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Female guards in Nazi concentration camps

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Female retinue of the SS
Weibliches Gefolge der SS (SS-Gefolge)

Aufseherinnen being escorted to bury deceased prisoners in mass graves following the liberation of Bergen-Belsen (19 April 1945)
Agency overview
Formed1938
Dissolved1945
TypeAuxiliary organization
Jurisdiction Nazi Germany
EmployeesApproximately 3,500
Parent agencySchutzstaffel Schutzstaffel
SS-Totenkopfverbände

SS-Aufseherin (pl. SS-Aufseherinnen; German: [ˈaʊ̯fˌzeːəʁɪn] ; lit.'female SS overseer'[I][a]) was the position title for a female guard in Nazi concentration camps. Female camp personnel were not official members of the Schutzstaffel, though they were members of the SS-Gefolge auxiliary organization that worked under the administration of SS-Totenkopfverbände.[II][i]

Background

[edit]

In April 1933, a workhouse in Moringen was made into a detention facility under Hanover administration. In November of that year, 141 women, the majority of whom were suspected or confirmed Communists, were imprisoned there. Prisoners usually stayed in Moringen for a few weeks before being released. There have been no reports of mistreatment, and mere group discussions were held daily to "re-educate". The facility closed in March 1938, and was replaced by the Lichtenburg concentration camp, which opened in Saxony in late 1937, and became known as the first SS-run women's concentration camp. It was commanded by Hauptsturmführer Max Koegel and staffed by recruited and conscripted women who worked as guards.[III]

Reichsleiter Heinrich Himmler directed the construction of a larger second women's concentration camp in November 1938, after Lichtenburg's limited capacity had become an issue due to a rising number of arrests.[IV] Ravensbrück commenced operations in May 1939, serving as the central camp for female prisoners. It was here that the position of SS-Aufseherin was established.[I]

On 1 September 1939, Hitler delivered a speech at the Reichstag, in which he stated: "I expect every German woman to integrate herself into the great community-in-struggle in an exemplary fashion and with iron discipline!"[V] This was the given order despite his the views he held in regards to women:

Women have the talent, which is unknown to us males, for giving a kiss to a woman-friend and at the same time piercing her heart with a well-sharpened stiletto. To wish to change women in this respect would be ingenuous: women are what they are. Let's come to terms with their little weaknesses…I prefer to see them thus occupied than devoting themselves to metaphysics. There's no worse disaster than to see them grappling with ideas.

— Adolf Hitler, Hitler's Table Talk (1942)[VI]

The Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM) was in support of the 1939 speech and had it written in the organization's 1940 yearbook.[VII]

Recruitment and conscription

[edit]

Advertisements were posted in newspapers, such as the Hannoverscher Kurier [de], which sought out German women between the ages of 20 and 40 to guard women who "committed an offense against the 'Volk community" at a "military installation". For women seeking employment or a higher pay, the job offer was enticing because of the free housing, prepared meals, and the absence of required qualifications.[VIII] Although a small number of newspaper clippings have survived after the war, history professor Jack G. Morrison claims that the advertisements neglected to mention concentration camps.[II]

In December 1942, the age range of 20–40 broadened and became 17–45 as tensions grew with the advancement of Allied forces and the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht's loss in the Battle of Stalingrad. During this time, many women were recruited by the labor office, which became a source of contention in postwar testimonies. Johanna Langefeld, who was an Oberaufseherin at numerous concentration camps, stated in her testimony: "There were also cases in which women were sent by one of the labor offices to work as guards at Ravensbrück. This happened most often to women who had refused once or even twice to take the job that had been assigned to them, which meant they were likely to be arrested the next time they refused to take the work assigned to them".[IX]

The need for female guards in concentration camps became critical when Reichsleiter Joseph Goebbels declared total war against Allied forces in his Sportpalast speech on 18 February 1943.[X] Hitler raised the age limit for women's involvement to 50 and made employment in military equipment production mandatory in his 1943 and 1944 decrees pertaining to both male and female participation in the defense of the Reich.[XI][XII] The 1943 order exempted individuals who worked at least 48 hours a week, employers of at least five workers, those working in agriculture or health services, pregnant women, and women with one child under the age of six or two children under the age of fourteen.[XIII] Despite these measures, only a small number of women voluntarily sought out such work, resulting in an increase in SS recruiting and labor office conscriptions.[XIV]

Acclimatization and training

[edit]

When the Nazi Party realized that Nazi Germany was losing the war, concentration camp personnel destroyed many records, leaving little information regarding how Aufseherinnen were trained. Ravensbrück has the most preserved records on training practices, largely due to its role as the primary training camp for women from 1942 to 1945.[XV][ii]

Upon arrival at Ravensbrück, the recruited and conscripted women were made to sign a slew of documents, including a declaration of confidentiality, a vow not to reprimand prisoners physically or verbally, and an oath of loyalty to Hitler and their superiors. The women were then led to their on-camp quarters.[XV] The ensuing training period lasted anywhere from one to six weeks, but as Aufseherin prospects were brought in at an increasing rate, this range decreased to just one week for some women.[XVI] In June 1942, conscripted Aufseherin Anna David[XVII][XVIII] provided testimony of her arrival at Ravensbrück:

At the very beginning, we were issued a uniform and had to give an oath. They instructed us on methods for dealing with prisoners. We were told that escape attempts must be prevented at any cost, and that we were to report even the smallest violation on the part of the prisoners…During the training course, every graduate had to take part in various duties, and learn how to carry them out in accordance with camp regulations.[XIX]

A three-month probationary period follows training, during which each prospective is partnered with an experienced Aufseherin who acts as a mentor and is tasked with overseeing a work detail.[b][XX] In 1939, Hermine Braunsteiner received mentoring from Maria Mandl, who was then the Oberaufseherin of Ravensbrück.[XXI] In a postwar testimony, Braunsteiner states that all Aufseherinnen were taught how to "handle, shoot, and clean their service weapon".[XXII][XVI]

According to Commandant's Order No. 3, issued 24 July 1942, new Aufseherinnen received ideological training every Saturday between five and six o'clock in the evening. As part of the curriculum, two antisemitic Nazi propaganda films were shown, including Jud Süß.[XXIII]

Membership

[edit]

Due to missing and destroyed documentation pre-liberation, the exact number of women who became Aufseherinnen between 1938 and 1945 has been disputed. Based on published literature and surviving evidence from numerous concentration camps, it is estimated that 3,500 women served as guards.[XXIV][XXV] Historian Bernhard Strebel [de] has further broken down this figure, estimating that 313 women were employed at Ravensbrück as camp personnel in late 1942 from payroll records.[XXVI] By late 1944, the total surpassed 3,000.[XXVII]

Ranks and uniforms

[edit]
Artistic depiction of an Aufseherin uniform

Braunsteiner has claimed that the first group of women assigned to Ravensbrück were only given blue smocks to wear. About a year later, prototype uniforms were supplied. In the first design, a light gray loden cloth jacket and culottes were worn with a blue blouse, black boots, and a light gray side cap.[XXVIII] Only after Himmler's visit to Ravensbrück in the spring of 1940 did Aufseherinnen receive standardized uniforms. Two military gray uniforms, one for winter and one for summer, were provided, together with two pairs of boots, blouses, a cap, and sportswear.[XXIX] Hats and jewelry were prohibited, with the exception of the designated side cap or a straw hat on hot days.[XXX][XXVIII]

To denote rank, uniforms displayed aluminum braiding on the shoulders and sleeves, as well as badges and awards such as the War Merit Medal Second Class.[XXXI]

Aufseherin

[edit]

Aufseherin means "female SS overseer". Aufseherinnen were in charge of conducting the daily roll call, or appellplatz, allocating inmates to work details, and guarding prisoners.[I]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar[XXXI]
Jenny-Wanda Barkmann Aufseherin at Stutthof 1944–1945 [XXXII]
Erna Beilhardt Aufseherin at the Heiligenbeil subcamp of Stutthof 1944–1945 [XXXIII]
Erika Bergmann Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and its Genthin subcamp, and the Neurohlau subcamp of Flossenbürg 1943–1945 [XXXIV][XXXV]
Johanna Bormann Aufseherin at Lichtenburg, Ravensbrück, Auschwitz II-Birkenau and its subcamp Hindenburg, and Bergen-Belsen 1939–1945 [XXXVI][XXXVII]
Hermine Böttcher Brückner Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and Majdanek. 1942–1945 [XXXVIII]
Herta Bothe Aufseherin at Ravensbrück, Stutthof and its Bromberg-Ost subcamp, Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen 1942–1945 [XXXIX]
Irene Haschke Aufseherin at Gross-Rosen and its subcamp Mährisch-Weißwasser, and Bergen-Belsen 1944–1945 [XL]
Ruth Elfriede Hildner Aufseherin at Ravensbrück, Dachau, and the Helmbrechts subcamp of Flossenbürg 1944–1945 [XLI]
Anneliese Kohlmann Aufseherin at the Neuengamme subcamps Neugraben and Hamburg-Tiefstack, and Bergen-Belsen 1944–1945 [XLII]
Hildegard Lächert Aufseherin at Majdanek, Auschwitz, Bolzano, and Mauthausen-Gusen 1942–1945 [XLIII]
Ewa Paradies Aufseherin at Stutthof and its subcamp Bromberg-Ost 1944–1945 [XLIV]
Margarete Rabe Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and its Uckermark subcamp 1944-1945 [XLV]
Erna Wallisch Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and Majdanek 1940-1945 [XLVI][XLVII]

Hundeführerin

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Hundeführerin means "female dog handler". There is little documentation on female dog handlers in concentration camps, with the only known name being that of Elfriede Rinkel, though it is assumed that they had similar training and responsibilities to their male counterparts. Himmler allegedly ordered for Aufseherinnen to not carry guns, though this is refuted by Braunsteiner's testimony, so some women were armed with German shepherds who Himmler demanded to be "trained to savage to death anyone except their handler".[XLVIII][XLIX]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar with star[XXXI]
Elfriede Rinkel Hundeführerin at Ravensbrück 1944–1945 [L]

Kommandoführerin

[edit]

Kommandoführerin means "commanding officer", though the women with this title were just in charge of overseeing certain work details in a concentration camp.[LI]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar with star[XXXI]
Alice Orlowski Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and Majdanek; Kommandoführerin at Majdanek, Plaszow-Kraków, and Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1941–1945 [LII][LIII]

Blockführerin

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Blockführerin and blockleiter means "block leader". The terms blockälteste, meaning "block senior" and blockova were the titles given to prisoners if they, like the appointed blockführerin, were put in charge of maintaining order within their respective block.[LIV]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar with star[XXXI]
Ulla Jürß Aufseherin and Blockführerin at Ravensbrück c. 1942–1944 [LV]
Elisabeth Lupka Aufseherin at Ravensbrück; Blockführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1943–1945 [LVI]

Arbeitsdienstführerin

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Arbeitsdienstführerin means "labor service leader". These women were in charge of assigning work details amongst the prisoners, maintaining efficiency within the concentration camp, and overseeing kommandoführerinnen.[LVII]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar with star[XXXI]
Greta Bösel Arbeitsdienstführerin at Ravensbrück 1944–1945 [LVIII]
Elisabeth Hasse Kommandoführerin at the Auschwitz subcamps of Budy and Rajsko; Arbeitsdienstführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau c. 1942–1945 [LIX]
Hilde Lobauer Arbeitsdienstführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau and Bergen-Belsen 1944–1945 [LX][LXI]

Rapportführerin

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Rapportführerin means "report leader". Rapportführerinnen coordinated daily schedules and work schedules from an office within the camp and received reports from other guards regarding any incidents, illnesses, and deaths.[LXII]

Name History Years of service Ref
1 bar with star[XXXI]
Irma Grese Aufseherin at Ravensbrück, Oberaufseherin Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Arbeitsdienstführerin and Rapportführerin in Bergen-Belsen 1942–1945 [LXIII]

Erstaufseherin

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Erstaufseherin means "first supervisor".

Name History Years of service Ref
Therese Brandl Aufseherin at the Dachau subcamp Mühldorf, Rapportführerin at Ravensbrück and Auschwitz I, Erstaufseherin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1940–1945 [LXIV]

Oberaufseherin

[edit]

Oberaufseherin means "head female overseer". Oberaufseherinnen were responsible for directing and supervising Aufseherinnen and reporting roll-call numbers to camp headquarters. In some camps, this position was equivalent to that of a Schutzhaftlagerführerin.[LXV][I][LXII]

Name History Years of service Ref
3 aluminum stripes, 9mm aluminum collar braid; upper edge of hat has a silver-gray braid[XXXI]
Jane Bernigau Aufseherin at Lichtenburg and Ravensbrück; Oberaufseherin at Gross-Rosen 1938–1945 [LXVI][LXVII][LXVIII]
Dorothea Binz Aufseherin and Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück 1939–1945 [LXIX]
Hermine Braunsteiner Aufseherin at Ravensbrück and Majdanek; Oberaufseherin at the Genthin subcamp of Ravensbrück 1939–1945 [LXX]
Gertrud Heise Aufseherin at Ravensbrück, Majdanek, Kraków-Płaszów, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, and Neuengamme; Kommandoführerin at the Obernheide subcamp; Oberaufseherin at the Obernheide subcamp of Neuengamme 1941–1945 [LXXI]
Johanna Langefeld Aufseherin at Lichtenburg; Oberaufseherin at Lichtenburg, Ravensbrück and Auschwitz 1936–1945 [LXXII]
Hildegard Neumann Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück and Theresienstadt 1944–1945 [LXXIII]
Gerda Steinhoff Blockführerin at Stutthof and Oberaufseherinat its subcamps Danzig–Holm and Bromberg-Ost 1944–1945 [LXXIV]
Elisabeth Volkenrath Oberaufseherin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau and Bergen-Belsen 1941–1945 [LXXV]
Emma Zimmer Aufseherin at Lichtenburg; Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück and Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1938–1945 [LXXVI][LXXVII][LXXVIII]

Chef Oberaufseherin

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Oberaufseherin means "female chief senior overseer".[LXXIX]

Name History Years of service Ref
Margarete Gallinat Chef Oberaufseherin at Herzogenbusch 1940–1945 [LXXX][LXXXI]
Anna Klein Chef Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück 1939–1945 [LXXXII][LXXXIII]

Schutzhaftlagerführerin

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Schutzhaftlagerführerin, commonly shortened in literature as Lagerführerin, means "camp leader". Lagerführerinnen dealt with affairs concerning the prisoners at the concentration camp, coordinated with the Labor Squad office to appoint work details to prisoners, and worked closely with the subordinate Oberaufseherinnen.[LXV]

Name History Years of service Ref
Luise Danz Aufseherin at Ravensbrück, Majdanek, Kraków-Płaszów, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, and the Malchow subcamp of Ravensbrück; Kommandoführerin and Rapportführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau; Oberaufseherin at Malchow; Lagerführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Camps B and C 1943–1945 [LXXXIV][LXXXV]
Else "Elsa" Ehrich Lagerführerin at Majdanek 1940–1945 [LXII]
Maria Mandl Aufseherin at Lichtenburg, Oberaufseherin at Ravensbrück, Lagerführerin at Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1938–1945 [LXXXVI]
Ruth Neudeck Aufseherin and Blockführerin at Ravensbrück; Oberaufseherin at Uckermark; Lagerführerin at the Barth subcamp of Ravensbrück 1944–1945 [LXXXVII]
Erna Petermann Lagerführerin at Gross-Rosen 1944–1945 [LXXXVIII]
Lotte Toberentz Lagerführerin at Ravensbrück 1942–1945 [LXXXIX]

Daily life

[edit]

Housing

[edit]
Ravensbrück residential building (2005)

Aufseherinnen were housed at Ravensbrück based on their rank. Since personal and intimate contact with the opposite sex was prohibited, the eight apartments on the campgrounds were all far from the men's quarters. Only young and unmarried guards were placed in these apartments, each of which were two stories with ten bedrooms and four attic rooms. Each building is believed to have held at least 112 women. Private housing arrangements were made for married women and mothers.[XC] Despite the policy that male and female camp personnel be separated on camp grounds, it remained a problem, with Oberaufseherinnen Maria Mandl and Dorothea Binz engaging in their own liaisons while employed there.[XCI][XCII]

Recreation

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Aufseherinnen were allowed to leave Ravensbrück only on specific days and with a curfew of 11 P.M., which a number of them ignored. During the spring and summer, the women frequented movie theaters, pubs, and festivals. If they remained in campgrounds, free time was spent sewing or getting their hair done at the prisoner-run salon.[XCIII]

The women did not have to do their own laundry, cleaning, or cooking as prisoners were made to do it for them. Some Aufseherinnen considered this a luxury. Herta Ehlert stated in her postwar testimony: "Well, I want to be quite honest, I had never such a good life as in the beginning at Ravensbrück when I arrived".[XCIV]

Trials and sentences

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Majdanek trials

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We were no longer human. Commands were always given. […] We were not allowed to speak with each other or the prisoners. We had to work whether it was raining or snowing, whether it was cold or hot. Imagine yourself standing in a storm for twelve hours and losing everything.

Elsa Ehrich was the first and only woman to face a death sentence in the second Majdanek trial, which took place between 1946 and 1948.[XCV][XCVI] Between 1975 and 1981, Alice Orlowski, Hermine Braunsteiner (life imprisonment)[XCVII], Hildegard Lächert (12 years imprisonment)[XCVIII], and Hermine Böttcher Brückner (acquitted and released)[XCIX] appeared in court for the third trial.

Orlowski died of natural causes during court proceedings,[C] but had first been tried in the 1947 Kraków Auschwitz trial and received a sentence of fifteen years in prison. Witnesses identified Braunsteiner based on the War Merit Medal, which she wore every day on her jacket whilst working at the Majdanek camp.[CI] Conversely, Böttcher Brückner was pinned by survivors at the Majdanek trial as being "good" and "humane", in comparison to other Aufseherinnen, though she had struck the prisoners from time to time.[CII]

Belsen trials

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The first Belsen trial took place in 1945, in which Irma Grese, Elisabeth Volkenrath, and Johanna Bormann received a sentence of death by hanging. Herta Bothe, Hilde Lobauer, and Irene Haschke received prison sentences of ten years, whilst Herta Ehlert received fifteen years.[CIII] Gertrud Heise and Anneliese Kohlmann were only sentenced the following year during the second Belsen trial, receiving fifteen years and two years' imprisonment, respectively.[CIV][CV]

Row 1, left to right: Becker, Steinhoff, Klaff; Row 2: Beilhardt, Barkmann (April/May 1946)

Stutthof trials

[edit]

Jenny-Wanda Barkmann, Elisabeth Becker, Wanda Klaff, Ewa Paradies, and Gerda Steinhoff all received a sentence of death by hanging in the first Stuffhof trial, which took place Gdańsk, Poland in 1946. [CVI] Erna Beilhardt had been the only woman to not receive a death sentence, having only received five years in prison.[CVII]

Kraków Auschwitz trial

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The 1947 Auschwitz trial in Kraków, Poland sentenced Maria Mandl[CVIII] and Therese Brandl[CIX] to death by hanging. Luise Danz was sentenced to life in prison. Alice Orlowski[CX] and Hildegard Lächert were sentenced to fifteen years in prison.[CIV]

Aftermath

[edit]

Perpetrators postwar

[edit]

One of the few former Aufseherinnen to tell her story to the public was Hertha Bothe, who had been employed at Ravensbrück in 1942, then at Stutthof and its Bromberg-Ost subcamp, Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen. She was given early release in the mid-1950s from her ten-year prison sentence. In an interview recorded in 1999, Bothe was asked if she regretted being a concentration camp guard. She replied, "Did I make a mistake? No. The mistake was that it was a concentration camp, but I had to go. Otherwise, I would have been put into it myself; that was my mistake".[2] Though Bothe claimed that refusal of the job would have resulted in her own arrest—an explanation given by many former Aufseherinnen—it was unlikely to have been true, as surviving records have shown that the new recruits refusing to remain as guards in Ravensbrück did not face consequences.[A]

Former Ravensbrück Hundeführerin Elfriede Rinkel was eighty-four and living in San Francisco when she was deported to Germany by the U.S. Justice Department in August 2006. She kept her participation in the Nazi Party a secret from her family, friends, and Jewish-German husband of forty-two years, Fred.[CXI] She had emigrated to the United States in 1959 in search of a better life, and had omitted Ravensbrück from the list of residences on her visa application. Rinkel ultimately faced no criminal charges in Germany, as the statute of limitations had expired.[B] The case continued to be examined until her death in 2018.[C]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Helferin (pl. Helferinnen), which means "female helper", is not synonymous with the position title Aufseherin.
  2. ^ This aspect of the training program was only implemented in 1939.

References

[edit]

Books

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Mailänder 2015, p. 2–3
  2. ^ a b Morrison 2000, p. 24
  3. ^ Morrison 2000, p. 11–12
  4. ^ Saidel 2006, p. 12
  5. ^ Domarus 1997, p. 1756
  6. ^ Trevor-Roper 2008, p. 266
  7. ^ Century 2017, p. 3
  8. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 45–46
  9. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 56–57
  10. ^ Longerich 2015, p. 559
  11. ^ Echternkamp 2008, p. 45
  12. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 60–61
  13. ^ Berkin & Lovett 1980, p. 38
  14. ^ Broszat 1996, p. 178
  15. ^ a b Mailänder 2015, p. 74–77
  16. ^ a b Mailänder 2015, p. 79
  17. ^ Sulej 2020, p. 180
  18. ^ Brown 2002, p. 57
  19. ^ Strebel 2003, p. 94
  20. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 71
  21. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 49
  22. ^ Strebel 2003, p. 25
  23. ^ Erpel 2007, p. 92
  24. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 544
  25. ^ Lower 2013, p. 21
  26. ^ Strebel 2003, p. 73
  27. ^ Morrison 2000, p. 22
  28. ^ a b Mailänder 2015, p. 92
  29. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 100
  30. ^ Füllberg Stolberg 1994, p. 224
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h Mailänder 2015, p. 95–96
  32. ^ Wynn 2020, p. 137
  33. ^ Megargee 2009, p. 1459
  34. ^ Fings et al. 1997, p. 90
  35. ^ Nick 2019, p. 294
  36. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 82
  37. ^ Benz & Distel 2007, p. 181
  38. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 62
  39. ^ Bartrop & Grimm 2019, p. 44
  40. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 294
  41. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 291
  42. ^ Buggeln 2015, p. 243
  43. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 268–270
  44. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 287
  45. ^ Ingmann 2022, p. 83
  46. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 56
  47. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 137
  48. ^ O'Reilly & Dugard 2018, p. 241
  49. ^ Overbey Hilton 2004, p. 94
  50. ^ Nick 2019, p. 297
  51. ^ Długoborski & Piper 1995, p. 283
  52. ^ Lewkowicz 2025, p. 68
  53. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 63–64
  54. ^ Hore 2016, p. 147
  55. ^ Brown 2002, p. 129
  56. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 84
  57. ^ Posner 2000, p. 219
  58. ^ Hördler 2015, p. 413
  59. ^ Megargee 2009, p. 233
  60. ^ Celinscak 2015, p. 73
  61. ^ United Nations War Crimes Commission 1947, p. 274–277
  62. ^ a b c Mailänder 2015, p. 38
  63. ^ Brown 2004, p. 28–29, 33–34, 57
  64. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 309
  65. ^ a b Morrison 2000, p. 21
  66. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 87
  67. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 11
  68. ^ Hördler 2009, p. 33
  69. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 150
  70. ^ Wynn 2020, p. 133–135
  71. ^ Megargee 2009, p. 1097
  72. ^ Herbermann 2000, p. 125
  73. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 261
  74. ^ Álvarez 2012, p. 265
  75. ^ Taulbee 2018, p. 70
  76. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 11
  77. ^ Herbermann 2000, p. 195
  78. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 81
  79. ^ Brown 2002, p. 51
  80. ^ Erpel 2007, p. 25
  81. ^ Schwartz 2018, p. 100
  82. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 81
  83. ^ Brown 2002, p. 139
  84. ^ Hellinger & Lee 2022, p. 207
  85. ^ Hellinger & Lee 2022, p. 243
  86. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 24–25, 38, 48
  87. ^ Heath 2018, p. 204
  88. ^ Rudorff 2018, p. 706
  89. ^ Schwarze 2009, p. 109
  90. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 84, 87
  91. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 48
  92. ^ Bartrop & Grimm 2019, p. 31
  93. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 90, 104
  94. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 91–92
  95. ^ Gigliotti & Tempian 2016, p. 189
  96. ^ Marszałek 1986, p. 188
  97. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 85
  98. ^ Marszałek 1986, p. 190
  99. ^ Marszałek 1986, p. 189
  100. ^ Álvarez 2019, p. 302
  101. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 96
  102. ^ Mailänder 2015, p. 237–238
  103. ^ United Nations War Crimes Commission 1947, p. 125
  104. ^ a b Theotokis 2024, p. 86
  105. ^ Brown 2002, p. 247
  106. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 83
  107. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 87
  108. ^ Eischeid 2024, p. 265–266
  109. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 84
  110. ^ Theotokis 2024, p. 85
  111. ^ Barbier 2017, p. 34

Bibliography

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  • Álvarez, Mónica González (2012). Guardianas nazis: El lado femenino del mal [Female Nazi Guards: The Feminine Side of Evil] (in Spanish). Madrid, Spain: Editorial Edaf. ISBN 978-8-4414-3950-4.
  • Barbier, Mary Kathryn (2017). Spies, Lies, and Citizenship: The Hunt for Nazi Criminals. Lincoln, Nebraska: Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-61234-971-8.
  • Bartrop, Paul R.; Grimm, Eve E. (2019). Perpetrating the Holocaust: Leaders, Enablers, and Collaborators. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-Clio. ISBN 978-1-4408-5896-3.
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  • Długoborski, Wacław; Piper, Franciszek, eds. (1995). Auschwitz 1940–1945: Central Issues in the History of the Camp (in Polish). Oświęcim, Poland: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. ISBN 978-8-38504-787-2.
  • Domarus, Max, ed. (1997). Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations, 1939–1940. Der Grossdeutsche Freiheitskampf. Vol. 3. Wauconda, Illinois: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 978-0-86516-230-3.
  • Echternkamp, Jörg, ed. (2008). Germany and the Second World War: German Wartime Society 1939–1945: Politicization, Disintegration, and the Struggle for Survival. Vol. IX/I. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-928277-7.
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  • Fings, Karola; Heuss, Herbert; Sparing, Frank; Kenrick, Donald (1997). The Gypsies During the Second World War: From "Race Science" to the Camps. Vol. 1. Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England: University of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 978-0-900458-78-1.
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Scholarly articles

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  1. ^ Gawor 2023, p. 88
  2. ^ Lamoureux 2022, p. 45

Works cited

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Interviews

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  1. ^ Fechner, Eberhard (1984). Der Prozess: Eine Darstellung des Majdanek-Verfahrens in Düsseldorf – II, Beweisaufnahme [The Trial: A Presentation of the Majdanek Trial in Düsseldorf – II, Hearing of Evidence] (VHS) (in German). Waltham, Massachusetts: National Center for Jewish Film. Interview occurs at 1:01:30–1:02:02.
  2. ^ Maurice Philip Remy (2000). Holokaust, Teil 6 – Befreiung [Holocaust, Part 6 – Liberation] (Docuseries) (in German). Germany: MPR Film und Fernsehproduktion GmbH. Interview occurs at 00:27:16–00:29:13.

Articles

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  1. ^ McGuinness, Damien (17 January 2021). "Nazi Ravensbrück camp: How ordinary women became SS torturers". BBC. Ravensbrück, Germany. Archived from the original on 19 March 2025. Retrieved 29 March 2025.
  2. ^ Harding, Luke (20 September 2006). "Shameful secret of the Nazi camp guard who married a Jew". The Guardian. Berlin, Germany. Archived from the original on 7 February 2025. Retrieved 29 March 2025.
  3. ^ Vasagar, Jeevan (9 August 2013). "Six German women investigated over Auschwitz crimes". The Daily Telegraph. Berlin, Germany. Archived from the original on 17 January 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2025.

Further reading

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