Skip to main content

THE FACE OF THE ASSEMBLY LINE: The Faces Of Auschwitz’ Guards – New Database Puts Human Face On Camp Killers

Alois Balletshofer

Franz Hubert

 

Fritz Korthals

 

Fritz Radimersky

Fritz Taddiken

Johann Kremer

Josef Bauer

 

Josef Kramer

 

Julius Donner

 

Karl Clauberg

 

Kolomann Bistritz

 

Otto Baatz

 

Otto Baatz, thợ thiếc người Đức.Viện Tưởng niệm Quốc gia

Otto Scherbinski

 

Paul Taubinger

 

Robert Gauger

 

Robert Nagy

Robert Nagy, Yugoslavian citizen and electrician.Institute of National Remembrance

Rudolf Hoss

Rudolf Höss, German agricultural officer. Höss was the longest-serving commandant of Auschwitz concentration camp.Institute of National Remembrance

Tannhausen

Matthias Tannhäuser, German butcher.Institute of National Remembrance

Taubert Portrait

Paul Taubert, German butcher.Institute of National Remembrance

Wilheim Friedrich Boger

Wilheim Friedrich Boger, German merchant and police officer.Institute of National Remembrance

“It never went out. Day and night…nobody could leave. And you couldn’t complain, it wouldn’t have changed anything.”

Those are the words of former Nazi SS Guard Jakob W., describing the fires at Auschwitz to Der Spiegel.

After Germany successfully invaded Poland in 1939, construction began on the brutal death camp complex. Before its 1945 demise, approximately 1.1 million people would die — approximately 90 percent of them European Jews.

From the time that the first train arrived at Auschwitz to its liberation by the Soviet Army in January 1945, nearly 10,000 SS guards and commanders stood watch over the camp and its inmates — many of whom perished through starvation, forced labor, disease, or in the gas chambers. Fewer than 800 SS guards were ever tried and punished for war crimes.

That only a fraction of guards had to account for their actions during the Holocaust is what historian Aleksander Lasik — along with many others — has hailed as a miscarriage of justice. And now, more than 70 years later, Lasik seeks to remedy it.

Working with the Polish state-run Institute of National Remembrance, Lasik and his colleagues have uploaded what they call the “most complete list of Nazi SS commanders and guards at the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp,” the AP reported.

More than 8,500 names appear in the searchable database — along with information on where the officers were from; how long they worked at Auschwitz, and if they served anywhere else during World War II.

With Lasik estimating that only 200 former SS guards may still be living today, it’s unlikely that the database will yield criminal trials. Still, to Lasik, a criminal punishment is not necessarily the ultimate reward of such an endeavor.

“The world justice system has failed,” Lasik said. “I’m doing what a historian should do: expose the responsible individuals as war criminals.”

Above, observe the names and faces of those very criminals — the overwhelming majority of whom led perfectly banal lives after Auschwitz closed.