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The “INFAMOUS BEAST” of Auschwitz in Her Final Moments: Maria Mandl – The “NOTORIOUS” Woman Who Ruled the Camp & the DARK, LITTLE-KNOWN Crimes That Shocked History 7

EXTREMELY SENSITIVE CONTENT – 18+ ONLY:

This article discusses sensitive historical events related to war crimes, torture, and executions during the Holocaust. The content is presented for educational purposes only, to promote understanding of the past and encourage reflection on how societies can prevent similar tragedies in the future. It does not endorse or glorify any form of violence or extremism.

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She Wept, Begged, and Screamed: The Execution of the Psychopathic Nazi Maria Mandl

About the story: Maria Mandl was one of the most infamous female criminals in the Nazi concentration camp system and a central figure in the terror apparatus during the Holocaust and World War II. Born on January 10, 1912, in Münzkirchen, Austria-Hungary, she grew up in a conservative Catholic family. Her life changed dramatically after the Anschluss (annexation of Austria) in 1938, when Nazi Germany annexed the country and loyalty to the regime became a prerequisite for survival and advancement.

In October 1938, Mandl joined the SS as a guard at the Lichtenburg concentration camp, one of the first camps for women. She quickly adapted to the brutal camp environment and became notorious for her extreme cruelty. Survivors later testified that she frequently beat, whipped, and tortured prisoners, often for no reason other than personal satisfaction. Her willingness to use violence led to rapid promotions within the SS camp hierarchy.

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Mandl was transferred to the Ravensbrück concentration camp in 1939, where her brutality only intensified. Prisoners feared her presence, describing her as merciless during roll calls, punishments, and daily camp life. In 1942, she was promoted to Oberaufseherin and assigned to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where she became the head warden of the women’s camp. There, she held near-absolute power over thousands of prisoners and all female SS guards, reporting directly to camp commandant Rudolf Höss.

At Auschwitz, Mandl played a key role in selecting prisoners for the gas chambers, personally signing death lists and tearing children from their mothers’ arms before sending them to their deaths. She was particularly brutal toward Jewish and Polish female prisoners. Ironically, she also established the Auschwitz women’s orchestra, forcing prisoners to play music while others were led to forced labor or execution—an example of the chilling contradictions of life in Nazi concentration camps.

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In late 1944, Mandl was transferred to the Mühldorf subcamp of Dachau, where prisoners were worked to death building underground factories. After the war, she was captured, extradited to Poland, and tried in the Auschwitz trial. Convicted of crimes against humanity and mass murder, Maria Mandl was sentenced to death and executed by hanging on January 24, 1948. Her story remains a stark example of how ordinary individuals became perpetrators of horrific atrocities under Nazi ideology.

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The execution of Maria Mandl was part of the postwar war crimes trials. Her death took place against the backdrop of the Nuremberg trials and local courts across Europe, which sought to prosecute those involved in the Holocaust. 

Information Sources

Wikipedia: “Maria Mandl”

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM): “Maria Mandel”

Yad Vashem: “Maria Mandl”

Britannica: “Maria Mandel | German Nazi officer”

BBC History: “Women of the SS”

The Guardian: “The female guards of Auschwitz”

YouTube: “Maria Mandl: The Blonde Beast of Auschwitz”

Additional historical materials from academic sources on the Holocaust and war crimes.