On
this date, 12 June 1950, The SS Camp Commandant of Ravensbrück concentration camp, Fritz Suhren, was executed by hanging. I
will post information about this SS from Wikipedia.
Fritz
Suhren [PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/spies/vera-atkins-wwii-spy-boss/judgment-at-hamburg.html]
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Born
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10 June 1908
Varel, Kingdom of Saxony |
Died
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12 June 1950 (aged 42)
Sandweier, Baden-Baden, Germany |
Allegiance
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Nazi Germany
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Service/branch
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Schutzstaffel
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Years of service
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1931-1945
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Rank
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SS-Sturmbannführer (Major)
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Commands held
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Fritz Suhren
(10 June 1908 – 12 June 1950) was a German SS officer and Nazi concentration
camp commandant.
Early
years
Suhren
joined the Nazi Party in 1928 and the Sturmabteilung at the same time. He moved
over to the SS in October 1931, initially as a volunteer before going full-time
in 1934.
SS
service
Trained
by the Wehrmacht
under SS supervision he was nevertheless not used as a soldier and instead was
stationed at Sachsenhausen concentration camp
in 1941. By 1942 he was Lagerführer (deputy commandant) at the camp and in May
of that year ordered camp Lagerältester Harry Naujoks to hang a prisoner that
had been earmarked for execution. Naujoks refused to perform the deed and,
whilst Naujoks was able to survive the insubordination, Suhren insisted that he
stand beside the prisoner on the gallows (which had been fitted with a winch in
order to prolong the execution) and forced a young inmate to perform the
hanging.
Ravensbrück
He
was later commandant of the women's camp at Ravensbrück concentration camp. His
policy upon taking command in 1942 was to exterminate the prisoners through
working them as hard as possible and feeding them as little as possible.
As
commandant at Ravensbrück, Suhren had to provide inmates to Dr. Karl Gebhardt for
experimentation. Suhren initially objected to this, mainly because most of the
inmates at the camp were political prisoners, and he complained to the SS-Reichssicherheitshauptamt
about the practice. However the SS command overruled Suhren's doubts and he was
forced to apologise to Gebhardt and supply him with the prisoners he demanded.
Suhren would later state that he had witnessed experiments that included
exposing women to high levels of x rays in order to accomplish sterilisation.
Near
the end of World War II, Franz Göring (SS member) (de) and Benoit Musy
approached Suhren to ask him to allow a convoy of women to leave the camp and
go into the custody of the Scandinavian Red Cross. Suhren however refused the
request as it was against superior orders although eventually Goering got the
backing of Rudolf Brandt and Suhren was forced to yield.
Surrender
and death
With
the Allies just a few miles from the camp Suhren took Odette Sansom, an inmate at Ravensbruck
whom he believed to be Winston Churchill's
niece due in part to her using the assumed surname of Churchill in the camp,
and drove with her to the United States base, hoping that her presence would
save him. Sansom had in fact been instructed to adopt the false name and to
encourage the presumption of her relationship to the British Prime Minister as
she was a spy in the camp and the British felt that if the Germans thought she
was Churchill's relative they would want to keep her alive as a possible
bargaining tool. Suhren later came to trial for his time as commandant of
Ravensbruck and was hanged in 1950.
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