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Personal Accounts of Survivors of the Various Concentration Marches, Part 4
![]() Shot down in pairs. Of 181 abducted persons only 5 returned!
Present: In the investigation into the abduction of Walter Kabsch, a minority German of Parsko, the overseer Walter Kabsch appeared and declared: Re. person: I am Walter Kabsch, aged 27, overseer in Parsko near Woinitz.
Re. matter: I am overseer in the employ of Baron von Gersdorff, of Parsko. On September 1, 1939, Matuczak, the gardener on the estate, came to me and announced that I was arrested. I wanted to appeal to my employer. He, however, was already standing together with the administrator Golinski and the wheelwright Laubsch on the yard, and I saw that they too had already been arrested. I wanted
On the evening of this day we arrived at Paiser. Here we were accommodated in a hall and in groups of six were tied together by the wrists with thin cords. These were drawn together as tight as possible, with the result that our hands became blue and swollen from
After passing Tulischkow, we were led on to a meadow. Herr von Gersdorff, who was 65 years of age and hardly capable of walking any further, stumbled as he was looking up at a German aeroplane. A soldier dealt him a blow with the butt of a rifle and he almost fell down. He regained his balance and shouted up to the aeroplane: "Heil Hitler!", whereupon the soldier struck him in the chest with the [176] mouth of the rifle barrel, so that he fell into a ditch. The soldier then pulled the trigger. Nobody paid any heed to the dead man. We were not allowed to go near him.
On the meadow we were given very dirty water from the duckpond to drink, and allowed to rest for ten minutes. We then continued our march in the direction of Turek. During the night our column was divided at a well. The older men, who had been marching in front, had drunk first and were driven on. Our section, when we were
Towards 11 or 12 midday we reached Turek, but marched straight on. Shortly after Turek we were passing a farm, when a German aeroplane appeared. Our escort left us standing in the road, but themselves took shelter in the roadside ditches or behind the willows. The airman must have concluded from this movement that he had to do with a convoy of minority Germans, for he immediately subjected the willows to fire. Of the soldiers forming our escort, which meanwhile, the nearer we approached to the front, had continued to increase in numbers until it now was between 80 and 90 strong, a large number was wounded. At this the soldiers became so enraged that without even leaving their places of concealment, they blindly directed machine gun and rifle fire into the midst of our column. When we were driven forward again those who had been struck were left lying there. The soldiers did not trouble whether the people were dead or wounded. We now numbered only about a quarter of the 181 men of whom our group had originally consisted.
About one and a half or two hours' march beyond Turek, the soldiers drove us on to a field. We were forced to line up in double file. The soldiers formed a rank on our left front and then began, without anybody having said a word to us, to shoot us down in pairs. My brother Willi was standing beside me and my brother Karl a little further forward. He suddenly shouted: "Every man for himself!" He took to his legs, and I and my brother Willi also. The soldiers fired after us with machine guns and rifles. I stumbled and fell after about 200 yards. While I was still lying on the ground, I received a grazing shot in the head. My brother Willi immediately dragged me to my feet. We ran on and, as I ran, I discarded my coat which had been pierced by several bullets.
I sank to the ground beneath the blow, but soon regained consciousness and was transferred to prison, without anybody taking any notice of the wound. After two hours, towards 10 p.m., we were driven out of the prison with blows from a knout and taken into the town. At that moment another column of minority Germans was being driven through the town. We jumped into the middle of the column, as they were marching in fours and
We five are the only ones of the group of 181 who escaped with our lives.
Read aloud, approved and signed Walter Kabsch. The witness thereupon formally took the oath.
(signed) Bömmels (signed) Miehe Source: Sd. Is. Posen 833/39
![]() ![]() Mass graves found containing 30 and 70 mutilated bodies of Germans
Pastor Leszczynski, of Kosten, who was in the party of abducted persons up to Turek-Tarnowa, describes the death of 100 Germans on the fields near Tarnowa.1 The Germans shot and robbed [there] were found in two mass graves containing 30 and 70 terribly mutilated corpses. (See page 251: "Graves, only graves." Front page of the "Posener Tageblatt" No. 236).
On Sept. 2, about 300 of us under the charge of Police-sergeants Wawrzyniak and Schwarz, started on the way to Czempin via Kawczyn. On arrival at the latter place we were met by an agitated crowd, with horrible abuse. Simultaneously,
In the night we continued on our way. While we were drinking water at a farmstead, the main body of our people left us. 50 men remained behind who did not dare to follow the main body. We spent the night in a small wood. In the morning, some went off, among them also Dr. Bambauer. When we saw that they were being arrested at the entrance to a village by a guard, we fled to a nearby hill covered with trees. I could not keep step with the others and finally remained behind alone. From a juniper bush, where I hid myself, I heard a series of shots. No doubt the captured Germans had been shot down. The wood was surrounded by the military. I stayed there for three days without water and food. I guarded myself against the cold of the night by digging a hole in the ground with my hands. After the soldiers had marched off in the night of Sept. 9, I ventured to come out. An elderly farmer took care of me and took me to Tulischkow, where I was put into prison. Soon afterwards, ten other Germans were brought in who belonged
Investigations as to the fate of the main body, from which the 50 men had separated, brought the following particulars to light. The Germans had been driven on to Turek. In the village of Tarnowa about 150 men were led from the main road on to a
by-path, where they were ordered to climb on to a hill in a closed column
According to various accounts given by German women in Tarnowa, the greater part of the German male population in that town was brutally tortured to death. One of the men had both eyes gouged out, was then dragged to the next village and finally murdered.
![]() ![]() The murder of Krüger The witness Anna Krüger, of 62 Brahestrasse, Bromberg-Jägerhof, gave the following evidence on oath:
... Shortly after midday, civilians and soldiers in uniform came and asserted that my husband had fired a
machine-gun. The dwelling was searched, firstly by a soldier and then by a civilian. The soldier found nothing. The civilian placed his hand on the wardrobe and ordered the soldier to examine it again. The soldier took out a small cartridge from it, on which grounds my husband, my son and my
son-in-law were taken away in a motor car. On Wednesday I found the three of them again in the woods. Frau Gutknecht was the first to find them. My husband was completely mutilated, his entire face was smashed in, leaving only a large hole. He was not shot but beaten to death. My son had a gaping wound as though they had ripped open his entire face. My son was not shot either. Source: WR II
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Extract from the report of the experience of minority Germans abducted from Lissa, as published in the "Posener Tageblatt" of September 19, 1939. We can hardly yet conceive that we are free, again permitted to live, and that our native country is under the protection of the German Army. Hardly any one of us had dared to hope to come out of this Polish hell alive. Too many of our comrades had fallen victims to the Polish murder bandits.
On Sunday, September 17 we buried in Lissa four shockingly mutilated victims in a common grave, in their native soil for which they had died (Gaumer, a butcher, [181] Weigt, a master plumber; Herr Häusler, and Herr Jäschke, a teacher). We have advised the relations of these victims as well as those of all the others affected. If anybody should still believe that the murders were only individual occurrences he will be convinced by the reports of comrades from all territories of Posen and Pommerellen, that this murder and
On the morning of Friday Sept. 1 at about 11 o'clock, my parents and I were taken out of the house by armed civilians, who had just before smashed all the windows of our business premises for the purpose of
A moment later our guards ran away, hell for leather, for suddenly a German tank came towards us over the field, circled round us once, the crew calling out that Lowitsch was occupied by German troops and that we were saved. We could not at first believe that our rescue had come at the last minute, nor were we able fully to rejoice in our own rescue, as None of us will ever forget the march into Lowitsch, the greetings of the German soldiers, and the first warm meal, the touching care for us and the great trouble taken in order to return us quickly to our homes, for which we have especially to thank comrade von Romberg. Neither shall we ever forget the tortures and ill-treatment! Today we know that there is only one method against a nation which is capable of such atrocities, i.e. merciless severity with unyielding determination. The words of a comrade who called out to us when bidding us good-bye as we were leaving for our freed native land, are only too true: "A nation which is capable of such cruelty and brutal treatment against defenceless people has no more right to exist, and has thereby automatically struck itself off the list of civilized nations." For those of us, however, who were able to return to our native homes through a merciful act of fate, there is something more to remember at this time, namely, that our lives and work belong now more than ever before to our people, and our great love and gratitude to the Fuehrer, for returning to us the freedom of our native land!
The foregoing is a description by an inhabitant of Lissa, who was amongst those minority Germans who took part in the march of martyrdom to Lowitsch. Many of those arrested have not returned, as they were unable to bear the terrible hardships and were left behind, only to be shot on the spot. Thus there are missing the
80-year-old master-tailor Tiller with his son, Juretzki the photographer, Frau Groschowski the wife of a teacher, and others. Other tragedies also occurred. Herr Hoffmann of Posen and Frau Hoffmann (nee Anneliese Remus), formerly Frau Runge of Lissa, committed suicide together by taking poison, as the young wife was expecting a child in two months and under the circumstances it seemed quite impossible for her to stand the strain of such a march with the abducted. It was impossible to flee over the frontier, notwithstanding its close proximity, Fraustadt being only 12 miles away. The few who were able to get through to Danzig in time can consider themselves very fortunate. ![]() ![]() The experience of Karl Mielke of Bromberg2 On August 29, when I came home from work, a large car belonging to the Anti-Espionage Department was standing before my house. I was driven in it to my office where a thorough search was made of both my office rooms. Not only the maps of Posen and Pommerellen which the itinerant teachers needed for their work were scrutinised and packed up as suspicious material, but also perfectly harmless school statistics, reports of closed-down German schools, lists of transfers of teachers, monthly reports, and similar papers, which at previous searches had been passed as harmless by the officials. Judge G. of the Criminal Court, before whom I was brought, showed hatred of everything German on his face. He tried with fanatical eagerness to get his victim to say what he was determined to hear. The first thing said to me was, that every German was a spy and it was further implied that the whole cultural work of the Educational Department of the German Association was only a cloak for carrying on espionage on a large scale. I was [fettered,] taken away and locked up in a local police gaol.
On September 7, a real funeral procession began for us. We were handed over to an infantry lieutenant whose duty it was to transport us with about 100 men of his own troops as a guard to the far-away prison in the east, situated at Bialypodlask. His first action was to give the soldiers strict orders to shoot any one of us who got out of line or spoke a word of German. This order was made known to all the 281 prisoners. At 1 a.m. the march began through the burning town of Siedlce. A dying German who was already as thin as a skeleton had to be dragged naked along with us as he was unable to walk; four of us carried him by the arms and legs just above the ground. The comrade alongside me was given a deep thrust in the seat with a bayonet. After we had marched along different roads until the dawn of day, we halted in a small wood. Here we had to leave the dying man and we covered him with a coat. He most probably received his coup de grace before the march continued. Another prisoner about the age of 70, who was unable to continue any longer, was taken aside by the soldiers, and, after we had heard the report of two rifle shots, we were told that he too had been settled. We had received nothing to eat or drink up to then. Our march was continually delayed by air-raid alarms when we had to lie down as near to trees as possible without moving and wait until we were ordered on again. We blessed the German airmen as we were otherwise given little time to rest ourselves, and many of us were already exhausted and lame. The first ones to remain behind fell victims to the fate which we all expected. They were forced to kneel down with their heads on the ground and were then shot in the back of the head. Nobody wanted to remain behind and march in the rear ranks, the old and weak held on to the stronger ones, linked arms and stamped on with iron determination and tight-lipped, despite open wounds on their feet and great pain. All those condemned to death died like men, and as one was on his knees waiting to receive the shot of his murderer, he cried out a defiant "Heil Hitler" and, even after the first shot which did not kill him, again faintly cried out the greeting to the Fuehrer.
The next day we received a visit from German aeroplanes, and bombs burst unceasingly on the middle of the fortifications where our prison was situated. The thought that one would hit our cell was terrible, but in our serious conversations [we] always came to the same conclusion, namely that to the end we must remain true to the principle of which we had so often spoken, which was, that it is not the individual that counts but that the most important things are the greatness and glory of the Reich. Another two days passed under these conditions, during which time the want of water was at its highest. We no longer felt hungry. We all had a fever rash on our lips, our tongues were thick and rough, and we were hoarse and could only speak in a very low voice. We were afraid of becoming insane. Water was now shared out by the spoonful. When we implored the warders to give us water, we were told that there was none. How cruel were these people who called themselves representatives of the Polish people, when we later saw that they had casks of water in the court-yard which were mostly three-quarters full!
On September of the German artillery fire and the dropping of bombs by German planes reached their height, and all the walls of the prison shook and shivered. Thick smoke came pouring through the small window of our cell. There was not [186] a guard in the corridor. Suddenly we heard the banging and crashing of the doors of two cells, then hurried steps on the landing and eager talking. Two cells had been broken open by their occupants. We stormed into the courtyard with our water cans and fetched water with our last remaining strength. The guards, in their terror of death, had retreated to a
bomb-proof shelter, leaving us to our own fate; however, the soldiers returned, and fired a few shots at us in order to Then came the morning of September 17, when the din of the battle gradually ceased. With fear we asked ourselves what this meant. I climbed onto the bed and looked through the iron-barred window on to the courtyard, which was completely destroyed. A German infantryman was coming towards us over the courtyard, and it is impossible for me to describe my feelings when I saw him. We drummed on the door, shouting with joy, and in all the other cells we heard deafening calls. The doors of the cells were eventually smashed down by the rifle-blows of the German infantrymen. We were free! and we found that our warders, who were to have shot us on this very Sunday, had been made prisoners.
When we were all standing in the prison yard we began to sing, at first softly, and then louder and louder. As the words of "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles" and the
"Horst-Wessel-Lied" resounded in this place of horror, now a place of happiness, we were not ashamed of the tears which ran down our dirty, unshaven cheeks. Source: "Der Volksdeutsche", October 1939, issue No. 19.
![]() ![]() Eyewitness report by the Director of the Schicht Corporation, Kopiera, from Warsaw3 [Scriptorium comments: this report is missing from the 1940 English edition of this book. It has been translated from the German original and included here by The Scriptorium.] 5,786 persons, among them 3,500 Germans and 1,600 Ukrainians, were imprisoned in the Polish internment camp Bereza-Kartuska at the time of their liberation in the night of September 17.-18. The tortures which the inmates of the hell of Bereza-Kartuska had to endure are a terrible body of charges against the former Polish government, on whose directives the abduction and maltreatment of the Reich and ethnic Germans occurred. Reports about the suffering of the Germans abducted to Bereza-Kartuska include, for exmple:
The "mildest form of abuse" was the daily running of the gauntlet under the truncheons of the police guards. A worse form were the daily beatings, meted out with fence slats and clubs against the Germans by the Polish convicted felons who had been appointed as "instructors" and released from prison for precisely this purpose. German and Ukrainian women were also subjected to this maltreatment. Anyone who could no longer bear the brutality and collapsed was "beaten into submission", which meant a terrible pounding of the kidney area with clubs and rubber truncheons. What was regarded as "resistance" was usually a last feeble motion to ward off the blows prior to complete physical collapse, and was taken as the perfect excuse to shoot the abused victim. 158 Germans were killed in this manner in
Bereza-Kartuska! Methodical and completely unnecessary brutality of treatment of the imprisoned Germans and Ukrainians were the order of the day. Standing the Germans against the wall, loading guns and taking aim at them, or herding them in front of machine guns, shooting some of them and leaving the rest to endure the terror of expected imminent death, trampling the defenceless victims of this sadistic revenge of the inferior underfoot with boots and increasing the abuse day by day until the tortured souls were "ripe" to be
shot – this kind of Polish brutality was exercised in
Bereza-Kartuska in unimaginable ways.
![]() ![]() A German Catholic priest under arrest in Poland
Father Odilo Gerhard was the German Catholic Priest at Cracow. On the outbreak of war he was arrested by the Poles at 3.30 p.m. on September 1, 1939. After his watch, money and identification papers were taken from him at the Headquarters of the Police Commissar in Kielce, he was dragged off by force with many German members of his congregation via Radom – Brest-Litowsk to the internment camp at Bereza-Kartuska. In the issue of October 1939 of "Die Getreuen", the Catholic Mission magazine published for Germans abroad, he describes his experiences. At 6.30 p.m. the train arrived at Bereza-Kartuska and after a forced march of 3 miles we reached the internment camp at about 8 p.m. Immediately our 10 guards were taken away. Then we had to run the gauntlet through a lane of 200 police who beat us with rubber truncheons, rifle butts and staves, and even an old man of 70 was not spared this punishment. We were counted on the drill ground and then taken into a heated room, where each of us was forced to lie face downwards on the cement floor. I was about to lie down when a policeman hit me with a rubber truncheon and dragged me off to the commander of the camp, who questioned me and gave the order to convey me to the doctor's isolation ward No. 2 and to give me better treatment. At the doctor's quarters I fell down in a half-fainting condition and begged for water. On Sept. 8, when being medically examined on the drill ground, my companions in distress exclaimed: "You have been beaten black and blue!" Before being led onto the drill ground without my habit and only in a shirt and stockings, five commanders questioned me. They all said: "If you are a Roman Catholic Priest you are a Pole." I replied "No, I am a German." "Yes, a German spy!" and on denying this, I received a blow from a rubber truncheon. We had to stand on the drill ground in the unbearable boiling hot sun and clouds of dust until the evening, without anything to eat or drink. Then we were forced to give up everything including money, our necessary under-clothing and even rosaries, lockets, breviaries, shaving equipment, nail cleaners, cigarettes and tobacco etc.
Then the drill began. We were So the days passed. On Sunday, September 10, I requested the commander to permit me to hold prayers in the room. His answer was a flood of curses and blows with a rubber truncheon; the same happened when I asked to administer spiritual comfort to the sick.
During the night from Sunday (September 17) until 3 o'clock on Monday morning we found that the police had fled and that we were free. We were soon on the drill ground, where I again met many German Catholics from Cracow and the province of Posen to whom I had given spiritual help. Unfortunately we found behind the hospital 7 German flying officers and 16 internees, who had been imprisoned in a dark cell,
![]() Oskar Daum, a Protestant clergyman, reports on his stay at the internment camp at Bereza-Kartuska as follows:4
The camp guards received us with rubber truncheons, took away from us all the things we needed for our daily use. I was not even allowed to keep my New Testament. Our cells were entirely devoid of everything, the concrete floor providing the only place for sleep. The food was almost unbearable. Besides thin soup we were given two spoonfulls of water once or twice a day and ![]() ![]() Old men who collapsed through weakness were shot down
On September 2, 1939 about 600 German-Poles [ethnic Germans] were arrested in the district of Obornik, north of Posen, and made up into an internees contingent. The march was made via Gnesen, Slupca, and Kutno near to a place just this side of Warsaw.
The interrogation of Willi Grossmann, a wheelwright, who survived the march is attached.
(signed) Discar, Commissioner of Criminal Police
Posen, Oct. 2, 1939
Special Commission of
Hearing. Elfriede Weigt, a married woman (a member of the German minority) appeared voluntarily and declared: My husband, Friedrich-Wilhelm W., born on May 26, 1901 in Potarzyce, had been estate manager (administrator) of the Przependowo estate in the district of Obornik (North Posen) for about 8 years. The estate hands are pure Polish. The estate owner is Countess Lüttichau, a German. My husband was known to the authorities as an upright German. He was a member of the German Association. On August 25, 1939 the city militia was billeted on our estate. The leader of the company was a Reserve officer of the Polish Army named Sigmund Rakocy from Morawana-Goslyn. On September 1, 1939 my husband was arrested with all other German residents of Morawana. The arrest was caused by R. The reason for arrest was not given. My husband, together with 23 others, was taken to Morawana.
Note: Grossmann, the wheelwright who was arrested on the same day, will be further closely interrogated afterwards re. Weigt's fate. The further questioning of Frau W. in this connection will therefore be set aside. My husband's height was about 5 ft. 6 inches, he was clean-shaven, with slightly curly fair hair. He wore glasses. He had a broken-off incisor in the upper jaw which had been crowned with gold, therefore he had half a gold tooth. At the time of his arrest he was wearing a pair of greenish-coloured riding breeches with leather strappings, and black riding boots, a mother-of-pearl coloured linen or canvas jacket with pleated side and breast pockets, and double breasted with ordinary bone buttons to match the cloth, a striped tricot shirt and long tricot underpants. His linen is marked F. W. I am unable to produce samples of underwear for identification, if needed, as everything was later stolen by convicts set free during my absence from the estate; [I know this because] on my return I found a pair of convict's trousers in our home.
Posen, October 2, 1939.
Special Commission of
Hearing. The minority German Willy Grossmann, a wheelwright, born on May 20, 1909 in Koblin, residing on the Przpendowo estate in the district of Obornik, appeared voluntarily and made the following statement: Since 1937 I have been employed as a wheelwright on the P. estate. I was on normal social terms with the Poles. I have never had any trouble with the civilian population or with the authorities. I have always kept to myself without troubling about politics. A few weeks before the German-Polish disagreement, the relationship between us and the Poles became rather strained, but there were no particular acts of violence on the part of the Polish workers on the estate.
In the park of Sochaczew we were supposed to receive a meal, that is about midday on September 9, but instead of getting any food we were shot at by the mob. One of us was shot down. As we were about to march off, the guards shot three elderly men, whose names are unknown to me. Two of them had been wounded by the mob and were unable to continue the march; the third tried to escape. He was caught, made to stand before us, and was shot at close range by a policeman. Many of the older people began to rave during the march. For instance, when a cart passed by,
Herr Heckert, Hans, 36 (?) Herr Repnack, 50 (?) Herr Belter, Alfred, 24 (?) Herr Sommer, Ferdinand, 23 (?) Herr Sommer, Gustav, 48 (?) Herr Sommer. Waldi, 20 (?) Herr Sydow, Gottfried, 30 (?) Herr Riemer, Willi, 31 Herr Riemer, Walter, 26 (?) During the night of the 9th to 10th September most of our column fled, myself among them. The next day we encountered German troops. After no great detour we returned home. Yesterday in Church I heard that about 100 comrades of our column and locality were still missing.
Read out, approved and signed (sgd.) Willy Großmann Grossmann was most emphatic. During the interrogation he was asked if he was exaggerating. He answered, "Inspector, you can take my word for it there is not the slightest exaggeration in what I am telling you." He repeated several times the following: "You cannot even tell the wives of those murdered men everything, they are in enough despair as it is".
(sgd.) Discar, Police Inspector
![]() 1"Ostdeutscher Beobachter", No. 259, Nov. 9, 1939. ...back... 2Published in "Der Volksdeutsche", October 1939, issue No. 19, under the heading, "Arrested, abducted and released". ...back... 3Since the official investigations of the events in the Bereza-Kartuska internment camp were not yet complete at the time of printing and the evidence based on the sworn statements of witnesses is not yet available, we instead publish this eyewitness account from the "Posener Tageblatt" of October 27, 1939. ...back...
4Report in the "Gemeindebote für das
evangelisch-lutherische Wien" of October 8, 1939. ...back... |