Anton Burger was born in
Neunkirchen, Austria, the son of a stationery dealer. He joined the Austrian Army in 1930 and the
Austrian Nazi Party in 1932. In June 1933 the Nazi Party was officially banned in Austria by the government of
Engelbert Dollfuss and Burger was dishonorably discharged from the army in July. He moved illegally to Lechfeld near
Augsburg in Germany, where he became a member of the
Austrian Legion, a
paramilitary group composed of pro-Nazi Austrian expatriates. Shortly afterward he joined the
Sturmabteilung (SA). In 1935 he received
German citizenship and moved into the SA barracks. Burger went to Vienna to participate with the Austrian Legion in the
Anschluss on 12 March 1938. He was inducted into the
SS and assigned to the
Central Agency for Jewish Emigration in Vienna, where he was a member of the Reich Security Main Office Special Action Command "Eichmann" (
RSHA Sondereinsatzkommando under
Adolf Eichmann). In the summer of 1939, he was transferred to the Central Agency for Jewish Emigration in
Prague, where he participated in the
expropriation of about 1,400 Jewish households. In April 1941 he was promoted to
Obersturmführer (Second Lieutenant). In the spring of 1941 he was promoted to head of the RSHA branch office in
Brno. In 1942 Burger was ordered to
Brussels by Eichmann to coordinate efforts to deport
Belgian,
Dutch and
French Jews. Burger served at
Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943 before becoming the
Commandant of Theresienstadt concentration camp from July 3, 1943, to February 7, 1944. He was known for his cruelty as a camp commander; on 11 November 1943 he ordered the entire camp population of approximately 40,000 people to stand in freezing weather during a camp census. About 300 prisoners died of
hypothermia as a result. In February 1944 he was sent to Greece by Eichmann to replace
Dieter Wisliceny, with whom Eichmann was dissatisfied. As head of the
Sicherheitsdienst in Athens under Colonel
Walter Blume, Burger organized the
deportations of
Romaniote and
Sephardi Jews from
Rhodes,
Kos,
Athens Ioannina, and
Corfu (a total of over 3,000 people), ==Capture and escapes==