Auschwitz guard Reinhold H. goes on trial in Germany
February 11, 2016
The court case against a 94-year-old former SS soldier has opened in the western German city of Detmold. Reinhold H. is charged with 170,000 counts of accessory to murder between January 1943 and June 1944.
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According to prosecutors, Reinhold H., who was 20 years old at the time, worked as a member of the 3rd SS Division Totenkopf (sometimes called the "Death's Head Division" because of its skull-and-crossbone insignia), which was in charge of administering concentration camps.
Several survivors of Auschwitz were due to testify against Reinhold H. during the trial; so far, 12 two-hour days in court have been scheduled for the case. The short daily running time in court is down to the defendant's advanced age.
Speaking at a press conference ahead of the trial, 90-year-old Justin Sonder, a German who survived the Auschwitz camp in his youth, said the trial should have happened "40, 50 years ago."
"But now it is not too late to show what once happened," Sonder told reporters.
'Hungary Operation'
As an Unterscharführer (junior squad leader), Reinhold H. was allegedly responsible for guarding transports of people entering the camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.
A key part in the case against Reinhold H. is that he was at the death camp for what became known as the "Hungary Operation," the three-month period from May to July 1944 when over 430,000 Hungarian Jews were deported to Auschwitz and over 300,000 were gassed on arrival.
Prosecutors argue that Reinhold H. was aware that the deportees were gassed "in large numbers" at Birkenau and that a selection process as well as mass shootings took place at the main camp.
Reinhold H.'s attorney, Johannes Salmen, told the AP news agency that his client acknowledges serving at the Auschwitz I part of the camp complex in Nazi-occupied Poland, but denies serving at Auschwitz II, the Birkenau section, where most of the 1.1 million victims were killed.
The latest trial against a former SS guard comes just months after Oskar Gröning was found guilty for complicity in 300,000 counts of murder. The 94-year-old, who collected luggage and valuables from Hungarian Jews, was sentenced to four years in prison.
Change in prosecution
Until recently, participation in the Holocaust was not a crime, and defendants could only be convicted for a specific provable act of murder or torture. But the way the mass executions were carried out virtually absolved everyone involved of a specific prosecutable act - at least according to the interpretation of most post-war German state prosecutors.
It was only with the conviction in 2011 of John Demjanjuk - a former guard at the Sobibor death camp - that this interpretation changed.
Three others defendants are also due to stand trial this year for similar charges of complicity to murder. Among them is a 91-year-old woman who worked as an SS radio operator at Auschwitz.
Around 6 million Jews and other prisoners and persecuted minorities - including Roma people, homosexuals, disabled people, Communists, and Soviet prisoners - were systematically murdered in the Holocaust during World War II.
The art of the Holocaust
Artists held in Nazi camps depicted the horror they experienced. Now their work is on show in Berlin. The exhibition of 100 works from Israel's Yad Vashem presents the art that survived, though many artists didn't.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
The colors of the ghetto
Can something horrible also be beautiful? As seen in the Berlin exhibition "Art from the Holocaust: 100 Works from the Yad Vashem Collection," a number of artists managed to document life in Nazi concentration camps and ghettos and create great art even during one of humanity's greatest tragedies. Pictured: "A Street in Łódź Ghetto" by Josef Kowner, who survived the Holocaust.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
The refugee
For the first time, 100 works from the Yad Vashem memorial center in Israel are on display at the German Historical Museum in Berlin. Of the 50 artists included, 24 were murdered by the Nazis. Among the victims is prominent artist Felix Nussbaum, who was killed at Auschwitz in 1944. His famous painting, "The Refugee," was painted in 1939 in Brussels and reveals the desperation of exile.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
A self-portrait of suffering
Works by Charlotte Salomon have been shown elsewhere in Germany as well. In a collection of over 700 individual works, titled "Life? or Theater?: A Song-play," Salomon explored her own tragic life story as a Jew in Berlin. In 1943, she was deported from southern France, where she had found exile, to Auschwitz, where she was murdered immediately upon arrival. She was pregnant at the time.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Pictures from a hidden girl
Nelly Toll's story is less well known. She and her mother survived the Holocaust in what was then the Polish city of Lwów because they were hidden by Christian friends. Locked in her room, Toll drew artworks including this gouache, "Girls in the Field." Now 81, the artist has traveled from her home in the United States to attend the opening of the Berlin exhibition.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
'Path Between the Barracks'
Leo Breuer from Bonn fought for the German Kaiser in World War I. In 1934, one year after Hitler rose to power, he immigrated to The Hague and then to Brussels, where he was able to work as a painter and exhibit his work. In 1940, he was taken to the St. Cyprien internment camp in France, and then to the camp in Gurs, where he documented his time there in water colors. Breuer died in 1975 in Bonn.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Artistic collaboration
In Gurs, Leo Breuer created stage designs for the camp cabaret together with photographer and artist Karl Robert Bodek. The two also worked together on greeting cards and other pieces of art - until 1941. That's when Bodek was deported to the camp in Les Milles near Aix-en-Provence and then to Drancy and finally to Auschwitz, where he was murdered in 1942.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Secret life of the artist
Bedřich Fritta headed the office at the Theresienstadt concentration camp where official propaganda material was produced. But Fritta and his colleagues also secretly drew images of the horrors of the Nazi ghettos. In 1944, their subversion was discovered. Fritta died in Auschwitz. After Theresienstadt was liberated, 200 of his works were found hidden in the walls and buried in the ground.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Friendship beyond death
Leo Haas helped Fritta create countless works depicting life in the concentration camp. In Sachsenhausen, he was ordered to create counterfeit bills in the currencies of the Allies ("Operation Bernhard"). He survived and later adopted Tomáš, Fritta's son. After the war, Haas found 400 of his hidden works in Theresienstadt.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Doctor under cover
Pavel Fantl belonged to the artists' circle at Theresienstadt as well. As a medical doctor he also ran the typhus clinic in the camp. Like Fritta, his cover was also blown and he was tortured and sent to Auschwitz. In January 1945, he was shot and killed during a death march. Around 80 of his drawings were smuggled out of Theresienstadt.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
The art teacher
Jacob Lipschitz taught at the art institute in Vilnius before the war. In 1941, he was forced to move to the ghetto in Kaunus, where he joined a group of artists that secretly documented life there. Lipschitz died in March 1945 in the Kaufering concentration camp. After the war, his wife and daughter went back to the Kaunus ghetto and recovered the pictures he had hidden in a cemetery.
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem
Preserving dignity in tragedy
The images in the exhibition, which runs through April 3 in Berlin's German Historical Museum, document the inconsolability and brutality of life in Nazi camps. But they also show how artists managed to create a world apart from the horrific deeds of their captors. Pictured is Moritz Müller's "Roofs in Winter."
Image: Collection of the Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem