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Dobris
Report No. 161
Women body-searched
Reported by: Elisabeth Lomitschka Report of August 25, 1946
I owned a 13-hectare [32-acre]
farm in Cwinomas, District Mies. On July 4,
1945 Czech partisans looted our estate, and on August 27 we were assigned a
Czech administrator. On October 28, 1945, at 2 o'clock at night, I was
abducted to Pribram District for agricultural labor, together
with my 8-year-old son and my parents-in-law. In Pribram we were constantly
being cursed and spat at by the Czech locals, and my son was often beaten. On
July 17, 1946 we were transferred to the concentration camp of Dobris near
Pribram. About 400 women and girls and 200 men were imprisoned there. The
second day all women had to assemble in a loft. Then 10 uniformed and armed
young Czech women came in and examined the vagina and uterus of every
woman and girl for jewelry, as they said. They pushed down on the stomach
with one hand, and inserted the other into the vagina and rooted around inside.
They proceeded like that from one woman to the next without washing.
Even 12-year-old girls were examined like that. Many women had pain
afterwards. Mrs. Wenisch from Otrocin developed fever and such severe pain
in her belly and lower back that she had to be sent to the hospital in
Prosecnice. I too have had abdominal pain ever since then, and need medical
care. I was just having my period at the time of that examination. On
my brother-in-law's request I was then sent to the resettlement camp in Mies. I
do not have nearly as much luggage as is officially allowed.
Dolawitz
Report No. 162
Looting
Reported by: Karl Ullsperger Report of July 3, 1946
In the community office of
Dolawitz we were relieved of a suitcase of clothing.
Also, my wife was robbed of
her horn-rimmed glasses, dish towels and all hand towels, her and our
daughter's underwear, a pair of leather shoes and a pair of slippers. Of her
seven dresses our daughter had to give up five, as well as two nightgowns. It
was Anna Odlas, the wife of the administrator of my farm, who took these
things from us. In conclusion Mrs. Odlas also punched my wife and daughter in
the head and back. She even helped herself to the toothbrushes that my wife and
daughter were using, as well as the soap and laundry detergent that had been
bought with our last ration stamps.
Domeschau
Report No. 163
Severe maltreatment and
torture
Reported by: Johann Rösner Report of October 17, 1946
On
November 16, 1945 my family and I were sent to the Czech regions to work, and
were sent back home on August 15, 1946 to be resettled [expelled]. That same
night 3 Czechs wearing civilian
clothes - one of them also had a gun - dragged me out of my bed, took me to my
former house which is currently under a Czech administrator, and there I was
literally tortured. One of the 3 Czechs, Lenert Vojtek, punched me in the face
until I bled. In the process he damaged my nasal bone, which is still visible today,
and smashed my dentures. Then he choked me until I fell to the floor. Then I was
given some water to wash up, and had to use my hands to dry myself. Then,
sharpened matches were driven ½ to 1 cm deep underneath all ten
fingernails and then lit, so that my fingernails caught fire. During this I was
forced to hold my hands up. I almost fainted from the agony. I was supposed to
sign a statement to the effect that on November 16, 1945 I had threatened to
murder my administrator's family and set the whole town on fire. I did not sign
the statement despite the torture. Then I was sent home. Half an hour later Lenert
came by again and forbade me to tell anyone about what had been done to me.
The next day the gendarmerie took up the case, and I was ordered to see a doctor.
Lenert was not to be seen for 3 days after that, but then he did return and is still in
Domeschau today.
Duppau
(near Kaaden)
Report No. 164
Shootings and murders
Reported by: Eduard Grimm Report of January 19, 1947
I served in the
Czechoslovak gendarmerie and was ordered 1945 to take over the position of
the mayor of Duppau near Karlsbad, who had fled.
The first to be shot in Duppau by the Czechs was the German soldier Franz Weis, who was on
a visit to his poor mother and his little sisters and brothers. The corpse was thrown in the market
place and left lying there.
Shortly afterwards two war invalids, Josef Wagner and Franz Mahr, both from Duppau, who
had been enlisted in the SS without their agreement and who lay at home seriously wounded,
were arrested by the Czechs and shot.
The following members of the teaching staff of the High School at Duppau were murdered: the
principal of the school, Andreas Draht, and three teachers, Damian Hotek, Franz Wenisch,
Rudolf Neudörfl, all of them entirely innocent.
Karl Schuh, the postmaster, was first bestially tortured and then killed. All those named above
were shot or killed in other ways by the Czech military; the Czech commanders were at that
time Captain Baxa and Lieutenant Tichý.
At the small village of Totzau near Kaaden the mayor Schmidt, the forester Bartl and his two
sons, as well as other Germans, altogether supposedly 34 German men, were killed, though
innocent of
any crime, because they were in possession of a few arms for the protection of their homes,
notwithstanding the fact that they had obtained the necessary permits from the American
occupation forces at Karlsbad.
In October 1945, the wife of one Holzknecht, a knacker from Dörfles near Duppau,
heard a suspicious noise one night and therefore looked out of the window; she was then shot
by a Czech gendarme.
At Puschwitz, in the district of Podersam, the German farmer Stengl was barbarously tortured
and
shot. He was accused of having hidden a gun in his manure heap; this was untrue. Close to the
county town of Podersam, in the vicinity of the Jewish cemetery, more than 80 defenceless
German men were shot by Czech military in August 1945. Most of the shot men had nothing to
do
with Nazism or politics, they were ordinary German farmers, artisans and salesmen, among
them
the mayor Groschup, from Gross-Otschehau, and Pfaff, a bookbinder from Podersam, an old
man with white hair.
German women were horribly maltreated and died from the effects: the wife of a certain Knic
in
Radnitz, a dairy owner, and the wife of one Marek, a salesman from Mekl in the district of
Kaaden.
German women and girls from Duppau had to fell trees, even in winter, in deep
snow; 18-year-old Anna Grund, daughter and only supporter of her aged, ill parents, was killed
by a falling tree.
Alois Guth, a confectioner from Duppau, in the district of Kaaden, was also murdered by the
Czechs, although entirely innocent, on June 26th, 1945 in the garden of the High School at
Duppau. This was reported by his brother Julius Guth. Alois Guth had intended to remove
from this garden a wooden cross, which had been erected in honour of his son, who fell in the
war; he was caught and, together with 21 other innocent Sudeten Germans, was shot in the
garden of the former archepiscopal boys' seminary, after they all had had to dig their own
graves.
The aged Mrs. Jansky from Duppau was threatened with hanging by the Czechs of the Sbor
Národní Bezpečnosti (National Security Corps), in
order to extort from her information about other Germans. They put a rope around her neck,
pulled her off the ground, so that she almost suffocated, set her free again and repeated the
torture until she fainted.
Josef Glatz, aged 13, was put in the court jail at Duppau for 6 weeks, together with other
innocent boys. Glatz and the other boys were beaten by Czech gendarmerie with police
truncheons on the back, evening after evening.
Report No. 165
Severe abuse of a woman, deportation into the coal
mines
Reported by: Friedrich Liebner Report of January 12, 1946 (Duppau)
A closed transport
of 400 Germans left the little town of Duppau for Saxony
as early as July 25, 1945. In the course of the following six months the
majority of the remaining German population of Duppau was deported to the
Bohemian interior for forced labor.
These deportations were accompanied by numerous brutalities. For example,
Mrs. Knie of Rednitz near Duppau had been found to have sewed some bank
notes, which were after all her property, into her girdle. As punishment she
was stripped naked at the Czech gendarmerie office in Duppau, and beaten
so badly that two days later, after she had already been abducted to Bernau,
she died of a spinal cord injury.
Due to their inaccessible location, the towns in the Duppau mountains are
largely still inhabited by Germans. Only in Duppau itself were the farmsteads
taken over by Czechs.
Recently all men between the ages of 16 and 45 were arrested and taken
away for forced labor in the
Brüx coal-mining region.
Report No. 166
Severe maltreatment in the course of house
searches
Reported by: Alois Zörkler Report of December 31, 1946 (Duppau)
In September 1945
the gendarmerie performed a house-search one afternoon in
my home at Duppau No. 7, District Kaaden. In the process they beat me
unconscious for no reason at all. Ever since then I suffer from a buzzing in my
left ear. Various items were stolen from me during
the house-search.
Eipel
Report No. 167
Treatment of Jews: excluded from the family
business
Reported by: Dr. Rudolf Fernegg Report of June 21, 1951
The son of the owner of Buxbaum
Brothers linen spinning and weaving mill at Eipel left for the
United States even before the German annexation of the Sudeten territories and the
establishment
of the Protectorate. During the period of the Third Reich the whole family followed him to
America. Mr. Buxbaum jun., who had in the meantime become an American citizen,
established
contact with the personnel of the factory, in order to ascertain their opinion as to whether he
would
be able to take over his factories in Eipel again. He received the answer that nothing could be
done.
Eisenstein
Report No. 168
Maltreatment of an invalid
Reported by: Alois Sperl Report of June 28, 1946
I was arrested in Eisenstein on May 18, 1945 and taken to
the court prison in Klattau, where I was repeatedly severely maltreated. I
sustained an injury to one of my kidneys, and the stump of my arm was beaten
bloody at the amputation point. In both cases I was denied treatment by the prison
doctor. I had to bandage my arm stump with my dirty handkerchief. Even though
I was an invalid I nonetheless had to crawl on the ground and submit to other
harassments. I was not given any reason for my arrest. Later I was always told that
it was because I had allegedly tried to defend Eisenstein.
Eisenstein-Grün
Report No. 169
Ill-treatment of a little boy
Reported by: Klara Obermaier Report of June 28, 1946
At the end of
May 1946 my son, who was not yet 10 years old, was so badly beaten by a
gendarme at Grün in the district of Eisenstein that he bled for hours. Since that time
the child's hearing has been impaired. The circumstances were as follows: The policeman found
my boy still on the street at 5 minutes past the curfew hour of nine o'clock. First he booked him
for a fine, but then he crossed this out, took the child into the gendarmerie station and beat him
up.
Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans
Survivors speak out
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