Bergen-Belsenpronunciationⓘ was a
Nazi concentration camp near
Belsen and Bergen in the
Celle district, in the
Province of Hanover (now
Lower Saxony),
Germany. Originally established as a
prisoner of war camp, it became in 1943 a
internment camp on the orders of
Heinrich Himmler, where
Jewish hostages were held with the intention of exchanging them for German prisoners of war held overseas.[2] Later still the name was applied to the
Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp established nearby, but it is most commonly associated with the concentration camp it became as conditions deteriorated between 1943 and 1945. During this time an estimated 20,000
Russian and
Polishprisoners of war and a further 50,000 inmates died there,[1][3]up to 35,000 of them dying of
typhus in the first few months of 1945.[4]
The camp was liberated on April 15, 1945, by the British, 60,000 prisoners were found inside, most of them seriously ill,[4] and another 13,000 corpses lay around the camp unburied.[5]
Army ConstructionCamp
The first plans for establishing a military training area on the
Lüneburg Heath were laid in 1934 as part of the military
re-armament of the German Reich as Nazi Germany was in the 1930s preparing for war.
On 16 March 1935, under the government of Adolf Hitler, Germany violated the
Treaty of Versailles by introducing compulsory military conscription in Germany and rebuilding the armed forces. This included a new Navy (
Kriegsmarine), an Air Force (
Luftwaffe), and the first full armoured divisions (
Panzerwaffe).[6] Due to the sparse population and the varied landscape, which covered over 280 square kilometres of land, the Bergen area (
Heidmark) was selected for creating the largest exercise area for the
German Panzer force, in spite of opposition from the local population. Within a few years 3,635 inhabitants in 25 villages had to leave their homes.[7]
Huge barracks, planned to house 15,000 men each, were built on the area. To put up the 3000 German and Polish labourers a Heeresneubauarbeiterlager (Construction Workers Camp) was established. The camp comprised of 30 + 18 large huts in the woods near the hamlet of Belsen, south of the small town of Bergen. The camp is referred to as the 'Waldlager' (Forest Camp).[8]
After the military camp was completed, most sheds were left empty, used for storage or destroyed.[4]
Nowadays the area is in use by the
Nato, it is called the
Bergen-Hohne Training Area.
POW Camp
In September 1939 a
prisoner of war camp was established at
Fallingbostel, and the nearby Bergen-Belsen site became a Häftlingslager, or "prison camp", initially housing around 500 prisoners who were used as construction workers for the Fallingbostel project.[9][10] In June 1940 it became a prisoner of war camp for around 600 French and Belgian soldiers, under the authority of the Wehrmacht, and in May 1941 it was designated prisoner of war camp
Stalag XI-C, (Stalag XI-C/311 for the Belgian and French POW's). Conditions in the camp were very basic, with inadequate food and little shelter. Around 20,000
Soviet prisoners of war were sent to the camp between July 1941 and the spring of 1942, of whom about 18,000 died of hunger, cold and disease. In June 1943 Stalag XI-C/311 was disbanded and the hospital for POW's in Bergen-Belsen became a branch camp of Stalag XI B at Fallingbostel.[11]
After
Fascist Italy surrendered on 29 September 1943 to the
United Nations,[12] the Wehrmacht occupied northern Italy. Around 600,000 soldiers whom refused to fight for the Germans were disarmed and deported to Germany for forced labour. These soldiers were viewed as traitors. They were denied the POW status instead classified as
Italian military internees (IMI).
The
Oerbke and
Wietzendorf camps were used as transit camps for tens of thousands of Italian military internees. Wietzendorf was the site of one of the largest camps for Italian officers known as
Oflag 83. The patients of the Oerbke POW camp hospital were transferred to a separate section of the Bergen-Belsen POW hospital in late July 1944. Most of these Italian prisoners were suffering from tuberculosis or had been injured while working. 142 Italian military internees died in the Bergen-Belsen hospital by the end of the war and were buried in a separate area at the edge of the POW cemetery.[13]
Residence Camp
After the
Niederhagen concentration camp was closed on 30 April 1943, the Waffen-SS
Sturmbannführer Adolf Haas, and 90 SS men under his command, escorted on 7 May 1943 a prisoner transport to Bergen-Belsen. Haas was appointed Lagerkommandant (camp commander) of the Aufenthaltslager (Residence Camp), designed to hold prominent non-German Jews, who could be exchanged for German citizens interned abroad.[14][15] The camp came under supervision of the
SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt (SS Economic and Administrative Department), Office Group D, which administered the concentration camp system.[4] The camp was initially been designated Zivilinterniertenlager Bergen-Belsen (civilian
internment camp Bergen-Belsen), in June 1943 it was re-designated Aufenthaltslager, to avoid inspection since the
Geneva Conventions stipulated that the former type of facility must be open to inspection by international committees.[9]
The Camp should be primarily reserved for Austauschjude (Exchange Jews), Jews who were candidates for prisoner swaps against German civilians, whom were interned in enemy countries.
In the
Second World War, the belligerent countries exchanged several times some of them civilian internees detained against their own citizens who were interned in the respective enemy state. Remarkably, however, in this case was that the Nazis at times in which Jews in the extermination camps were murdered en masse, in the Residence Camp Bergen-Belsen, certain Jews for a replacement ready presented.
At least 14,600 Jewish prisoners were transported, between July 1943 and December 1944, to the Residence Camp. In total only ca. 2,560 prisoners were released from Bergen-Belsen and travelled abroad.
Layout of the Residence Camp
A construction commando of 600 inmates was housed in a separated part of the Residence Camp. The Residence Camp was divided by barbed wire in sections. The several detained groups were isolated from each other and were treated differently.[16]
Star Camp
Star Camp (Sternlager) or Vorzugslager (Privileged Camp), so called because the prisoners had to wear the yellow
Star of David but not vertically striped prison uniforms.
Star Camp inmates were made to work, many of them in the shoe commando which salvaged usable pieces of leather from shoes collected and brought to the camp from all over Germany and Occupied Europe.[17] Families were permitted to meet during the day,[10] and in general the Star Camp prisoners were treated less harshly than some other classes of Bergen-Belsen prisoners, due to their perceived potential exchange value, until fairly late in the war when they suffered severely from
malnutrition.
In July 1944 around 4,100 Exchange Jews were detained,[18] thereunder Jews from
Saloniki, seven transports
Dutch Jews from
Westerbork concentration camp in The Netherlands, North-African Jews, small groups of French, Yugoslavian and Albanian Jews.
Only a small part of these Exchange Jews were freed. In April 1944 only 222 persons departed the camp in a Palestine-exchange.
136 persons, with South American passports, travelled in January 1945 to Switzerland; others were hold up in the
internment camp of
Biberach.
On 28 October 1944 Anne and Margot Frank were chosen in a selection to be transferred from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen. Their mother Edith Frank was left behind where it was reported she died of starvation. Anne and Margot would both die in March 1945 in the
typhus epidemic only a few weeks before the camp's liberation on 15 April 1945.[19]
Special Camp
The Special Camp (Sonderlager) contained two transports, in mid June 1943 of 2400 Jews whom, although of Polish origin from
Warsaw,
Lemberg and
Kracow, were citizens of neutral countries in Latin America and hold Palestine emigration papers. Regardless of their papers these people were deported in the winter 1943/44 to the gas chambers of Auschwitz[18]
Neutrals' Camp
The Neutrals' Camp (Neutralenlager) barracked, from July 1944 to early March, for 250 up to 360 Jews from neutral countries, holding papers from
Argentina,
Portugal,
Spain and
Turkey. De living conditions were far more better than in the Star Camp. On 4 March 105 Jews were released for Turkey.[18]
Hungarians' Camp
In the Hungarians' Camp (Ungarnlager) lived since 8 July 1944 a total of 1.684
Hungarian Jews housed.[18] They were deported from Hungary on the so-called
Kastner train. The train was named after
Rudolf Kastner, who negotiated with the SS officer
Adolf Eichmann to allow the Jews to escape in exchange for money, gold, diamonds and coffee beans. This group eventually arrived on 25 January 1945 in Switzerland.[20][21][22][23]
Prisoners' Camp
The Prisoners' Camp (Häftlingslager) contained prisoners previously held at Buchenwald and Natzweiler who were used for the construction of the Internierungslager (Internment camp)
Concentration Camp
In March 1944, part of the camp was re-designated as an Erholungslager ("recovery camp"),[24] where prisoners too sick to work were brought from other camps. In August 1944, a shipment of approximately 8,000 female prisoners of various nationalities arrived from Auschwitz, most of whom were sent to
Arbeitskommandos to work in factories, and from October 1944 captured
Armia Krajowa (Polish Home Army) soldiers also began arriving at the camp.[9] In all there were eight separate sections to the camp with different groups, treated differently according to their status.[25]
On 2 December 1944 saw the completion of the change-over of Bergen-Belsen into a concentration camp when SS-
HauptsturmführerJosef Kramer, previously at
Auschwitz-Birkenau, became the new camp commander. The number of inmates in the camp on 2 December 1944 was 15,257.[26] In 1945 large numbers of prisoners were moved to Belsen from the eastern camps as the Soviet forces advanced. The resulting overcrowding led to a vast increase in deaths from disease (particularly typhus) and malnutrition in a camp originally designed to hold about 10,000 inmates. The number of inmates increased from 22,000 on 1 February 1945, to 41,520 on 1 March, 43,042 on April 1 and ultimately to about 60,000 on April 15. The number of deaths increased from 7,000 in February to 18,168 during March and 9,000 during the first half of April. The bodies of these prisoners were buried in mass graves.
There were no
gas chambers in Bergen-Belsen, since the mass executions took place in the camps further east. Nevertheless, an estimated 50,000
Jews,
Czechs,
Poles, anti-Nazi
Christians,
homosexuals, and
Roma and
Sinti (Gypsies) died in the camp from genocide by neglect.[27] Among them were Czech painter and writer Josef Čapek (est. April 1945).
After the war, there were allegations that the camp (or possibly a section of it), was "of a privileged nature", compared to others. A lawsuit filed by the Jewish community in
Thessaloniki against 55 alleged collaborators claims that 53 of them were sent to Bergen-Belsen "as a special favor" granted by the Germans.[28]
Sub-camps
Bergen-Belsen had three sub-camps (German: Aussenlager):
Aussenlager
Benefeld housed between September and October 1944 around 600 Polish Jewesses whom worked as slave labourers at the
explosive factory of Eibia
GmbH, which was partly underground.
Aussenlager
Hambühren (AKA Hambühren-
Ovelgönne or Waldeslust), here worked from August 1944 until 4 February 1945 about 400 Jewesses
mining of a
salt dome and at the construction of railway tracks and barracks.
Aussenlager
Unterlüß (AKA Tannenberg) accommodated from end of August 1944 until 13 April 1945 up to 900 Women, whom for a part worked in a munition factory and for the greater part at road and railway track construction.[29]
Liberation
When the British and Canadians advanced on Bergen-Belsen in 1945, the German army negotiated a truce and exclusion zone around the camp to prevent the spread of typhus. Under the agreement, Hungarian and regular German troops of the Wehrmacht guarding the camp returned to German lines when Allied troops liberated the camp on April 15, 1945.[30] Although many SS guards had fled the camp, a small number remained, wearing white armbands as a sign of surrender. The retreating Germans sabotaged the water supply to the barracks,[2] making it difficult for the Allied troops to treat the ill prisoners.
When British and Canadian troops finally entered the camp they found thousands of bodies unburied and approximately 55,000 inmates,[9] most acutely sick and starving. Evacuation of the camp started on 21 April 1945. The surviving prisoners were thoroughly deloused with
DDT, sprayed with pressure air hoses, and moved to a nearby German
Panzer army camp,[31] which became the
Bergen-Belsen DP camp. On 19 May 1945 the evacuation was completed and the last barracks were burned down.[24]
The liberators whom worked in the camp were also daily sprayed with DDT (typhus is spread by
lice). The medics vaccinated them against various other diseases. Fortunately, few if any soldiers contracted typhus or any other disease than
dysentery, but they kept on working.[31]
The Bergen-Belsen DP camp became the largest DP camp in Germany, for the
Sh'erit ha-Pletah (the surviving remnant) of the Jewish survivors, with 11,000 residents in 1946 and the only exclusively Jewish facility in the
British zone.
The remaining SS personnel were then forced by armed Allied troops to bury the bodies in pits.[27]
The scenes that greeted British troops were described by the BBC's Richard Dimbleby, who accompanied them:
Here over an acre of ground lay dead and dying people. You could not see which was which... The living lay with their heads against the corpses and around them moved the awful, ghostly procession of emaciated, aimless people, with nothing to do and with no hope of life, unable to move out of your way, unable to look at the terrible sights around them ... Babies had been born here, tiny wizened things that could not live ... A mother, driven mad, screamed at a British sentry to give her milk for her child, and thrust the tiny mite into his arms, then ran off, crying terribly. He opened the bundle and found the baby had been dead for days.
"This day at Belsen was the most horrible of my life".[32]
For public opinion in Western countries in the immediate post-1945 period, the name "Belsen" became emblematic of Nazi horrors in general. The even greater horrors of Auschwitz, a camp which was liberated by the Soviets and of which Western soldiers and journalists had no direct experience, became widely known only later.
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp was then burned to the ground by
flamethrowing"Bren gun" carriers and
Churchill Crocodile tanks because of the
typhus epidemic and
louse infestation.[33]
In spite of massive efforts to help the survivors, about another 9,000 died in April, and by the end of June 1945 another 4,000 had died (after liberation a total of 13,994 people died). On the 13th day after liberation, the
Luftwaffe bombed one of the hospitals in the DP camp, injuring and killing several patients and
Red Cross workers. The total number of deaths at Bergen-Belsen from 1943 to June 1945 was about 50,000.[9]
The British troops and medical staff tried these diets to feed the prisoners, in this order:[34]
Bully beef from Army rations. Most of the prisoners' digestive systems were in too weak a state from long-term starvation to handle such food.
Skimmed milk. The result was a bit better, but still far from acceptable.
Bengal Famine Mixture. This is a rice-and-sugar-based mixture which had achieved good results after the
Bengal famine of 1943, but it proved less suitable to Europeans than to Bengalis because of the differences in the food to which they were accustomed. Adding the common ingredient
paprika to the mixture made it more palatable to these Europeans and recovery started.
List of personnel
SS-
Sturmbannführer Adolf Haas, camp commander till 2 December 1944, 1 May 1945 missed in action.
SS-
HauptsturmführerJosef Kramer, camp commander 2 December 1944 – 15 April 1945, Nickname: The Beast of Belsen, a notorious war criminal, directly responsible for the deaths of thousands of people, hanged.
SS-Hauptsturmführer
Siegfried Seidl, chief of the
Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police), 1943 – March 1944, convicted to death by the Volksgericht (Austrian People's Court), hanged.[35]
Officially called the
"Trial of Josef Kramer and 44 others", the trial started on September 17 1945 in the town gymnasium at 30 Lindenstrasse,
Lüneburg, which was converted to a Court of Justice for the purpose of holding the trials, ten days before the trials started against 45 former SS men, women and kapos (
prisoner functionaries) from the
Bergen-Belsen and
Auschwitz concentration camps.
The trial took place before a
British military court and lasted until 17 November 1945.[37] Of the 77 arrested former SS staff 17 died before 1 June due to the typhus epidemic.[38]
Many of the SS men and women served before at the
Arbeitslager (labour) camp
Mittelbau Dora and the
Ravensbrück, Auschwitz I, II, III, and
Neuengamme concentration camps.
Eleven defendants were sentenced to death by hanging.
Erich Zoddel was sentenced to lifetime imprisonment.Five defendants were sentenced to 15 years imprisonment; nine accused were sentenced to 10 years imprisonment; two got five years; one two years and another one a year imprisonment; the tribunal acquitted fourteen defendants.
Gallery of Convicted War Criminals
At the trial, the world got its first view of
Defendant Number 1 Josef Kramer
Defendant Number 2 Fritz Klein
Defendant Number 3 Peter Weingartner
Defendant Number 5 Franz Hössler
Defendant Number 6 Juana Bormann
Defendant Number 7 Elisabeth Volkenrath
Defendant Number 8 Hertha Ehlert
Defendant Number 9 Irma Grese
Defendant Number 22 Ansgar Pichen
Defendant Number 25 Franz Stofel, AKA Xaver Stärfel
Defendant Number 27 Wilhelm Dörr
Defendant Number 29 Erich Zoddel
Documentation Centre
Bergen-Belsen fell into neglect after the burning of the buildings and the closure of the nearby displaced persons' camp. The area reverted to heath, with few traces of the camp remaining.
Ronald Reagan's visit to West Germany in 1985 (see
Bitburg) included a hastily arranged stop at Bergen-Belsen, which prompted the West Germans to put together a small documentation center. It soon became inadequate to the accumulating archives, to the general liberalizing process of German identity building after the
Berlin Wall fell, and for the growing public appetite abroad for Holocaust museums, along with the tourist economy they generated.[39]On April 15, 2005, there was a commemorative ceremony, and many ex-prisoners and ex-liberating troops attended.[40][41]
In October 2007 the redesigned memorial site was opened, including a large new Documentation Centre and permanent exhibition on the edge of the newly redefined camp, whose structure and layout can now be traced. The site is open to the public and includes a monument to the dead, some individual memorial stones and a "House of Silence" for reflection.
We were headed for an
airstrip outsideCelle, a small town, just of
Hanover. We had barely cranked to a halt and started to set up the ‘ops’ tent, when the
Typhoons thundered into the circuit and broke formation for their approach. As they landed on the hastily repaired strip – a ‘Jock’ [Scottish] doctor raced up to us in his jeep.
‘Got any medical
orderlies?’ he shouted above the roar of the aircraft engines. ‘Any
K rations or vitaminised chocolate?’
‘What’s up?’ I asked for I could see his face was grey with shock.
‘Concentration camp up the road,’ he said shakily, lighting a cigarette. ‘It’s dreadful – just dreadful.’ He threw the cigarette away untouched. ‘I’ve never seen anything so awful in my life. You just won’t believe it 'til you see it – for God’s sake come and help them!’
‘What’s it called?’ I asked, reaching for the operations map to mark the concentration camp safely out of the danger area near the bomb line.
‘Belsen,’ he said, simply.
Millions of words have been written about these horror camps, many of them by inmates of those unbelievable places. I’ve tried, without success, to describe it from my own point of view, but the words won’t come. To me Belsen was the ultimate blasphemy.
After VE. Day I flew up to Denmark with Kelly, a West Indian pilot who was a close friend. As we climbed over Belsen, we saw the flame-throwing
Bren carriers trundling through the camp – burning it to the ground. Our light
Bf 108 rocked in the superheated air, as we sped above the curling smoke, and Kelly had the last words on it.
Major Leonard Berney, Staff Officer (Anti-Aircraft Artillery), attached to the HQ of 8th Corps of the British 2nd Army.
I remember being completely shattered. The dead bodies lying beside the road, the starving emaciated prisoners still mostly :behind barbed wire, the open mass graves containing hundreds of corpses, the stench, the sheer horror of the place, were :indescribable. None of us who entered the camp had any warning of what we were about to see or had ever experienced anything :remotely like it before.[31]
Picture gallery
Depictions of Bergen-Belsen
17, 18 April 1945, Former guards are made to load the bodies of dead prisoners onto a truck for burial.
Fritz Klein stands amongst corpses in Mass Grave 3.
Polish wooden cross, the oldest monument in Bergen-Belsen.
1–4 May 1945, German doctors and nurses wash and delouse the sick.
17 April 1945, Bergen-Belsen inmates, whom carried dead bodies from the huts in the open air for the funeral.
BBC recording from 20 April 1945 of Jewish survivors of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp singing Hatikvah, today the
national anthem of
Israel, only five days after their liberation by Allied forces. (The words sung are from the original poem by
Naftali Herz Imber.)
Leslie Hardman,
British ArmyJewishChaplain and
Rabbi, was the first Jewish Chaplain to enter the camp, two days after its liberation, and published his account in the collective book "Belsen in history and memory"
[2].
In his book From Belsen to Buckingham PalacePaul Oppenheimer tells of the events leading up to the internment of his whole family at the camp and their incarceration there between February 1944 and April 1945, when he was aged 14 – 15.[3] Following publication of the book, Oppenheimer personally talked to many groups and schools about the events he witnessed. This work is now continued by his brother Rudi, who shared the experiences.
^"BergenBelsen.co.uk". Stalag XIC (311) and KZ Bergen-Belsen, A History From 1935. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^
abcdeGodeke, Monika (ed) (2007). Bergen-Belsen Memorial 2007: Guide to the Exhibition. Scherrer.
ISBN978-3-9811617-3-1. {{
cite book}}: |first= has generic name (
help)
^PIETRO BADOGLIO, DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER (29 September 1943).
"Armistice with Italy Instrument of Surrender". The Avalon Project. Department of State Government Printing Office, Washington, DC. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^Zahlenangaben in diesem Abschnitt nach Eberhard Kolb: Bergen-Belsen 1943–1945….
^Oestreicher, Felix Hermann (2000). Ein jüdischer Arzt-Kalender-Durch Westerbork und Bergen-Belsen nach Tröbitz. Konzentrationslager-Tagebuch 1943-1945.
ISBN [[Special:BookSources/
ISBN3-89649-411-2|'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-00000085-QINU`"'[[ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]] [[Special:BookSources/3-89649-411-2 |3-89649-411-2]]]]. {{
cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (
help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (
help); templatestyles stripmarker in |isbn= at position 1 (
help)
^
abcd"Bergen-Belsen"(PDF). Shoah Resource Center. Yad Vashem. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^Müller, Melissa. Anne Frank: The Biography Macmillan, 1998.
ISBN0-8050-5996-2 pp. 119–120
^Alexandra-Eileen Wenck: Zwischen Menschenhandel und Endlösung… Paderborn 2000,
ISBN3-506-77511-1, S. 335.(in German)
^Braham, Randolph (2004): Rescue Operations in Hungary: Myths and Realities, East European Quarterly 38(2): 173-203.
^Bilsky, Leora (2004): Transformative Justice : Israeli Identity on Trial (Law, Meaning, and Violence), University of Michigan Press.
^Bauer, Yehuda (1994): Jews for Sale?, Yale University Press.