|
Troppau
Report No. 94
Severe maltreatment of a woman in
1945
Reported by: Elfriede Hanke Report of June 21, 1946
On June 2, 1945
I was sent to the camp at Troppau. There I was
beaten, half-strangled and threatened with being shot, because I said that I [was
not] a member of the party and that I know nothing of any ammunition, neither of
which they were willing to believe. I was taken to the camp-prison on July 6,
1945, where I was severely maltreated. Immediately on my arrival I was punched,
trampled under foot and thrashed
with rubber-truncheons. This treatment was repeated day after day for a period of
13 days. On the 13th day one Fitzek came, together with several other Czechs.
They threw me on the [pallet] of my cell, took my pants off and lashed me
with rubber-truncheons from the hips to the calves of both legs, so that I had to be
taken to
the sick-room in the evening, where I had to lie flat on my face for four weeks,
since I had big festering wounds on my buttocks and on both calves. My sores
also had to be lanced several times. I was ill for four months. After this I was no
longer beaten, but, like the others, was pushed
about, ill-used and yelled at. On February 8, 1946 I was released.
Report No. 95
Collection camp, torture of a sick man in autumn
1945
Reported by: V. Skolaut Report of June 21, 1946 (Troppau)
In early July 1945 I and the rest
of the city's German population were taken to
the collection camp Troppau. From there I was sent every day to perform
heavy physical labor in the electricity plant, and my health was not up to this
work as I was 52 years old and suffering from severe angina pectoris, and had
only recently had a severe inflammation of the gall bladder.
In the afternoon of August 3 I had a heart attack. When I returned from work in
the evening with the rest of the inmates, I went to see the physician and before
I could even consult him I was assigned to more physical labor in the camp. I
obeyed this order without objection, and only asked permission to fetch my
evening soup first as it was being distributed just then. The militiaman agreed
to that. When I went into my barrack to get my dish, another militiaman came
along and maltreated me. He knocked me to the ground with a wooden slat and
kicked me all over my body, to the point where I had open wounds in my sides
and lay unconscious for hours. Nonetheless I had to report for work as usual
the next day, and the militiaman who had maltreated me jeered and made fun
of me for my weakness and pain. In the course of the forenoon, when I was
carrying some office equipment up some steep stone steps, I was suddenly
seized with weakness and fell down unconscious, breaking my kneecap in the
process. First I was not even acknowledged as being ill, and was forced to
continue working. It was not until two days later, when my swollen knee
looked ominous and the pain got steadily worse, that I was transferred to the
hospital, where I had to remain for four weeks. Towards the end of this time I
was asked to donate blood for a Czech, which I did.
Report No. 96
Cases of severe maltreatment in the
camp
Reported by: Emma Bittner Report of June 21, 1946 (Troppau)
On May 31,
1945, I was sent to the labour camp at Troppau and remained there until June 5,
1946. I worked in this camp for three weeks and took part in all the parades with
their accompanying maltreatment and humiliations. When I collapsed during
a roll-call as a result of the constant terror, the doctor certified me unable to work
and [unfit] for further detention in the camp; thus I came to
the sick-room on [June] 20, 1946, where I stayed for several months. During this
time drunken members of the militia, led by one Grossmann, known as the "tiger
of the camp", broke into the cells which were nearest to our barrack. Female
members of the militia were also involved. The inmates of these cells were
beaten so terribly that their cries of pain could be heard for hours. A wholesale
merchant named Habel from Troppau was killed on this occasion. Such beatings
went on for months. I myself saw the bruises of the victims. The diet consisted of
only 100 g of bread and a thin soup without [nutritional value].
When the camp was moved to Eichendorff Platz, Troppau, at the end of August,
the food improved thanks to the influence of a German partisan by the name of
Gebauer. But we suffered from vermin, as the washing facilities were entirely
insufficient. Three months later
a shower-bath was built. There were, however, still beatings of men, women and
girls as well as base insults. When I was brought to the camp, my last shirt was
stolen.
I am prepared to swear to the foregoing statements.
Report No. 97
Severe maltreatment in the camp
Reported by: Rundt Report of June 21, 1946 (Troppau)
On June 4, 1945, arriving with
travel permission at the Troppau train
station from Böhmisch-Leipa, I was arrested for being a German,
with no official reason given, and was taken to the police prison, where I
was beaten and robbed of all my valuables. After three days I was
transferred to the Troppau labor camp and immediately put into solitary
confinement where, for two weeks, like all other inmates in solitary, I was
beaten every day. The militia beat us all over our bodies with belts, rubber
truncheons and sticks. Many of us passed out, and had open bleeding
wounds. I myself had several open wounds on my back, and since I was
nonetheless still beaten every day they eventually suppurated. The worst of
the Czechs were Grossmann, Fitzek, Noss and Hoza. The German partisan
Gebauer frequently stood up for the inmates, and saved many a life by
doing so. When he was on duty I was not beaten. After bearing these
tortures for 14 days, I volunteered for farm labor in the country. It took
another two months before my wounds had healed.
Report No. 98
Woman fatally injured on or about November
20,1945
Reported by: Alois Leckl Report of June 21, 1946 (Troppau)
On or about
November 20, 1945 my aged mother, Irene Leckl of Troppau, was walking along
Ginschwitzer Street, and used the sidewalk to cut across a corner. A Czech
woman shoved her off the sidewalk. She fell and hit the back of her head, and
remained lying in the street, unconscious. She was taken to the Nursing Hospital
of Troppau, where she died of brain hemorrhage without ever regaining
consciousness. She was buried in the Troppau municipal cemetery, but church
consecration was denied. At the cemetery itself I managed with much effort to
persuade a Czech clergyman who happened to be there, to consecrate her grave.
Charges were brought against the Czech woman who had pushed my mother. She
was acquitted. I was not allowed to attend the trial, as I was in the labor camp.
Report No. 99
Abuse and rape
Reported by: M. T. Report of June 19, 1946 (Troppau)
On June 19,
1945 four partisans beat me up in my home. I had to lie across a chair, and one
held my head between his legs while another beat me with his leather belt.
My 66-year-old father was beaten up in the same way after they finished with
me. After that I had to lead the partisans through the entire house, from the
basement to the attic. In the attic they attacked me and raped me. My father and I
were then taken to the Troppau camp without being allowed to take anything at
all with us from our home.
Report No. 100
Confiscation of a family tomb
Reported by: Wilhelm Loy Report of August 3, 1945 (Troppau)
I spent 13 months in the
Troppau concentration camp and was severely
maltreated after my arrest and my committal to the camp. In the Troppau
cemetery I owned a family tomb, in which my first wife had been buried for the
last 10 years. In September
1945 - as I found out in October - my wife was exhumed and reburied elsewhere
at an unmarked location. A
Czech master-turner, a member of the Vrablik family, was buried instead in my
family tomb. The German inscription on the grave stone was removed.
Report No. 101
Eye injury as result of abuse
Reported by: Dr. Karl Prokop Report of August 21, 1946 (Troppau)
Because I am
an Austrian I received Czech food-ration
cards [which were much better than the ration cards
issued to Germans; comment added by The Scriptorium] from
June until October 1945. Due to an informant's denunciation I was summoned
to the police office in Teichgasse [Street], Troppau on November 2, 1945 for
a follow-up questioning, and there I was told that I am not Austrian. When I
objected and said that I certainly am Austrian, I was boxed about the head three
times so severely that I was quite dazed for the rest of the day and experienced
impaired vision. At the same time I was dragged off to the concentration camp,
where I was detained for eight months until at long last it was found that the
denunciation had been groundless. From the camp I was sent to a Czech
ophthalmologist by the name of Dr. Steffek, who diagnosed retinitis and
clouding of the vitreous body. He accepted me as patient, but seven weeks later,
when he asked me when I had first noticed these problems and I answered him
honestly that "on November 2nd I was slapped about the head and the defects in
my vision began after that," he refused to treat me further.
Report No. 102
Concentration camp Schimrowitz,
woman maltreated after giving birth
Reported by: Maria Weißhuhn Report of September 21, 1946 (Troppau)
On May 15,
1945 I and my three children, of which the youngest was two weeks old, were
committed to the concentration camp Schimrowitz near Troppau, where I was
forced to work in the paper mill and to do the dirtiest and hardest jobs usually
reserved for men, even though I had just given birth shortly before. Time and
again I heard: let's hope she croaks, she and her German children. I was forbidden
to nurse the baby. I had to give it water and black coffee. After 8 weeks I was
released from that camp. While there, I had been robbed of everything I had
brought along for myself and the children. My home had also been looted. Even
my resettlement [expulsion] luggage was looted, including a bag of clothes and
linen, the baby buggy and diapers, the night pot and other things for the children,
and all cutlery and dishes for four people. I immediately protested to the
gendarmerie and the Resettlement Commissar in Bautsch, later to the district
captain in Bärn, and finally to the Czech border official in Wiesau, but
nothing helped. The Resettlement Commissar was drunk when I spoke to him.
When I applied to him again the next day, when he was sober again, he stated that
I could not have my things back because he needed them for himself. I know that
his wife was expecting a baby in the next few days.
My husband, engineer Karl Weißhuhn, born in Innsbruck on March 13,
1902, was arrested on May 12, 1945 and sent via Troppau and Ratibor to
Auschwitz. All my efforts to find out what happened to him were in vain.
Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans
Survivors speak out
|
|