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Iglau
Report No. 24
Shooting of women in May and June 1945
Reported by: Else Köchel Report of June 30, 1950
On May 23rd, 1945, we were
ordered to clear out of our house within two hours and were taken
to
a dirty old textile factory in the outskirts of the town. Here the hygienic conditions were terrible:
for example, there was only one single water-tap in the yard for about a thousand men. Three
latrines, on the ground floor, were in an indescribable condition, and the stairs on all the floors
so narrow that only two persons could pass each other.
Young boys and elderly men had to fetch the water for the kitchen in barrels from far away.
We slept on the floor, which was soaked with oil, in four rows, side by side. Every morning at 6
and again at 8 we had to line up for roll call. The moment the "Velitel" (commandant) appeared,
we had to stand at attention. Our rations consisted of a cup of coffee, a cup of soup and one
piece of bread per day.
On June 9th, 1945, they told us: "Tomorrow you will march 30 kilometers [about 20 miles], you
may only take with you as much as you can carry!" Our luggage was examined, searched for
money and the surplus confiscated. On June 10th, 1945 we started to march to Stannern,
another
camp, in scorching heat. Naturally, everyone threw away anything he could spare, so that finally
we had nothing left. Suddenly we were told that the Austrians among us would be allowed to
return to Austria the same day. For that purpose we marched towards Teltsch, but within sight of
the towers of the town, we were told that our return was impossible after all and we had to
march back to Stannern, another 10 kilometers [6 miles]. On our march we were driven with
lashes and rifle shots. There were only two short pauses during
this 40-kilometer march. When we arrived in Stannern in heavy rain, tired almost to death, we
dropped where we stood.
At Stannern many of us died of malnutrition-related disease.
The camp was located on a hill, surrounded by a fence, and we were heavily guarded; we were
not
allowed to leave the camp. The women of the village sometimes brought coffee, soup or bread.
Since all of us were terribly hungry, especially the children, the mothers would wait at the fence
for one of these women to come. One day, seeing
a village-woman approaching, three of the women looked out of the camp. Suddenly shots were
fired - two women fell dead and the third was wounded; their only crime was that they had
looked
over the fence. The guard was praised for the deed and even received an award for being such a
good shot.
I don't want to talk about all the other things we had to endure, but this crime simply has to be
reported!
Unfortunately I do not know the name of this fine "Velitel". I know the name of only one of the
three women, Kerpes; the others are unknown to me, but I am prepared to swear to the facts
described at any time.
Maybe someone else from Iglau knows this Velitel's name and also those of the other women.
Report No. 25
Reign of terror
Reported by: Franz Kaupil Report of September 2, 1946 (Iglau)
On May 13, 1945 the Czech reign
of terror began in Iglau. Approximately 1,200 Germans
committed suicide the following night. By Christmas [of last year] the death count had risen to
about 2,000.
On May 24 and 25 partisans drove the German inhabitants out of their homes within 20 minutes,
to be locked up in the camps Helenental and Altenberg. These were officially designated as
"concentration camps". 3,700 people were imprisoned in Helenental, in Altenberg there were
roughly 3,000. There was not enough water, neither to drink nor for other uses. Toilets and
washing facilities were nonexistent. We received no food at all for the first 8 days, and later on,
only thin soup and 100 g bread daily. Children received a cup of milk only after the first 8 days.
Every day, several older people and small children died. On June 8 the prisoners of Helenental
were robbed blind, and then marched 33 km via Teltsch to Stannern the next day. We were
hurried along with whips. The older people among us were driven on carts only after they had
collapsed. This forced march cost 350 people their lives due to debilitation and starvation.
In Stannern 3,500 people were squeezed into a camp with an intended capacity of 250. Most of
them had to sleep outside despite the rain. The next day, families were split up into 5 different
camps, segregated into men, women and children. Again there was no food for 8 days, and then,
the usual soups. Once, in the Women's Camp, four women were killed with a single bullet, and
one was seriously wounded. The victims included Frau Friedl and Frau Kerpes. Corporal
punishment was the order of the day for men and women alike. There was also a Beating Cell.
The camp administration hired the inmates out to the Czech farmers as day labor. In August
conditions improved, but nonetheless some 500 inmates had died in Stannern by Christmas. In
January the Stannern camp was dissolved.
I myself was placed in "detention awaiting trial" on January 9, 1946 and released on August 7,
1946. Eyewitnesses told me of horrible cruelties, and I myself experienced my share. On June
10, 1945, 19 inmates from Iglau were taken from their cells and shot in the Ranzenwald [forest].
These inmates included the old city preacher Honsik, Howorka, Augustin, Biskonz, Brunner,
Laschka, Martel, Kästler, and others. As late as May 1945 the following were shot in the
Court Building without any trial: Krautschneider, Kaliwoda, Müller and Ruffa. One
Hoffmann was beaten to death. The overseer who was most feared was Rychtetzky. Factory
owner Krebs was scalped. Master builder Lang died of the consequences of maltreatment he
suffered. 70-year-old Group Captain Zobel hanged himself in his cell. Many people had been
forced by means of dreadful maltreatment to give incriminating testimony and were then
detained under arrest for crimes they had not committed. I am prepared to take these statements
on my oath and also to bring further witnesses to corroborate them.
Report No. 26
Maltreatment, withholding of personal belongings,
father was murdered
Reported by: Robert Pupeter Report of September 2, 1946 (Iglau)
I was arrested on August 6, 1945
for no reason and without any interrogation, and detained in the
Iglau prison for 8 months, where I was badly maltreated several times. Then I had to work in a
brickworks, where I lost a finger. I never received any wages. Then I was sent via the
concentration camp at Altenberg to work for a Czech farmer. My father and 19 other men were
shot in prison without any trial. My mother has been missing ever since she was expelled to
Austria. I have lost everything I ever had.
I now have 20 kg of luggage to my name. In the resettlement camp all I received was a pair of
overalls. The provisions which my last employer gave me for the journey were taken from me in
the resettlement camp by the camp administrator personally, and I even had to carry them into
his room for him.
Report No. 27
State of the luggage in the Iglau camp
Reported by: Alfred Chlad Report of September 2, 1946 (Iglau)
In the resettlement camp in Iglau
we were informed that we could take 50 kg luggage with us per
person. Prisoners of war and people who had been released from prisons did not have nearly this
allowable quantity, in most cases they only had about 15 kg. At the border the American officer
who was to admit us objected to this state of affairs, and our transport was supposed to be turned
back because of it. Since none of the people to be resettled wanted to remain, and since the
Czech transfer officers also urged that we should go on, our transport was finally allowed to
cross the border.
Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans
Survivors speak out
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