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Maria Mandl

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Maria Mandl
Mandl after her extradition to Poland (1946)
Born(1912-01-10)10 January 1912
Died24 January 1948(1948-01-24) (aged 36)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Other namesMaria Mandel
The Beast
Political partyNazi Party
MotiveNazism
Conviction(s)Crimes against humanity
TrialAuschwitz trial
Criminal penaltyDeath

Maria Mandl (also spelled Mandel; 10 January 1912 – 24 January 1948) was an Austrian SS-Helferin ("SS helper") and a war criminal known for her role in the Holocaust as a top-ranking official at the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp,[1] where she is believed to have been directly complicit in the deaths of over 500,000 prisoners.[2] She was executed for war crimes.

Life

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Early life

[edit]

Mandl was born on 10 January 1912 in Münzkirchen, Upper Austria, then part of Austria-Hungary,[3] the daughter of a master shoemaker named Franz Mandl and his wife Anna.[4] She had three elder siblings and the family were members of the local Turnverin sports club. She attended school until she was 14 and left without achieving an exit certificate, and then spent 3 years attending a convent school in the Bavarian community of Neuhaus am Inn.[4] She struggled to find work in her hometown so at 17 moved to Brig, Valais, Switzerland, where she worked for 13 months before returning home to Austria and working in the local post office.[4] As Hitler rose to power, her father was outspoken and critical of Nazism.[4]

Camp work

[edit]

After the Anschluss by Nazi Germany, Mandl moved to Munich, and lived with her uncle who was a Police constable in the German city.[4] On 15 October 1938 she joined the camp staff at Lichtenburg, an early Nazi concentration camp in the Province of Saxony, for female prisoners. She was employed as an Aufseherin, and worked with fifty other SS women, including Emma Zimmer, under Commandant Max Koegel. A survivor of the camp, Emilie Neu, recalled Mandl during this time and how "at Lichtenburg she began to beat people" often wielding the stick at public punishments in front of all the women inmates.[4]

On 15 May 1939, along with other guards and prisoners, Mandl was sent to the newly opened Ravensbrück concentration camp near Berlin. She soon impressed her superiors and, after she had joined the Nazi Party on 1 April 1941, was elevated to the rank of a SS-Oberaufseherin in April 1942. She oversaw daily roll calls, assignments for Aufseherinnen and punishments such as beatings and floggings.[5] Maria Bielicka, a survivor, testified after the war that she saw Mandl kick a woman to death during a roll-call at Ravensbrück.[6] At Ravensbrück she was also responsible for the training of new recruits, with Hermine Braunsteiner, later known at the "Mare of Majdanek", training at the camp under Mandl's supervision during the summer of 1939.[7] Hermine later described her as "very strict" and said that she "often hit prisoners".[4]

On 7 October 1942, Mandl was assigned to Auschwitz II-Birkenau, succeeding Johanna Langefeld as SS-Lagerführerin of the women camp under SS-Kommandant Rudolf Höß.[8][6] As a woman she could never outrank a male,[citation needed] but her control over both female prisoners and her female subordinates was absolute. The only man Mandl reported to was the commandant. She was well regarded by Höß, who in March 1944 arranged for her to have a 100 Reichsmark bonus in addition to her monthly pay.[9] Mandl additionally controlled all the female Auschwitz camps and female subcamps[10] including Hindenburg, Lichtewerden and Raisko.

Mandl promoted Irma Grese to head of the Hungarian women's camp at Birkenau[11] and appointed Therese Brandl as her private secretary.[12] According to some accounts, Mandl often stood at the gate into Birkenau waiting for an inmate to turn and look at her: any who did were taken out of the lines and never heard from again. At Auschwitz, Mandl was known as "The Beast",[1][13] and for the next two years she participated in selections for death, amongst and other documented abuses. She signed inmate lists, sending an estimated half a million women and children to their deaths in the gas chambers at Auschwitz I and II.[14]

Alongside Hauptsturmfuhrer Franz Hössler, Mandl created the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz in April 1943[15] to accompany roll calls, executions, selections and transports.[16] Mandl personally chose the first conductor,[16] Polish music teacher Zofia Czajkowska,[17] and later arranged for an accomplished Austrian violinist named Alma Rosé to be transferred camps so that she could conduct the women’s orchestra.[18] Historian David Crowe has written that Mandl "blended a passion for classical music with extreme cruelty towards her female prisoners."[19] An Auschwitz prisoner, Lucia Adelsberger, later described it in her book, Auschwitz: Ein Tatsachenbericht:

"The women who came back from work exhausted had to march in time to the music. Music was ordered for all occasions, for the addresses of the Camp Commanders, for the transports and whenever anybody was hanged."[14]

For her services, Mandl was awarded the War Merit Cross 2nd class.[3] In November 1944, she was assigned to the Mühldorf subcamp of Dachau concentration camp and Elisabeth Volkenrath became head of Auschwitz,[20] which were liberated in late January 1945.[1] In May 1945, Mandl fled from Mühldorf into the mountains of southern Bavaria to her birthplace, Münzkirchen.[3]

Firsthand account of Mandl's treatment of prisoners

[edit]

The following is a first-hand account of Mandl's treatment of prisoners upon arrival to Auschwitz, provided by Jewish Prisoner Sala Feder on 1 December 1947 to the District Court in Kraków.[21]

"In August 1943 I was deported together with my family (27 people, including nine children aged from one month to eleven years) from the ghetto in Środula near Sosnowiec to Auschwitz, in a transport numbering some 5,000 people.

At the ramp in Birkenau, the transport was awaited by the defendant Mandl accompanied by SS woman Margot Dreschel, and as soon as the transport had arrived, Mandl carried out a selection, sending approximately 90 percent of the transport to the cars which transported these people to the nearby crematorium.

[...] During these selections, defendant Mandl tortured the prisoners in a cruel way, beating the women, the men and the children with a whip and kicking them blindly. She would tear the children from the arms of their mothers, and when the mothers tried to come near the children and defend them, Mandl would beat the mothers horribly and kick them. I saw – right next to me – a young, 20-year-old mother, who tried to go near her two-year-old child thrown onto the car, and Mandl kicked and beat her so cruelly that she didn't get up any more.

[...] I held my four-year-old child by the hand. The defendant Mandl approached me, tore my child away from me and threw the child onto a still empty car so that the child got wounded in the face and began to cry and call me, but I was put aside to the group that wasn't loaded onto the cars. When I tried to reach the child, crying on the car, Mandl began to beat me so cruelly that I fell. Mandl continued to kick me although I was lying on the ground, and she knocked out almost all of my teeth with her shoe."

Sala Feder's account[21] continues with a description of Margot Dreschel's mass torture of women involving the infamous Block 25 in Auschwitz:

"In my block [Block 15], 700 women were chosen out of 1,000; in the whole camp (that is, in lager A, where we stayed in the so-called quarantine), Mandl selected several thousand women, and all of them – naked – were crammed into one block no. 25,[22] where they stayed for seven days and nights without food or water. On the night of 27 September, they were transported to the crematorium.[citation needed]

For the period of these seven days, we heard horrible screams and groans issuing from that block, and when the women were taken to the crematorium, the block elder, a Slovakian woman named Cyla (who had already been tried in Czechoslovakia), told us that after those seven days there were more corpses than living people in that block, and that almost all of them had bitten fingers and breasts and plucked out eyes.[citation needed]

During these seven days, if any prisoner wanted to carry water or some food to that block, she was arrested there and perished along with the rest. The above-described selection was carried by the defendant Mandl in person, with the help from kapos: Stenia, Leo and Maria, all of them cruel and used to torturing the prisoners in a horrible manner."

Arrest and execution

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After the war, Mandl fled to her native Münzkirchen but her father refused to help her hide. Mandl then sought her sister for refuge.[23] However, Mandl was arrested by the United States Army on 10 August 1945.[3] Interrogations reportedly revealed her to be highly intelligent and dedicated to her work in the camps.[3] For some time, Mandl was held in a cell in the former Dachau camp. She was filmed by U.S. soldiers in May 1946 sharing a cell with Elisabeth Ruppert.[24] Upon their request, U.S. officials transferred Mandl to Polish custody in November 1946.[12] In November 1947, Mandl was tried by the Supreme National Tribunal in the Auschwitz trial, found guilty of crimes against humanity, and sentenced to death by hanging.[14]

Defendant Mandl at Kraków, 1947.

Stanisława Rachwałowa [pl] (a Polish survivor of Auschwitz who was an inmate under Mandl's administration and, after the war, was arrested by Poland's post-war communist authorities as an "anti-communist activist") was imprisoned in the cell next to Maria Mandl and Therese Brandl. Rachwałowa was proficient enough in German to interpret for the wardens. She stated that the last time she and the two German war criminals met – after they had been sentenced to death and shortly before their executions took place – both had asked her for forgiveness. Mandl was hanged on 24 January 1948.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Bartrop, Paul (26 June 2019). The Holocaust: The Basics. Routledge. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-351-32989-7.
  2. ^ Profile, s3.photobucket.com; accessed 16 November 2014.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d e Heath, Tim (30 April 2018). In Hitler's Shadow: Post-War Germany & the Girls of the BDM. Grub Street Publishers. ISBN 978-1-5267-2003-0.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Eischeid, Susan J. (26 December 2023). Mistress of Life and Death: The Dark Journey of Maria Mandl, Head Overseer of the Women's Camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Citadel Press. ISBN 978-0-8065-4287-4.
  5. ^ Lewy, Guenter (2017). Perpetrators: The World of the Holocaust Killers. Oxford University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-19-066113-7.
  6. ^ a b Helm, Sarah (15 January 2015). If This Is A Woman: Inside Ravensbruck: Hitler's Concentration Camp for Women. Little, Brown Book Group. ISBN 978-0-7481-1243-2.
  7. ^ "Biographie: Hermine Braunsteiner-Ryan, 1919–1999" (in German). Deutsches Historisches Museum. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  8. ^ Jr, Walter S. Zapotoczny (14 December 2022). Road To Auschwitz: The Deportation of the Slovak Jews by the Hlinka Guard. Fonthill Media.
  9. ^ Koop, Volker (23 March 2021). The Commandant of Auschwitz: Rudolf Höss. Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-4738-8690-2.
  10. ^ Fleming, Michael (6 January 2022). In the Shadow of the Holocaust: Poland, the United Nations War Crimes Commission, and the Search for Justice. Cambridge University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-009-11660-2.
  11. ^ Müller, J. M. (2020). Angeklagte Nr. 9. Die "Hyäne von Auschwitz" im Kreuzverhör [Defendant No. 9 : The "Hyena of Auschwitz" under cross-examination] (in German) (1st ed.). Norderstedt: BoD. ISBN 978-3-7519-9549-8.
  12. ^ a b Bartrop, Paul R.; Grimm, Eve E. (11 January 2019). Perpetrating the Holocaust: Leaders, Enablers, and Collaborators. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 199. ISBN 978-1-4408-5897-0.
  13. ^ Rice, Xan (31 October 2015). "The cellist of Auschwitz". New Statesman. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  14. ^ a b c d "Maria Mandel". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  15. ^ Kennedy, Kate (15 August 2024). Cello: A Journey Through Silence to Sound. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-80328-701-0.
  16. ^ a b Eischeid, Susan (2016), Eischeid, Susan (ed.), "The Auschwitz-Birkenau Women's Orchestra", The Truth about Fania Fénelon and the Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz-Birkenau, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 5–10, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-31038-1_2, ISBN 978-3-319-31038-1, retrieved 20 September 2024
  17. ^ Renker, Shaunessy F. (2022). Ilse Weber and Alma Rosé: Women Artists Fighting for Survival in the Shoah. Bard Digital Commons. p. 49. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  18. ^ Newman, Richard (2003). Alma Rose: Vienna to Auschwitz. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 250–253. ISBN 978-1-57467-085-1.
  19. ^ Crowe, David (1 August 2007). Oskar Schindler: The Untold Account of His Life, Wartime Activities, and the True Story Behind the List. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-00849-0.
  20. ^ Peretti, Jacques (20 January 2022). Little Bird of Auschwitz: How My Mother Escaped Death and Found Our Family. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1-4736-4643-8.
  21. ^ a b Tribunal, Supreme National (1 December 1947). "Files in the criminal case of the former members of the SS crew at Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp".
  22. ^ "Virtual Tour - Block 25 in sector Bia". Auschwitz-Birkenau Wirtualne zwiedzanie. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  23. ^ "Institute of National Remembrance". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  24. ^ "SS BUNKER, DACHAU SS COMPOUND, PRISON FOR MALMEDY MASSACRE DEFENDANTS, DACHAU, GERMANY ; MUNICH. [No.] 193, LANDSBERG (DACHAU) HANGINGS, LANDSBERG, GERMANY". catalog.archives.gov. Series: Moving Images Relating to Military Activities, 1860 - 1985. Department of Defense. Department of the Army (US). 14 May 1946. Retrieved 15 September 2019.

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