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Female guards in Nazi concentration camps

SS-Aufseherin was the position title for a female guard in Nazi concentration and extermination camps. Female camp personnel were members of the SS-Gefolge auxiliary organization, which served the SS-Totenkopfverbände (SS-TV) in a limited capacity as these women were not formally recognized as members of the Schutzstaffel (SS).

Background
In April 1933, a workhouse in Moringen was made into a detention facility under Hanover administration. In November of that year, 141 women, the majority of whom were suspected or confirmed Communists, were imprisoned there. Prisoners usually stayed in Moringen for a few weeks before being released. There have been no reports of mistreatment, and group discussions were held daily to "re-educate". The facility closed in March 1938, and was replaced by the Lichtenburg concentration camp, which opened in Saxony in late 1937, and became known as the first SS-run women's concentration camp. It was commanded by SS- Max Koegel and staffed by recruited and conscripted women who worked as guards. Heinrich Himmler directed the construction of a larger second women's concentration camp in November 1938, after Lichtenburg's limited capacity had become an issue due to a rising number of arrests. Ravensbrück commenced operations in May 1939, serving as the central camp for female prisoners. It was here that the position of was established. This was the given order despite the views he held in regards to women: The (BDM) was in support of the 1939 speech and had it written in the organization's 1940 yearbook. ==Recruitment and conscription==
Recruitment and conscription
Advertisements were posted in newspapers, such as the , which sought out German women between the ages of 20 and 40 to guard women who "committed an offense against the 'Volk community" at a "military installation". For women seeking employment or a higher pay, the job offer was enticing because of the free housing, prepared meals, and the absence of required qualifications. Although a small number of newspaper clippings have survived after the war, history professor Jack G. Morrison claims that the advertisements neglected to mention concentration camps. The need for female guards in concentration camps became critical when Joseph Goebbels declared total war against Allied forces in his Sportpalast speech on 18 February 1943. Hitler raised the age limit for women's involvement to 50 and made employment in military equipment production mandatory in his 1943 and 1944 decrees pertaining to both male and female participation in the defense of the Reich. The 1943 order exempted individuals who worked at least 48 hours a week, employers of at least five workers, those working in agriculture or health services, pregnant women, and women with one child under the age of six or two children under the age of 14. Despite these measures, only a small number of women voluntarily sought out such work, resulting in an increase in SS recruiting and labor office conscriptions. ==Acclimatisation and training==
Acclimatisation and training
When the Nazi Party realized that Nazi Germany was losing the war, concentration camp personnel destroyed many records, leaving little information regarding how were trained. Ravensbrück has the most preserved records on training practices, largely due to its role as the primary training camp for women from 1942 to 1945. Upon arrival at Ravensbrück, the recruited and conscripted women were made to sign a slew of documents, including a declaration of confidentiality, a vow not to reprimand prisoners physically or verbally, and an oath of loyalty to Hitler and their superiors. The women were then led to their on-camp quarters. In June 1942, conscripted Anna David provided testimony of her arrival at Ravensbrück: A three-month probationary period follows training, during which each prospective is partnered with an experienced who acts as a mentor and is tasked with overseeing a work detail. In 1939, Hermine Braunsteiner received mentoring from Maria Mandl, who was then the of Ravensbrück. In a postwar testimony, Braunsteiner states that all were taught how to "handle, shoot, and clean their service weapon". ==Membership==
Membership
Due to missing and destroyed documentation pre-liberation, the exact number of women who became between 1938 and 1945 has been disputed. Based on published literature and surviving evidence from numerous concentration camps, it is estimated that 3,500 women served as guards. Historian has further broken down this figure, estimating that 313 women were employed at Ravensbrück as camp personnel in late 1942 from payroll records. By late 1944, the total surpassed 3,000. ==Ranks and uniforms==
Ranks and uniforms
Braunsteiner has claimed that the first group of women assigned to Ravensbrück were only given blue smocks to wear. About a year later, prototype uniforms were supplied. In the first design, a light gray loden cloth jacket and culottes were worn with a blue blouse, black boots, and a light gray side cap. Only after Himmler's visit to Ravensbrück in the spring of 1940 did receive standardized uniforms. Two military gray uniforms, one for winter and one for summer, were provided, together with two pairs of boots, blouses, a cap, and sportswear. Hats and jewelry were prohibited, with the exception of the designated side cap or a straw hat on hot days. Aufseherin means "female overseer". were in charge of conducting the daily roll call, or , allocating inmates to work details, and guarding prisoners. ====== means "commanding officer", though the women with this title were just in charge of overseeing certain work details in a concentration camp. ====== and means "block leader". The terms , meaning "block senior" and blockova were the titles given to prisoners if they, like the appointed , were put in charge of maintaining order within their respective block. ====== means "labor service leader". These women were in charge of assigning work details amongst the prisoners, maintaining efficiency within the concentration camp, and overseeing . ====== means "report leader". coordinated daily schedules and work schedules from an office within the camp and received reports from other guards regarding any incidents, illnesses, and deaths. ====== means "female chief senior overseer". ====== , commonly shortened in literature as , means "camp leader". dealt with affairs concerning the prisoners at the concentration camp, coordinated with the Labor Squad office to appoint work details to prisoners, and worked closely with the subordinate . ==Daily life==
Daily life
Housing were housed at Ravensbrück based on their rank. Since personal and intimate contact with the opposite sex was prohibited, the eight apartments on the campgrounds were all far from the men's quarters. Only young and unmarried guards were placed in these apartments, each of which were two stories with ten bedrooms and four attic rooms. Each building is believed to have held at least 112 women. Private housing arrangements were made for married women and mothers. Despite the policy that male and female camp personnel be separated on camp grounds, it remained a problem, with Maria Mandl and Dorothea Binz engaging in their own liaisons while employed there. Recreation were allowed to leave Ravensbrück only on specific days and with a curfew of 11 P.M., which a number of them ignored. During the spring and summer, the women frequented movie theaters, pubs, and festivals. If they remained in campgrounds, free time was spent sewing or getting their hair done at the prisoner-run salon. The women did not have to do their own laundry, cleaning, or cooking as prisoners were made to do it for them. Some considered this a luxury. Herta Ehlert stated in her postwar testimony: "Well, I want to be quite honest, I had never such a good life as in the beginning at Ravensbrück when I arrived". ==Trials and sentences==
Trials and sentences
Majdanek trials Elsa Ehrich was the first and only woman to face a death sentence in the second Majdanek trial, which took place between 1946 and 1948. Between 1975 and 1981, Alice Orlowski, Hermine Braunsteiner (life imprisonment), Hildegard Lächert (12 years imprisonment), and Hermine Böttcher Brückner (acquitted and released) appeared in court for the third trial. Orlowski died of natural causes during court proceedings, but had first been tried in the 1947 Kraków Auschwitz trial and received a sentence of 15 years in prison. Witnesses identified Braunsteiner based on the War Merit Medal, which she wore every day on her jacket while working at the Majdanek camp. Conversely, Böttcher Brückner was pinned by survivors at the Majdanek trial as being "good" and "humane", in comparison to other , though she had struck the prisoners from time to time. Belsen trials The first Belsen trial took place in 1945, in which Irma Grese, Elisabeth Volkenrath, and Johanna Bormann received a sentence of death by hanging. Herta Bothe, Hilde Lobauer, and Irene Haschke received prison sentences of ten years, while Herta Ehlert received 15 years. Gertrud Heise and Anneliese Kohlmann were only sentenced the following year during the second Belsen trial, receiving 15 years and two years' imprisonment, respectively. Stutthof trials Jenny-Wanda Barkmann, Elisabeth Becker, Wanda Klaff, Ewa Paradies, and Gerda Steinhoff all received a sentence of death by hanging in the first Stuffhof trial, which took place Gdańsk, Poland in 1946. Erna Beilhardt had been the only woman to not receive a death sentence, having only received five years in prison. Kraków Auschwitz trial The 1947 Auschwitz trial in Kraków, Poland sentenced Maria Mandl and Therese Brandl to death by hanging. Luise Danz was sentenced to life in prison. Alice Orlowski and Hildegard Lächert were sentenced to 15 years in prison. ==Aftermath==
Aftermath
Perpetrators postwar One of the few former to tell her story to the public was Hertha Bothe, who had been employed at Ravensbrück in 1942, then at Stutthof and its Bromberg-Ost subcamp, Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen. She was given early release in the mid-1950s from her ten-year prison sentence. In an interview recorded in 1999, Bothe was asked if she regretted being a concentration camp guard. She replied, "Did I make a mistake? No. The mistake was that it was a concentration camp, but I had to go. Otherwise, I would have been put into it myself; that was my mistake". Though Bothe claimed that refusal of the job would have resulted in her own arrest—an explanation given by many former —it was unlikely to have been true, as surviving records have shown that the new recruits refusing to remain as guards in Ravensbrück did not face consequences. Former Ravensbrück Elfriede Rinkel was 84 and living in San Francisco when she was deported to Germany by the U.S. Justice Department in August 2006. She kept her participation in the Nazi Party a secret from her family, friends, and Jewish-German husband of 42 years, Fred. She had emigrated to the United States in 1959 in search of a better life, and had omitted Ravensbrück from the list of residences on her visa application. Rinkel ultimately faced no criminal charges in Germany, as the statute of limitations had expired. The case continued to be examined until her death in 2018. ==See also==
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