HORRIBLY Painful EXECUTION of Extremely SADISTIC Female NAZI Guards at Stutthof Concentration Camp

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The 1st of September 1939. Nazi Germany invades  Poland which marks the beginning of the Second   World War. After defeating the Polish army, the  Germans ruthlessly suppress the Poles whom they   consider to be racially inferior and, in the  weeks, following the German attack on Poland,   German SS, police, and military units  shoot thousands of Polish civilians,   including many members of the Polish nobility,  clergy, and intelligentsia. The Nazis seek to   destroy Polish culture and the Polish  nation, and eliminate any resistance,   by arresting and murdering Poles. The Germans mean  for Poland to be an endless supply of slave labor,   and a site for the mass extermination  of European Jewry. On 2 September 1939,   the Nazis set up the first German concentration  camp outside German borders in World War II. The   camp’s name is Stutthof, and after the war, its  former personnel will pay for their crimes with   their own lives, when they will be brutally  executed in front of 200,000 people. This   mass execution will be recorded by official press  photographers, and resemble a theater of horror. The Germans established the Stutthof camp  in a wooded area west of Stutthof, a town   about 22 miles east of Danzig, today’s Gdańsk.  The original camp, known as the old camp, was   surrounded by barbed-wire fences and 8 barracks  for the inmates built by prisoners in 1940. The camp was established in connection  with the ethnic cleansing project that   included the liquidation of Polish elites such as   members of the intelligentsia as well  as religious and political leaders. Even before the war, the Germans had created lists  of people to be arrested, and the Nazi authorities   were secretly reviewing suitable places to  set up concentration camps in their area. Originally, Stutthof was a civilian  internment camp under the Danzig   police chief, before its subsequent  massive expansion. In November 1941,   it became a "labor education" camp for political  prisoners and persons accused of violating labor   discipline, administered by the SD - German  Security Police. Finally, in January 1942,   Stutthof became a regular concentration  camp under the jurisdiction of the SS. In 1943, the camp was enlarged and a new  camp was constructed alongside the earlier   one. It contained 30 new barracks  and was surrounded by electrified   barbed-wire fences. A crematorium  and gas chamber were added in 1943,   just in time to start mass executions when  Stutthof was included in the "Final Solution"   in June 1944. The maximum capacity of the  gas chamber was 150 people per execution. Eventually, the Stutthof camp system became  a vast network of forced-labor camps. 105   Stutthof subcamps were established throughout  northern and central German-occupied Poland. Tens of thousands of people, perhaps as many  as 100,000, were deported to the Stutthof   camp. The prisoners were mainly non-Jewish  Poles. Conditions in the camp were brutal.   Many prisoners died in typhus epidemics that  swept the camp in the winter of 1942 and again   in 1944. Those whom the SS guards judged too  weak or sick to work were gassed in the gas   chamber. Gassing with Zyklon B gas began in  June 1944. 4,000 prisoners, including Jewish   women and children, were killed in a gas  chamber before the evacuation of the camp.  Camp doctors also killed sick or injured  prisoners in the infirmary with lethal   injections of phenol. More than 60,000 people died  in Stutthof concentration camp and its subcamps. Until 1942, nearly all of the prisoners  were Polish. The number of inmates increased   considerably in 1944, with Jews forming a  significant proportion of the newcomers.   The first contingent of 2,500 Jewish prisoners  arrived from Auschwitz in July 1944. In total,   23,566 Jews including 21,817 women were  transferred to Stutthof from Auschwitz. The camp staff consisted of SS guards  and, after 1943, Ukrainian auxiliaries.  In June 1944, the SS in Stutthof began  conscripting women from Danzig and the   surrounding cities to train as camp  guards because of their severe shortage   after the women's subcamp of Stutthof called  Bromberg-Ost was set up in the city of Bydgoszcz. The evacuation of prisoners from the Stutthof camp  system in northern Poland began in January 1945.   When the final evacuation began, there were nearly  50,000 prisoners in the Stutthof camp system, the   overwhelming majority of them Jews. About 5,000  prisoners from the Stutthof subcamps were marched   to the Baltic Sea coast, forced into the water,  and machine gunned. The rest of the prisoners   were marched in the direction of Lauenburg in  eastern Germany but after they were cut off by   advancing Soviet forces, the Germans forced the  surviving prisoners back to Stutthof. Marching in   severe winter conditions and treated brutally by  the SS guards, thousands died during the march. In late April 1945, the remaining prisoners were  removed from Stutthof by sea, since Stutthof was   completely encircled by Soviet forces. Again,  hundreds of prisoners were forced into the sea   and shot. It has been estimated that over 25,000  prisoners, one in two, died during the evacuation   from Stutthof and its subcamps. When Soviet forces  liberated Stutthof on the 9th of May 1945, they   found only about 100 prisoners who had managed  to hide during the final evacuation of the camp. Altogether, some 100,000 prisoners passed  through Stutthof; 60,000 of them perished,   while another 22,000 were transferred  to other concentration camps. After the war, the former Stutthof personnel were  tried at the First Stutthof trial which began on   the 25th of April 1946. Among the accused  was Jenny Wanda Barkmann who as a guard at   Stutthof had brutalized prisoners and was known  for beating inmates, some to death, either with   her bare hands or with her whip. Among her victims  were also children. During the trial, Barkmann was   not particularly worried about her life, but was  rather concerned about her appearance. She wore   stylish clothes and the different hairstyle every  day and reportedly flirted with the prison guards.  Another accused was Wanda Klaff, who had  became infamous at Stutthof for her brutal   treatment of prisoners whom she would beat and  kick without any reason at all until they lay   still. When she was in particularly bad mood,  she would drown the female inmates in mud or   club them to death. During the trial she said:  "I am very intelligent and I was very devoted   to my work in the camps. I struck at least two  prisoners every day." Having made this statement,   she was probably the only one to think so. Another accused was Elisabeth Becker who   had become known as a ruthless overseer. She  brutalized prisoners and would beat children with   their mothers and then select them to be send to  the gas chamber to be killed without any remorse.  Another Stutthof guard who stood trial was  Ewa Paradies who, in the freezing cold winter,   often ordered a group of female prisoners  to undress and stand in the snow. Then she   poured cold water on the naked women and  when they moved, she would beat them.”  Among the 5 Stutthof guards, who were  sentenced to death was also Gerda Steinhoff.  She was known for beating female inmates,  including children, to death as well as selections   of prisoners to be sent to the gas chambers. Despite the serious charges, the women were said   to have behaved insolently, giggling  and joking during the proceedings. When the trial ended on the 31st of May, 11  defendants, convicted of crimes against humanity,   were sentenced to death by hanging. Among  them were 5 above mentioned women. 4 cried   and pleaded for their life, only one,  Jenny Wanda Barkmann, remained calm. Their execution was held publicly and became a  theater of horror which was recorded by official   press photographers. After World War II, only  three public executions of war criminals were   carried out in Poland. One of them took  place at Biskupia Górka Hill near Gdańsk,   former Danzig. When on the 4th of July  1946, 11 Nazi Criminals from the Stutthof   concentration camp were hanged from the  gallows, 200,000 people were watching. On that day Biskupia Górka Hill experienced a  real siege. Three days earlier, the newspapers   had reported the date of the execution  and workplaces announced a day off and   provided employees with transport to the event.  Everyone could come to witness the execution.  The security forces feared that  a lynching might occur at any   moment and the militia and army had  difficulty controlling the huge crowd.  The 4th of July was very  warm, the sun was shining.  Punctually at 5 PM, eleven open trucks  brought the prisoners to the execution ground,   their hands and legs tied with cords. On the  platform of each of the eleven trucks stood   a convict, six men and five women in total. The trucks were backed under the gallows and   the condemned made to stand on the tailboards  or on the chairs on which they had been sitting.  Former Stutthof prisoners,  dressed in striped uniforms,   had volunteered to serve as executioners and put  a simple cord noose around the convicts’ necks. The execution was planned in such a way that  after each truck would be driven forward,   the 11 convicts would be left suspended, and  their bodies would not fall from too great   a height. As a result, the nooses did  not break their necks and did not cause   an instant death. This short-drop method  of hanging resulted in a torturous death   by strangulation of each of the criminals  lasting anywhere from 10 to 20 long minutes. When the driver of the first  truck carrying Johann Pauls,   the former commandant of the guards in Stutthof,  started the engine and moved slowly forward,   Pauls, before sliding off the platform and  hanging on the rope, managed to shout "Heil   Hitler!". He was answered by the insults  of the crowd. As Pauls' body went still,   another truck started moving and another  criminal began what those present at the   execution described as a "rope dance". As each  truck moved forward, the other convicts had the   opportunity to take a good look at what awaited  them in the next few moments. When one truck   driver failed to start the engine several times,  the former Stutthof prisoner pushed the convict   off the platform. The crowd waved and the people  shouted: "For our husbands, for our children".  After the last convict died, the security  forces then allowed the crowd to the gallows.   People ripped off buttons, cut off pieces of  fabric and kicked and smashed the corpses.  The gathered people were then chased away,  and the bodies were removed from the gallows.   After the execution it was rumored that  Jenny Wanda Barkman’s body was cremated,   her ashes were taken to Hamburg and dumped  into the toilet of the apartment where she   had been born. However, it was not true. Instead, the bodies of those executed were   taken to the Medical University of Gdańsk to  be used as a teaching aid in anatomy classes.  There were no tears shed  for Stutthof Nazi torturers. thanks for watching the World History  Channel be sure to like And subscribe   and click the Bell notification icon so you don't   miss our next episodes we thank you  and we'll see you next time on the channel
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Channel: World History
Views: 68,083
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Keywords: World History, German invasion of Poland, World War 2, WW2, Second World War, Executions WW2, Stutthof, Stutthof concentration camp, Heinrich Himmler, Holocaust, Auschwitz, Auschwitz concentration camp, Nazi SS, Nazi concentration camps, Nazi GErmany, Third Reich, Jenny Wanda Barkmann, Wanda Klaff, Elisabeth Becker, Ewa Paradies, Gerda Steinhoff, Stutthof executions, Execution of Nazi guards, Nazi guards, Nazi women, Female Nazi, Nazi brutality, Nazi atrocities, Nazi crimes
Id: MmHQ0uE2OK8
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Length: 12min 26sec (746 seconds)
Published: Thu Mar 28 2024
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