Most of the prisoners in Schirmeck-Vorbruck were French, but there were also Americans, Belgians, Germans, English, Poles, Romanians, Russians and Scandinavians. The prisoners included so-called "work refusers", "professional criminals", beggars, escape helpers, clergymen, homosexuals, illegal border crossers, opponents of the Nazi regime, prostitutes and conscientious objectors. By September 1942, the camp had 1,400 inmates. The total number of camp inmates in Schirmeck-Vorbruck is estimated at up to 25,000; on average, 1,000 men and 250 women were held in separate camp areas.
Feeding The prisoners' rations were set at 1,200
kcal. Of the 1.05
RM available per day to feed a prisoner, 40 pfennigs were diverted to a black fund. According to prisoner reports, prisoners lost up to half their body weight within a few weeks.
Experiments with humans From May 1943, the physician
Eugen Haagen carried out
typhus fever experiments on around 25 Polish prisoners. Two prisoners died in the experiments, which were the subject of the
Nuremberg Doctors' Trial after the end of the war.
Prisoner typology Prisoners wear a distinctive piece of sewn cloth: red for political prisoners, green for illegal immigrants, yellow for Jews, Poles and Russians, blue for clergymen, prostitutes and homosexuals, checkered for antisocials and commoners, purple for Jehovah's Witnesses. New prisoners were dressed in old
Wehrmacht uniforms. In contrast to the usual marking of prisoners in concentration camps, the markings varied in this security camp. Instead of angles, colored pieces of cloth were issued, blue ones for Jews, for example.
Forced labor The prisoners had to perform forced labor inside and outside the camp. The external detachments included a quarry in
Herbach, forestry work, repairing railroad tracks and road construction, where up to ten prisoners had to pull a heavy roller. A satellite camp existed on the site of today's
Strasbourg-Entzheim airport, 35 kilometers away. Other prisoners were "rented out" to companies by the camp commandant's office. At the end of 1943, the
Daimler-Benz company set up a production facility right next to the camp grounds, where prisoners had to produce spare parts.
Deaths 76 deaths are registered in the Schirmeck registry office; however, it is estimated that up to 500 people died. After the crematorium in the Natzweiler concentration camp was completed, the bodies of Schirmeck prisoners were cremated there. 107 members of the "Alliance" resistance network, who had been imprisoned in Schirmeck-Vorbruck since May 1944, were murdered in Natzweiler on the night of September 1 to 2, 1944. Among the internees executed at Schirmeck were : • Antoine Becker, imprisoned on August 2, 1944. Former commissioner of the
Renseignements généraux in Strasbourg, divisional police commissioner in Marseille, he was arrested for having taken part in the repression of the
Karl Roos network. He was murdered on his way to Struthof. •
Joseph Schmidlin, a Catholic priest who opposed Nazism and died there on January 10, 1944. •
Ceslav Sieradzki, an Alsatian resistance fighter of Polish origin and member of the
Black Hand, who was murdered there on December 12, 1941. • In his autobiography,
Pierre Seel, an Alsatian who was interned there for homosexuality, describes the execution of a prisoner who was mauled by guard dogs in the roll call area in front of his fellow prisoners, testified in his book to the murder of his lover on the Place d'Appel in front of all the inmates. == Liberation ==