Summary The report presents the Dachau concentration camp complex comprehensively and from different perspectives. Since the American investigators were in the camp as liberators, they were able to rely on a high level of cooperation and willingness to testify from the liberated prisoners; a part of the report consists of eyewitness accounts of the inmates, as well as occasional longer excerpts from diaries and personal accounts of the experiences of individual prisoners. A large part of the report consists of factual analysis and summaries by the authors of the report. The
sociology and
social psychology of the system of prisoners and prisoner groups, their interactions with each other the commanding SS, and the so-called prisoner administration or labour administration are detailed through an
organizational chart. The report also contains statistical listings of prisoner numbers and the proportion of different nationalities and the crimes charged, as well as figures on deaths in the camp, which rose sharply from autumn 1944 onwards. Accounts of the social dynamics among the prisoners Another section deals with the pseudoscientific, inhumane
human experiments. These included, for example, the deliberate infection of healthy inmates with serious, potentially deadly infectious diseases without subsequent treatment. In other "experiments", prisoners were forcefully immersed in tanks filled with icy water at about for long periods of time until they became unconscious. Throughout the report there are descriptions of various aspects of the extremely harsh living conditions, both physical and
psychological, which were forced upon the inmates and determined their struggle for survival. The OSS wrote in section I of the report: A large section is also dedicated to the description of the
control,
repression and
terror system that the SS had set up in Dachau, just as
in all other German concentration camps. Selected inmates who were in the camp for criminal offences such as
murder or
robbery were known as "criminals" and given special positions in the hierarchy of the camp. They were used by the SS to suppress and control the larger number of people imprisoned for political reasons ("politicals") through psychological and physical terror. This included, for example, reducing or depriving food rations, threats, harassment and physical violence up to
torture and murder of political prisoners by "criminals". These acts were usually directly ordered by the SS or done to accomplish a particular goal set out by the SS for one or more criminal inmates. Several pages also document the various ways inmates were executed at Dachau.
Dachau also discusses the history of the Dachau concentration camp, which existed as early as 1933 and is considered the first camp of its kind in
Nazi Germany. The US investigators also conducted extensive interviews with residents of the
town of Dachau, which was located near the camp. While doing so, they particularly tried to find individuals among the mass of allegedly unsuspecting and innocent residents who had in some way politically resisted. Their statements, including their assessment of their fellow residents' attitudes, were documented. Other sections deal with the liberation of the camp by the US Army and the events that followed as well as with the physical structure or organization of the camp along with the daily routine of the prisoners.
Gallery "Dachau" (US Army report, IA dachau00unse).pdf|page=2|Aerial photograph of the camp by an American reconnaissance plane, p. 2 "Dachau" (US Army report, IA dachau00unse).pdf|page=41|Bodies of prisoners who died of conditions in the camp, p. 41 "Dachau" (US Army report, IA dachau00unse).pdf|page=15|Picture of three liberated inmates, two wearing the black and white striped concentration camp inmate clothing, p. 13 "Dachau" (US Army report, IA dachau00unse).pdf|page=18|Introduction Part III (p. 16): "(...) the first impression comes as a complete, a stunning shock." Picture of murdered prisoners of the
Außenlager Kaufering IV on the railway line
Kaufering-
Landsberg Chapters Part I. Foreword The three-paragraph preface by Colonel William W. Quinn includes the following statement:
Part II. Dachau, Concentration Camp - OSS Section The OSS section, introduced by a
Summary (pp. 3, 4), comprises twelve pages and is divided into the sections
History (pp. 5 to 6),
Composition (pp. 6 to 8),
Organization (pp. 9 to 11) and
Groupings of Prisoners (pp. 11 to 15). The summary is followed by a brief outline of the history of Dachau Concentration Camp from 1933 to 1945, describing the increasing number of prisoners in the camp, the expansion of the groups of prisoners admitted and the constantly expanding network of affiliated subcamps. Furthermore, the chapter describes the increasing overcrowding of the camp during the
Second World War, exacerbated by incoming evacuation transports from other camps, which led to a considerable increase in the death rate among the prisoners due to hunger and disease in the final phase of the camp. The following section is devoted to the composition of the prisoner groups, whereby nationality and the reason for admission are mentioned as the main distinguishing features. Furthermore, the identification of prisoners in the concentration camps and the contrast between political (
Reds) and so-called criminal prisoners (
Greens) are explained. Finally, the section notes the irrelevance of previous social distinctions given the camp's poor conditions, leading to prisoners being "gradually reduced to the most primitive and cruel form of existence—motivated almost exclusively by fear of death." In the
Organization section, the terror system in the camp is explained, which consisted of external control by the camp SS and internal control by the
function prisoners appointed by the SS. The following
Prisoner Groups section describes functional posts for prisoners and, within the framework of internal organization, the key position of the Labour Deployment Department is emphasized. The second part concludes with a description of prisoner groups formed on the basis of nationality and the ''International Prisoners' Committee''.
Part III. Dachau, Concentration Camp and Town - PWB Section The third part of the report is from the PWB section is eleven pages long. It is divided into the
Introduction (pp. 16 to 18),
The Camp (pp. 18 to 21),
The Townspeople (pp. 22 to 25) and
Conclusion (pp. 25 to 26) sections. In the introduction, the subject of the study is derived by prefacing the following remarks with two questions: What is currently known about the situation in the camp, and what did the Dachau townspeople know about the events in the camp, and what was their corresponding attitude towards it? To answer the first question, 20 former political prisoners were interviewed. The Dachau camp survivors told the American interrogators about everyday life in the camp, which was characterized by hunger, illness and punishment, mass crimes. They further detailed the role of the SS guards and the prisoner functionaries, camp hierarchies and the poor medical care. On the other hand, citizens of the nearby town of Dachau were interviewed to the second question. The questioning of the Dachau citizens revealed that the existence of the camp was known; however, many of them remarked to the interrogators that they had known nothing about what was going on in the camp and the mass crimes. This section also lists some of the explanations given in German, such as "" (We were all lied to) or "" (What could we do?). However, some political opponents to the Nazi regime from the town of Dachau stated that the events in the camp had been known in the town. The interrogators concluded that the overwhelming majority of the town population had brought guilt upon themselves through alleged ignorance and lack of
civil courage.
Part IV. Dachau, Concentration Camp - CIC Detachment , begins with images of the liberation of the camp by US soldiers. The main part of the report, prepared by the CIC, comprises forty pages. This part is divided into the
Memorandum (pp. 27 and 28),
Liberation (pp. 28 to 30),
Life at Dachau (pp. 30 to 34),
Diary of E.K. (pp. 35 to 45),
Statement by E.H. (pp. 35 to 45),
Special Case Reports (pp. 61 to 63) and
Miscellaneous (p. 63ff.) sections. The
Memorandum leads on to the next section, which deals with the circumstances of the liberation of the camp. The section
Life at Dachau deals with the transport of prisoners to the camp, the admission procedure after arrival, and the harsh everyday life in the camp. The following pages contain a detailed account of the cruel
human experiments on prisoners and of the types of executions in the camp. The special case reports focus on people with connections to Dachau concentration camp, including the
camp medical doctor Claus Schilling, who was executed for his crimes against the Dachau prisoners in 1946, and the SS members of the camp, Wilhelm Welter, Franz Böttger and Johann Kick. The report concludes with the section
Miscellaneous, where the structure of the camp SS is detailed. Several tables showing the list of Dachau survivors by nationality, the number of prisoners who passed through the Dachau concentration camp, the list of the number of deaths and executions by year, and the composition of the
International Prisoners Committee are also included.
Diary of Edgar Kupfer-Koberwitz (Diary of E. K.) Ten pages of the Dachau report are devoted to a diary that was partially translated from German into English during the writing of the report. These are excerpts from the diary of the Dachau survivor
Edgar Kupfer-Koberwitz, which he risked his life to write secretly during his imprisonment in the camp from November 1942 to spring 1945. In the diary, Kupfer-Koberwitz recorded his personal experiences and those of his prisoner friends. The excerpts from the diary are meant to illustrate and serve as evidence for crimes committed in the Dachau concentration camp. The CIC Detachment investigators considered this diary to be "one of the most interesting documents" they had obtained on the Dachau crime complex. Because Kupfer-Koberwitz was seen to be at risk of German reprisals, only his initials are given as the author in the Dachau report. Kupfer-Koberwitz, who managed to hide the diary until the camp's liberation, published excerpts from it in 1957 under the title "The Powerful and the Helpless". His unabridged diary was published in 1997, under the title "Dachau Diaries".
Statement by Eleonore Hodys (Statement by E. H.) The section
Statement by E.H. covers 15 pages in the Dachau report (pp. 46 to 60) and is thus the longest thematically continuous section in the report. It contains the testimony of a female concentration camp inmate with the initials E.H., who reports on her experiences in the
Auschwitz concentration camp and incriminates members of the SS assigned there. She gave a detailed account of events in the Auschwitz concentration camp and in particular of the violent crimes committed by the SS in the "bunker", the camp prison in
Block 11 of the main camp in Auschwitz, where, according to her own statements, she was imprisoned for nine months. Among other things, she stated that after being admitted to the Auschwitz concentration camp, she initially had a privileged position among the prisoners. For example, she had been employed as an embroiderer in the villa of the camp commander
Rudolf Höss, where she was well fed and lived in a single room. She also reports that the camp commandant made advances to her. In October 1942 she was locked up in the bunker (Block 11) and initially received preferential treatment there. Along with other members of the Auschwitz camp SS, she also incriminated camp commander Höss. He had secretly visited her in the bunker and had sexual intercourse with her. Höss is said to have impregnated Hodys, whereupon she was taken to a standing cell to die of starvation to cover up the affair.
Background and subsequent use Why the E. H. statement was included in the Dachau report, given it has no connection with the Dachau crime complex, is unclear. The "Statement by E.H." contains the transcript of the testimony of the female prisoner
Eleonore Hodys, also known as Nora Mattaliano-Hodys, about her experiences in the Auschwitz concentration camp, as recorded by the SS judge
Konrad Morgen in October 1944. Morgen headed an SS commission of internal enquiry that was supposed to uncover and bring to trial corruption in concentration camps in particular. The members of the investigating commission were made aware of Hodys by a member of the SS in the Auschwitz concentration camp who was in custody and had testified as a witness in the proceedings against the former head of the political department in Auschwitz,
Max Grabner, before the SS and police court in
Weimar. Morgen stated after the end of the war that he had taken Hodys out of the bunker to provide witness protection. Physically weakened and ill, he had her taken to a Munich clinic for convalescence at the end of July 1944, until she could finally be questioned by Morgen in October 1944 about events in the Auschwitz concentration camp. A copy of this protocol was given to US investigators by Gerhard Wiebeck, who worked under Morgen, immediately after the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. The Hodys' transcript was translated from German into English and included in the Dachau Report. Wiebeck, who was taken into American internment custody in the course of the liberation of Dachau concentration camp, is also listed with a short vita in the Dachau report. A back-translation of this protocol into German made by Wiebeck also played a role as evidence in the
first Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, on which he provided comprehensive information during his testimony in October 1964. == Reception ==