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WSWS : History
: Fascism
and the Holocaust
Forty years since the Frankfurt Auschwitz trial
Part onea belated inquiry
By Sybille Fuchs
27 April 2004
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The following is the first in a three-part series of articles.
Judge: Did you see anything of the camp?
2nd witness: Nothing
I was just glad to get out of there
Judge: Did you see the chimneys
At the end of the platform
Or the smoke and glare?
2nd witness: Yes
I saw the smoke
Judge: And what did you think?
2nd witness: I thought those must be the bakeries
I had heard
They baked bread in there day and night
After all it was a big camp
(The Investigation by Peter Weiss, Frankfurt 1965)
An exhibition commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Auschwitz
trial opened on March 27 in the House of Gallus in Frankfurt-Main.
On display is material from the Fritz-Bauer-Institute documenting
the Trial against Mulka and others. A DVD edition
of the trial protocols has also recently been issued.
The Auschwitz hearings marked the first time some of the individuals
responsible for the Nazis machinery of extermination were
brought before courts in the former German Federal Republic. The
court case opened on December 23, 1963, in the Römer, Frankfurts
town hall, nearly 20 years after the end of World War II and the
Nuremberg Trials, and ended on August 19, 1965.
As is well known, the response of German courts to the Nazi
regime and its monstrous crimes is one of the most disgraceful
episodes in West German justice. Opposition to trials of this
kind was widespread in the 1950s and 60s within Germanys
legal and political elite.
None of Auschwitzs three leading concentration camp commanders
were still alive at the start of the trial. Rudolf Höss and
Arthur Liebehenschel had been tried and executed in Poland in
1947, in accordance with an agreement made between the Allied
forces. Others who bore chief responsibility, like the notorious
concentration camp Doctor Mengele, were able to flee and remain
in hiding in South America. Richard Baer, the last camp commandant
of Auschwitz, declined to give any testimony during the preliminary
investigations to the Frankfurt proceedings. He died in detention
while investigations were pending and all legal action against
him was dropped. The Frankfurt trials were therefore only concerned
with some lower level assistants to these camp commanders.
But it was perhaps precisely because the trial did not deal
only with leading members of the SS, but with their underlings,
that the case and the detailed media coverage that accompanied
it provided West Germans with their first comprehensive picture
of the seemingly banal daily routine of the ghastly extermination
machinery at Auschwitz. The trial, thereby, played a significant
role in politicizing West German youth.
That West Germans began to closely follow the Auschwitz hearings
was largely due to the testimony of 359 witnesses from 19 countries,
including 211 camp survivors. The trial, which required witnesses
to recall the terrible events with the precision that is required
in a criminal prosecution, often put excessive demands on the
survivors. The accused, flanked by their defenders on benches
normally occupied by the town councilors, were, for the most part,
indifferent to the proceedings.
Behind them, in front of high windows, hung two large display
boards depicting sketches of Auschwitz I (the main concentration
camp) and Auschwitz II (the extermination camp at Birkenau). With
the magistrates sat the assize court, at that time three professional
judges and six magistrates sworn in as jurors. Judge Hans Hofmeyer
chaired the proceedings.
The trial was scheduled to last 20 months and commenced in
the Römer hall, at the time the only venue in Frankfurt capable
of holding those involved in the proceedings. In the spring of
1964, hearings were moved to the Bürgerhaus Gallus, built
especially for that purpose, and where they were continued until
the trials conclusion. Approximately 20,000 visitors attended
the proceedings over the ensuing months.
Six of the accused were given life sentences on charges of
murder or for being jointly responsible for murder, and eleven
received maximum sentences of 14 years imprisonment. Three were
acquitted due to insufficient evidence and two of the accused
were not put on trial because of illness or death. The challenge
facing the judges was to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
each of the accused was individually complicit in the crimes.
This difficult standard was also the reason for the relatively
mild sentences, which were considered inadequate by many of the
surviving victims of Nazism.
Of the more than 6,000 (other sources say 8,000) former members
of the SS who guarded Auschwitz between 1940 to 1945, only 22
came before the Frankfurt court, among them a former operative
prisoner or so-called kapo. In the 20 months
of court proceedings, those accused showed no trace of insight
or regret.
The sentences bore no relation to the crimes for which the
perpetrators were individually or jointly guilty. At least three
million Jews and a similar number of political prisoners, Sinti,
gypsies or homosexuals were sent to be gassed in Auschwitz or
died through forced labour, starvation and cold, bestial medical
experiments, arbitrary beatings or shootings. The camps were located
throughout Germany. Birkenau extermination camp alone could accommodate
100,000 prisoners.
The road to the trial
The fact that the trial even occurred was the outcome of two
more or less accidental and not immediately connected events.
As Werner Renz of the Fritz-Bauer-Institute explained in a recent
essay, if circumstances had been only slightly different, the
Auschwitz trial would not have occurred forty years ago.[1]
Adolf Roegner, a former Auschwitz inmate and a kapo, was also
a Bruchsal prisoner convicted of perjury and making false
statements while not under oath. In a letter to Stuttgarts
attorney general dated March 1, 1958, he referred to Wilhelm Boger,
a former member of the Auschwitz camp Gestapo. In this letter
he accused Boger of crimes in Auschwitz, and cited Bogers
home address and workplace.
The authorities hesitated to act, but two months later, after
representations from International Auschwitz Committee General
Secretary Hermann Langbein, whom Roegner had also contacted, investigations
commenced. In his interrogation Roegner named other members of
the Auschwitz SS. Finally an arrest warrant was issued against
Wilhelm Boger, but it was not until October 8, 1958, seven months
later, that he was arrested at his workplace. Those accused by
RoegnerStark, Broad and Dylewskiwere taken into investigative
custody in April 1959.
Independently, Frankfurter Rundschau reporter Thomas
Gnielka sent documents to Hessen Attorney General Fritz Bauer
in mid-January, 1959. Gnielka received the material from Frankfurt
resident Emil Wulkan, another concentration camp survivor. Wulkan
had originally taken possession of the documents from a burning
SS court at Breslau in May 1945. He showed them to Gnielka in
December 1958, while making a reparation application. The journalist
identified them as Auschwitz execution files.
The documents, which were from Auschwitz concentration camp
commandants and members of the SS and XV Breslau police courts
from 1942, listed prisoners shot during alleged escape attempts.
Thirty-seven SS members involved in the shootings, including Stefan
Baretzki, were also named. In order to give these killings the
appearance of legality, the victims were found guilty according
to existing regulations and their SS murderers duly acquitted.
Attorney General Fritz Bauer used the documents to establish
Frankfurt-Main county court jurisdiction over the Auschwitz-complexa
move finally accepted by the national court in April 1959. Only
then was it possible to systematically initiate preliminary investigations
and arrest the Auschwitz criminals.
Bauer, a social democrat who had been forced to flee Germany
because of his politics and his Jewish origin, was one of the
few jurors of the former Federal Republic who attempted to seriously
prosecute those responsible for the Nazi crimes. Having previously
encountered a wall of resistance to his endeavours, he now seized
the opportunity to get the trial underway.
Bauer wanted to turn the proceedings into an investigation
of the Final solution to the Jewish question which
had been implemented by the Nazis in Auschwitz. He therefore tried
to involve experts from the Institute for Contemporary History
in Munich. For him the main consideration was not the sentencing
of individual perpetrators, but providing a historical clarification
of what had taken place. The trial definitively revealed the claims
by the extreme right that no one was ever gassed in Auschwitz
to be the foulest of historical falsifications.
A young Christian Democratic Union state representative from
Mainz by the name of Helmut Kohl, who later acknowledged that
thankfully he was born too late, opposed Bauer, arguing
that the fall of the so-called Third Reich was too recent and
therefore prevented an historical judgment being made of
National Socialism. Kohl, the longtime Federal Republic
chancellor and immediate predecessor of Gerhard Schröder,
articulated a view that was broadly held in political circles
within the Federal Republic.
To be continued
See Also:
Fascism
& the Holocaust:
A critical review of Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners
[17 April 1997]
Notes:
1. 40 Years Auschwitz-Trial: An unwanted
proceedings by Werner Renz,
http://www.fritz-bauer-institut.de/texte/essay/12-03_renz.htm
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