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Komotau
Report No. 42
The concentration camp
Reported by: Ottokar Kremen Report of June 25, 1950
I returned home from the
Wehrmacht on May 7, 1945 and was unable to enter my
apartment because it was occupied by Russian officers. Therefore I went instead to
my sister-in-law in Gersdorf, District Komotau, to stay there with my wife until my
apartment was vacated. I went to my apartment to get some linen and clothing.
While I was there, the officers apologized and did not keep me from taking my
clothes and linen with me. I had arrived on a bicycle, but while I was in my
apartment the bike was stolen. When the officers noticed what had happened, one
of them, a Major, went out into the street with me and flagged down a Russian
soldier who was driving by on a Sachs motorcycle. He levied the motorcycle from
him and gave it to me as replacement for my stolen bike. He gave me a paper in
Russian so that I would be able to pass the Russian sentries without trouble. And
indeed none of these sentries gave me any trouble, and I arrived safely in Gersdorf
with the motorcycle. The officers had mentioned that they would be moving out in
three weeks at the latest and that I would be able to move back into my flat then.
But that's not how things turned out:
On June 3, 1945 nine Czechs came to my temporary lodgings at
my sister-in-laws's place in Gersdorf. Except for one, the Czechs wore civilian
clothes, but you could tell at first glance that they had stolen them as there was not
one among them whose jacket or pants fit properly. Only one of them wore a
uniform (Staff Captain of the gendarmes), which appeared to belong to him, since
it fit. They searched my quarters, and others from the same unit searched the entire
house. They took all the clothes and linen which the Russians had let me keep, as
well all of
my sister-in-law's clothing and all the food there was. They shot the rabbits that
were in the hutch, and left them lying there. I had to undress and was examined for
evidence of having been in the SS. When no such evidence was found they asked
me if I was a member of the NSDAP or the SA, and when I said no, I was hit in the
face to the point where the blood ran from my nose and mouth. When they had
collected everything that they intended to take, including the motorcycle that the
Russian Major had given me,
my sister-in-law's son had to harness the oxen and cart the booty to the road. I
myself also had to go along. I was taken to an inn in the town. Other men were
immediately brought in, and we were forced to beat each other
up - each had to punch or slap the other. From there I was taken to the police jail
in Komotau (formerly the Hotel Weimar).
June 3 was a Sunday. I was put into a cell meant for two. There were 16 of us in
this cell, among us
an 11-year-old boy whose parents were in a different cell. I don't remember the
names of all the prisoners, but one of them, whom I knew well personally, was the
teacher Kny from Sporitz.
The 11-year-old boy was the son of engineer Merden from
the bell-foundry Herold in Komotau. Both father and son were later shot in the
camp and are buried somewhere in a field in Trauschkowitz. The mother had to
remain in the camp. We had to stay in this police jail until Thursday, without food
or water. Finally, on Thursday afternoon, our situation changed. We were lined up
in the jail yard and made to face the wall. It was lucky that I understood Czech and
could therefore understand what the Czechs were planning and saying to each
other, and I was able to let
my fellow-sufferers know what was being planned. One by one we were
interrogated by a lieutenant of the gendarmes. When it was my turn I asked the
lieutenant why I had been locked up here. He replied: "I didn't bring you here and
so I can't discharge you either." When we had all been interrogated, we had to line
up in the yard in fours to be transported off. One of the Czechs held a bust of
Hitler and demanded that everyone marching past had to give the Hitler salute, and
another one of these Czechs took up position on the other side with a submachine
gun. I understood when the Czech holding the bust called to the other guard: when
one of the raises his paw, shoot immediately! By 'paw' he meant 'hand'. I was just
able to inform the others of this so that they would not salute, and we marched out
the gate without even a glance at the Czech with the bust. Naturally the guards
leading us were angry that they had not managed to get one of us to raise his hand,
so as to be able to shoot at him. En route we were maltreated with kicks and with
whip lashes for allegedly not marching properly.
We were put into a camp, it was the old Glass Works near the Municipal Estate of
Komotau. Once there, we had to line
up single-file at a distance of three paces from each other. First we had to empty
our pockets and place everything on the ground before us, and then to strip naked.
When we had stripped, the camp guards rifled through our pockets. Woe to anyone
who still had anything at all in his pockets, even if it was just a tiny scrap of old
paper; he was immediately whipped, or punched in the face so that he could hardly
find his way back to his place in the line. Those who had good clothes or underwear or
shoes were relieved of these things and got clothes instead that had belonged
to fellow-sufferers who had already been beaten or tortured to death. These clothes
were either torn or covered in blood. Then we were taken into a large room where
there was a total of 78 men, among them Herr Rafler-Müller from
Neudorf/Biela, weapons dealer Böhm, and others whose names I do not
recall. The room was paved with bricks and covered with a roof of roofing felt. It
had a single window, where a guard stood all day, watching us in the room. It was
as hot as an oven in this room. None of us had any bedding or even a blanket,
much less a straw pallet. We had to sleep on the bricks. All day long, from 6
o'clock in the morning until 10 in the evening, we had to parade to Czech orders.
There were old men 70 to 80 years of age among us, and even they had to drill
along with us. One day the guard did not like how we performed the drill, and he
said: "Well, what's wrong? If you can't do any better than that I'll teach you." No
sooner said than
done - he took groups of nine men at a time out into the square to parade, but God
help anyone who turned to the wrong side, then he was pointed in the right
direction with the guard's leather whip. Then we were urged into a jog, again with
lashes from the leather whip. On their return many of the men collapsed and begged
to be killed, put out of their misery, but nonetheless the torture went on. In the
evening the camp commandant entered our room and asked if there wasn't anyone
among us who was familiar with Czech command. When nobody spoke up, I
raised my hand. The commandant asked me if I spoke Czech well, I said yes, and
he put me in charge. I asked him if it might be permitted to give the prisoners
classes in Czech. The commandant agreed to it, and in this way we got out of the
parading for a while, since it was permitted to sit during the classes, albeit only on
the brick floor.
During this time our daily rations consisted of 100 g bread and a cup of coffee,
nothing for breakfast and at noon, and another 100 g of bread and a cup of coffee
in the evening. Often we were harshly awakened at night, forced to stand at
attention and to endure any and all harassment and torments that Czech civilians
chose to inflict on us. One night a group of Czechs came in, among them a
gendarme, and we had to line up in rows of three and at three paces' distance, and
then the Czechs went from one to the other and asked each if he had been with the
Party or the SS or SA. Woe to any unfortunate who had been! These had to run
into the yard, under blows from the whips; once all had run out, the Czechs left the
room and we could lie down again, but there was no question of sleep, for we were
all too agitated and didn't know what would happen the next moment. Shortly
afterwards we heard the rattle of submachine guns. It was already dawn. A truck
drove past our window and was loaded up with the bodies of the shot men. There
were 78 of them. That same morning right after reveille I and three others had to
fetch a wheelbarrow and to cart sand into the yard to cover up the pools of blood
left by the unfortunate men. It took us 18 wheelbarrow loads of sand, they had to
be filled right up and even so it was only enough for a sprinkle over the blood.
Later the truck returned and I had to wash it, since it was all covered with blood.
As I heard from a guard, the men were dumped into a shallow pit in a field in
Trauschkowitz. The dead included the aforementioned engineer Merden from
the bell-foundry Herold and his 11-year-old son, whereas their wife and mother
was still in the camp.
One day the order was issued to vacate the camp, as the inmates would all be
taken across the border to the Russians. A transport was put together, and off we
went. In the evening I found out from the camp commandant, who was a Staff
Captain with the gendarmes, that everyone had been taken to the infamous
concentration camp of Maltheuern. Those who had to remain behind in the Glass
Works camp included: a doctor named Lockwenz from the Komotau District
Hospital; an engineer; an Austrian who had done the Czech laborers many good
deeds during the
Hitler years - this was well known in the camp, and such former Czech
beneficiaries actually visited him and brought him cigarettes
as thank-you, but nonetheless this man was not released; a former Staff Captain
from the Czech army; a Yugoslav; a postal worker named Havel from
Görkau; and I. We asked a guard who was a little more approachable what
was to be done with us, and he replied: "You weren't with any Nazi organization
and you will be released." But the release didn't happen. The Austrian and the
Serb were sent under guard to their native countries, and the rest of us continued to
remain in the camp. Hardly 8 days had passed before the number of inmates had
increased to 360, 78 of them women. Of the new arrivals I remember the
following names: Herr Mader, Director of the Mannesmann pipe manufactory of
Komotau; engineer Vierlinger from the same factory; one Herr Dr. Meier, the
largest merchant in Komotau; Herr Taud, the Administrative Director of the royal
demesne of Rothenhaus-Görkau; the sausage manufacturer Herr Mittelbach
of Komotau (he was tortured to death in the camp), Herr Müller, gravel pit
owner from Komotau-Oberdorf; the priest of Eidlitz near Komotau; one Herr
Heger from Natschung (he too was beaten to death); and many other people whose
names I do not recall. Together with the new arrivals we were divided into labor
gangs for the CSD (Czech railroad) in Komotau and had to clear away the rubble
from
the bombed-out boiler house. An engineer Sturm from Komotau was also there. I
had to go along on these work details to serve as translator, to convey the railroad
foreman's or team leaders' orders to the prisoners. There were many among them
who had never done this sort of work before in their life, and they were speeded up
in their efforts by the whips of the Railway Police guards who oversaw the work
gangs. This hard labor was accompanied with rations consisting of
unsalted soy-meal soup, and nothing else at all except 100 g bread a cup of coffee
in the morning and evening. If a prisoner escaped, the team leader, who was also
an inmate, was treated to a session "on
the teeter-totter" (torture room). I will return to this torture method a little later.
Many inmates were no longer able to return home after
that - for example Herr Mittelbach of Komotau. He had been beaten so badly that
his face was steel blue and he did not recognize anyone nor even know where he
was. He was quite out of his mind. His own daughter did not recognize him when he
passed her during
the march-out from the railway station, and anyone else who knew him and didn't
know that it was him also did not recognize him, that's how badly this man had
been disfigured.
At the railway station I met a young foreman who had been assigned
a 3-room flat in Komotau, Klingergärten, but who refused to move into it.
He often said to me: "Where is all this going to end? I won't take a flat here,
because everything here has been stolen." But this man was the only one of
this mind-set whom I ever met. Later he gave us two cartloads of potatoes for the
camp, so that the inmates could cook them. He also brought many an inmate some
bread, and gave away his own lunch rations.
Whenever someone collapsed at work, the Railway Police found it amusing to
throw him into
a water-filled bomb crater, and would laugh when the victim surfaced, all covered
in mud. We were often glad when we could go to work, and feared Sundays, as
torture by the camp guards and civilian Czechs from the city were the order of the
day on Sundays. Even at night inmates were often called out in order to be
tormented. One example of Sunday in the camp: in the forenoon civilian Czechs,
including women, came to the camp and selected their victims, whom they abused
by beating them in the face with their shoe heels, or had them beaten by other
prisoners. If the one in question did not beat
his fellow-sufferer as he was expected to, he himself would be beaten by the
Czechs, sometimes
with knuckle-busters. Everyone man or woman who had been a member in any
NSDAP organ, or whose sons or husbands had been members, were taken straight
to the torture chamber right after
being body-searched. This torture chamber was a room where the people had to
strip naked and were then beaten by eight guards armed with clubs. Then he or she
was taken to another room and made to stand at the wall and to hold a piece of
paper to the wall with his or her nose. God help you if the paper dropped, then you
were punished with punches and blows to the head. One day the officers of the
former municipal police were brought to the camp. It goes without saying that, like
all the other torture victims, these men were also beaten every third day. One of
the policemen, quite a big, strong man, responded to the first blow he received by
reaching for the throat of one of the guards. The other guard standing nearby shot
him down. Then the tortures were stopped for a few days.
Then came a new invention. A gear wheel was installed, across which a rope was
drawn. On one end the rope had a loop, through which the unfortunate souls had to
put their hands. The loop was then pulled tight, and after the victim had been
hoisted up the other end of the rope was tied to a post to ensure that the beaten
man could not retaliate against his tormentor. Often these unfortunates were left
hanging, or lying on the ground. Those who had already been beaten twice or even
three times had festering wounds. The pus soaked through their shirts and jackets.
The poor people's backs were covered with flies and stank horribly. They were put
into a separate little room,
the so-called "marodka", but there could be no suggestion of recovery or healing.
Once 8 to 10 prisoners were in this "marodka", these beaten people who could
hardly move had to dig a pit 2 meters deep and about 60 cm wide. In the evening,
when the pit was finished, they were stood beside it and the first of them had to lie
down in the hole (grave). Only after he was in it was he shot, from above. The
second had to lie down on the corpse and was also shot from above, and so on until
the grave was full. Once there was enough room left for one more, and so they
fetched
a 67-year-old woman. Her hair was cut off. She was beaten for refusing to reveal
where her son was, and had to lie down on the previously murdered inmates. Then
she was shot just as they had been.
Words fail me to describe how those people looked who had been beaten twice. I
saw one man from the Waffen-SS who had already been beaten twice. Aside from
his body, which was basically pulped, his manhood was swollen to an average
of 8-9 cm [approx. 3 inches] in diameter, entirely suffused with blood, and his
testicles were beginning to suppurate; the entire area right to his anus was full of
pus, and he stank horribly. And all this had been done to him only because he was
a German and a member of the SS. More and more people arrived every day. The
"Stráz bezpecnosti" brought the people in
already half-dead. Once they brought in a badly injured Latvian who had been in
the infirmary to recover. They brought him on a stretcher, dressed only in a shirt
and underpants. He did not speak German well. When I had to question him, he
told me that he regretted not having known what the SS meant when he had
volunteered for battle. He had ended up with the SS without knowing it. This poor
man was shot that very evening. Later on, officers from the Czech army came and
chose some victims from among the prisoners. They found an old, formerly retired
German Colonel who had served in the Czech military from 1918 to 1924 and had
been pensioned off from there; he was literally beaten to death. The photographer
Schuster from Komotau
and piano-maker Lutz were also beaten to death in this camp, as was the municipal
surveyor with
a Polish-sounding name. Once a number of Czech officers came to the camp and
criticized the camp commandant because the former members of the municipal
police were still alive in the camp, and one of them said: "Get rid of that rabble!"
He said it in Czech, but I understood it.
For a time I also had to serve in the kitchen. There was nothing but
unsalted soy-meal soup on the menu and, as already mentioned, some bread and
coffee in the evenings. But meanwhile the butter, margarine, noodles, barley and
other foodstuffs were going bad in the store houses. Every guard, even the
commandant, would drive away in stolen cars packed with full suitcases, taking
food, clothing, linen and other things home. The inmates' family members
brought clothes for their fathers and sons, as well as bread and other food. The
guard at the gate would take these things, and in the guard room they were
examined and if there were good articles of clothing among them the guards would
divide them up amongst themselves. The food was eaten by the guards or left to go to
waste. It was not until close to the end that the women got some margarine on
their evening bread and the soup was salted, and it was even longer before the
commandant could be persuaded to cook some horsemeat in the soup once a week.
And so it went until we were transferred to the former Ciprian camp in Oberdorf.
In this camp I had to undergo an operation and was then permitted to stay there.
After I had recovered, I planned my escape, which I carried out.
And that's what the civilized world - that dares call itself democratic - sanctioned and
deliberately hushed up, and praised as "liberation"!
Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans
Survivors speak out
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