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WSWS : History
: Fascism
and the Holocaust
The history of the former Gestapo concentration camp "Oderblick"
in Schwetig/Swiecko
By Carola Kleinert and Brigritte Fehlau
17 March 2000
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On February 19 a conference on the history of the former concentration
camp Oderblick took place in the Polish town of Slubice,
which lies on the border with Germany. The conference was organised
by the Project for German-Polish History of the Polonicum College,
a joint institution of the universities of Slubice and the neighbouring
German town of Frankfurt/Oder.
The project's goal is to focus public attention on the former
concentration camp in Schwetig, situated only a few kilometres
from Frankfurt/Oder and Slubice. The group has demonstrated considerable
commitment to pressuring the authorities to expand the existing
(very small) memorial, have the site published in town maps and
guidebooks, and eventually organise sign-posts.
A highlight of the conference was the participation of 76-year-old
Nicholas Livkovsky, a survivor of the labour education camp,
who visited the scene of his suffering for the first time since
his imprisonment and spoke of his experiences (see
accompanying article).
Horst Joachim, a retired history teacher and author of a number
of works about the crimes of the Nazis and the experiences of
Jews in Frankfurt/Oder, reported the results of his years of painstaking
research.
During the 40 months that camp Oderblick functioned,
i.e., from October 1940 to January 1945, documented evidence reveals
that at least 4,000 inmates met their death through forced labour,
hunger, beatings and executions.
The camp had a capacity of 400 prisoners, but was generally
packed with around 800 inmates. On January 30, 1945 the camp held
1,600 prisoners, who were sent on a death march after the Gestapo
evacuated the facility. Only the weakest, about 70 who were unable
to walk, remained in the barracks. They were burnt to death, as
the Nazis set fire to all the camps in advance of the entry of
the Red Army.
In the years following the war neither the East German nor
the Polish governments paid much heed to these terrible events.
In 1963 Horst Joachim obtained permission to visit the former
camp at Schwetig. Inside the burnt-out walls he observed that
there still remained a 15 to 20 centimetre thick layer of ash,
bits of timber, broken plates and cups along with the bleached
thigh bone of a burnt corpse. He reported that he had been unable
to erase this picture from his mind. When his official escorts
noticed his horror, they quickly shoved the human remains under
the ashes. Since then, Joachim has worked to uncover the Nazi
crimes in his district.
In Germany under Hitler's fascist regime there were 25 work
camps in the Frankfurt/Oder district. The Gestapo camp in Schwetig,
however, had a particular function.
In September 1940 the fascist heads of state decided to construct
labour education camps, calculating, 10 months before
the German army invaded the Soviet Union, on a massive influx
of foreign workers. The labour education installations
were to operate as forced labour re-education camps.
In six weeks, later eight weeks, the workers were to become either
pliant, or die. Camps of this type were exclusively under the
control of the Gestapo, which had free rein in their running,
unrestricted by any legislation.
The buildings in the Schwetig facility, which had served since
1938 as accommodation for workers building the autobahns, were
reorganised in October 1940 as a labour education camp. The Gestapo
command decided who should be sent to such camps. Grumbling on
the part of a forced labourer in the Oder region about his miserable
working and living conditions was sufficient for him to be sent
to one of the re-education camps. Awaiting him were
hunger, hard labour and perpetual torment.
Every month 70 Schwetig prisoners were incinerated in Frankfurt's
crematorium, others were hastily buried in a wood near the camp.
Jews were invariably buried.
This was established by Joachim in the course of his 30 years
of research, during which he fought to gain access to the records
of the crematorium located in the public prosecutor's office.
The book recording incinerations cited over 2,500 dead from the
Gestapo camp.
The ashes of the dead were sent in cardboard cartons to the
then-mayor of Schwetig, who saw to it that they were tossed onto
the rubbish heap of the community cemetery. One attempt by Joachim
to talk with the former mayor was blocked by the Frankfurt/Oder
public prosecutor.
The camp inmates came from 14 different countries, mostly Poles,
Russians, White Russians and Ukrainians, but also Yugoslavs, Czechs,
French and Moldavians, and Jews of every nationality. Germans
were also incarcerated from 1942 onwards.
A mass execution of prisoners from the Soviet Union took place
in the camp in the autumn of 1944. Because the camp had only two
gallows, the men were hanged one after another, followed by all
the women. Among these was a married couple accused of planning
an escape, because they possessed a small reserve of dry bread.
The camp was disbanded in mid-January 1945, shortly before
the arrival of the Red Army. The inmates were to disappear, and
so 1,600 ambulant prisoners were sent on their death march. The
remainder were burnt along with the camp buildings.
The death march went westwards toward Berlin, and took seven
weeks. The prisoners had to walk around Berlin to the Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, and on the next day to a labour depot at the
Potsdam airport. Another 29 prisoners arrived at Buchenwald concentration
camp on March 16, 1945, the march continuing the next day. One
prisoner hid himself there and was the only survivor.
The fate of the concentration camp commandants and the prison
guards has never been made public. It is not known what became
of them after the war.
As late as 1977 a memorial was set up on the site of the former
Schwetig camp. An enclosed path leads to a small tower and a wall
with broken bars in a window openinga symbol of liberation
from the outside. There is also a notice board.
The attempt by the Project for German-Polish History to erect
an additional notice board in two languages has met with considerable
official obstruction. In the meantime, a Swiss organisation aiding
refugees has agreed to finance such a sign.
See Also:
The report of former forced-labor prisoner
Nicholas Livkovsky
[17 March 2000]
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