Gerhard Bast, the son of attorney Rudolf Bast, grew up in a German nationalist household. In 1912, the family moved to
Amstetten. Bast studied at the high school in Wels. After graduation, he studied
jurisprudence at the
University of Graz, where he was a member of the
Burschenschaft (student fraternity) "Germania Graz". He graduated law school in 1935 with his doctorate. In October 1931, he became a member of the
Nazi Party (
member number 612,972) and shortly thereafter joined the
SS (SS Number 23,064). After graduation, Bast worked at the county court in
St. Pölten, but lost his job shortly afterwards due to his membership of the
Nazi Party. He then worked in the law office of his father, who was an enthusiastic national socialist. From November 1942 to December 1942, he was leader of Sonderkommando 11a in
Einsatzgruppe D and led the murders of Jews. In January 1943, Bast was transferred to
Linz, where he led the
Gestapo. In November 1943, Bast accidentally killed a young hunter while hunting. He was convicted of negligent manslaughter and sentenced to 4 months in prison. However, as he could "prove his worth" on the
Eastern Front, Bast did not have to serve his sentence, yet suffered a severe blow for his NS career as he was ordered, as punitive measure, into the field and away from his desk job if he wished to stay within the SS system. From Poland Bast's battalion moved to Slovakia, where they committed other war crimes: "In the small village of , members of the Special Command [Sonderkommando] 7a found a group of Jews hiding in the hut of a poor farmer's wife. My father ordered them to be shot – along with the woman who had given them shelter" (Pollack). Bast obtained the following awards:
War Merit Cross I and II class with swords,
Ostvolk Medal II class in silver, as well as an armed forces cross (Heeressiegeskreuz) III class with swords. He was referred to as an
Alter Kämpfer. At the end of
World War II, Bast disappeared under a false name. In disguise as a farmhand and lumberjack, he found accommodation and employment at a farm in South Tyrol. In March 1947, he wanted to return to his family in
Innsbruck and asked the help of a smuggler to assist him in passing through the guarded
Brenner Pass. Before reaching the Brenner Pass, however, the smuggler robbed and killed Bast, shooting him three times. In 1949, a court in
Bolzano convicted the smuggler of murder and robbery and sentenced him to 30 years in prison. The Austrian author Martin Pollack is the illegitimate son of Gerhard Bast. Pollack wrote the book: "Der Tote im Bunker. Bericht über meinen Vater", that was published in Vienna in 2004. ==Literature==