Communion hosts before they forced
the women and children into it. The Bishop of Limoges visited the village in
the days after the massacre, one of the first public figures to do so, and his
account of what he witnessed is one of the earliest available. Amongst those who went to bury the dead and
document the event by taking photographs were some local seminarians.
German response Protests
at Diekmann's unilateral action followed, both from Field Marshal Erwin Rommel,
General Walter Gleiniger, German commander in Limoges, as well as the Vichy
Government. Even Stadler felt Diekmann had far exceeded his orders and began an
investigation. However, Diekmann was killed in action shortly afterwards during
the Battle of Normandy; many of the 3rd Company, which had conducted the
massacre, were also killed in action. The investigation was then suspended.
Postwar trials On 12
January 1953, a military tribunal in Bordeaux heard the charges against the
surviving 65 of the 200 or so SS men who had been involved. Only 21 of them
were present, as many were in West and East Germany, which would not extradite
them. Seven of those present for the charges were German citizens, but 14 were
Alsatians, French nationals whose home region had been occupied by Germany in
1940 and later integrated into the German Reich. All but one of the Alsatians
claimed to have been forced to join the Waffen-SS. Such forced conscripts from
Alsace and Lorraine called themselves the malgré-nous, meaning "against
our will".
On 11 February, 19 of the 20
defendants were convicted. Five received terms of imprisonment and two were
executed. Continuing uproar in Alsace (including demands for autonomy) pressed
the French parliament to pass an amnesty law for all the malgré-nous on 19
February. The convicted Alsatian former SS men were released shortly
afterwards, which caused bitter protests in the Limousin region. By 1958 the
remaining German defendants had been released. General Heinz Lammerding of the
Das Reich division, who had given the orders for retaliation against the
Resistance, died in 1971, following a successful entrepreneurial career. At the
time of the trial, he lived in Düsseldorf, in the former British occupation
zone of West Germany, and the French government never obtained his extradition
from West Germany. The last trial of a Waffen-SS member who had been involved
took place in 1983. Former SS-Obersturmführer Heinz Barth was tracked down in
East Germany. Barth had participated in the massacre as a platoon leader in the
"Der Führer" regiment, commanding 45 SS men. He was one of several
charged with giving orders to shoot 20 men in a garage. Barth was sentenced to
life imprisonment by the First Senate of the City Court of Berlin. He was
released from prison in the reunified Germany in 1997 and died in August 2007.
On 8 January 2014, Werner
Christukat, an 88-year-old former member of the 3rd Company of the 1st
Battalion of the "Der Führer" regiment was charged, by the state
court in Cologne, with 25 charges of murder and hundreds of counts of accessory
to murder in connection with the massacre in Oradour-sur-Glane. The suspect,
who was identified only as Werner C., had until 31 March 2014 to respond to the
charges. If the case went to trial, it could have possibly been held in a
juvenile court because the suspect was only 19 at the time it occurred.
According to his attorney, Rainer Pohlen, the suspect acknowledged being at the
village but denied being involved in any killings. On 9 December 2014, the court dropped the
case, citing a lack of any witness statements or reliable documentary evidence
able to disprove the suspect's contention that he was not a part of the
massacre.
Memorial After the war,
General Charles de Gaulle decided the village should never be rebuilt, but
would remain a memorial to the cruelty of the Nazi occupation. The new village
of Oradour-sur-Glane (population 2,375 in 2012), northwest of the site of the
massacre, was built after the war. The ruins of the original village remain as
a memorial to the dead and to represent similar sites and events.
In 1999 French president Jacques
Chirac dedicated a memorial museum, the Centre de la mémoire d'Oradour, near
the entrance to the Village Martyr ("martyred village"). Its museum
includes items recovered from the burned-out buildings: watches stopped at the
time their owners were burned alive, glasses melted from the intense heat, and
various personal items.
On 4 September 2013, German
president Joachim Gauck and French president François Hollande visited the
ghost village of Oradour-sur-Glane. A joint news conference broadcast by the
two leaders followed their tour of the site. This was the first time a German
president had come to the site of one of the biggest World War II massacres on
French soil.
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