Former Auschwitz guard describes camp in chilling detail

 <http://www.ap.org/> DAVID RISING Apr 22nd 2015 1:41PM 

 
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LUENEBURG, Germany (AP) -- A former SS sergeant described in chilling detail 
Wednesday how cattle cars full of Jews were brought to the Auschwitz death 
camp, the people stripped of their belongings and then most led directly into 
gas chambers. 

Oskar Groening is being tried on 300,000 counts of accessory to murder, related 
to a period between May and July 1944 when around 425,000 Jews from Hungary 
were brought to the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex in Nazi-occupied Poland and most 
immediately gassed to death.

*        

Former SS guard Oskar Groening steps out of a car as he arrives at the back 
entrance of the court hall prior to a trail against him in Lueneburg, northern 
Germany, Tuesday, April 21, 2015. Groening, 93, is accused of helping to 
operate the death camp Auschwitz in Nazi-occupied Poland between May and June 
1944, when some 425,000 Jews from Hungary were brought there and at least 
300,000 were almost immediately gassed to death. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

During that period, so many trains were arriving that often two would have to 
wait with closed doors as the first was "processed," Groening testified at the 
Lueneburg state court.

Though he was more regularly assigned to the camp's Auschwitz I section, he 
said he guarded the Birkenau camp three times, including one busy 24-hour 
shift. The main gas chambers were located at Birkenau.

"The capacity of the gas chambers and the capacity of the crematoria were quite 
limited. Someone said that 5,000 people were processed in 24 hours but I didn't 
verify this. I didn't know," he said. "For the sake of order we waited until 
train 1 was entirely processed and finished."

Auschwitz survivors describe their arrival as chaotic, with Nazi guards yelling 
orders, dogs barking and families being ripped apart.

But Groening, 93, maintained the opposite, saying "it was very orderly and not 
as strenuous" on the ramp at Birkenau.

"The process was the same as Auschwitz I. The only difference was that there 
were no trucks," he said during the second day of his trial. "They all walked - 
some in one direction some, in another direction ... to where the crematoria 
and gas chambers were."

No pleas are entered in the German system and Groening said as his trial opened 
Tuesday that he considers himself "morally guilty," but it was up to the court 
to decide if he was legally guilty. He faces between three and 15 years in 
prison if convicted in the trial, which is scheduled through July.

Eva Kor, 81, was one of the Jews who arrived at Auschwitz in 1944. Though she 
doesn't remember Groening personally, she said she can't forget the scene.

"Everything was going very fast. Yelling, crying, pushing; even dogs were 
barking. I had never experienced anything that fast or that crazy in my entire 
life," she told The Associated Press before addressing the court.

Her two older sisters and parents were taken directly to the gas chambers, 
while she and her twin sister, both 10 at the time, were ripped away from their 
mother to be used as human guinea pigs for notorious camp Dr. Josef Mengele's 
experiments.

"All I remember is her arms stretched out in despair as she was pulled away," 
Kor remembered. "I never even got to say goodbye."

Kor, who now lives in Indiana, is one of more than 60 Auschwitz survivors and 
their families from the U.S., Canada, Israel and elsewhere who have joined the 
trial as co-plaintiffs as allowed under German law.

Thomas Walther, who represents many co-plaintiffs, said he and his clients were 
happy Groening agreed to testify, but suspected he was withholding many details.

"There is an ocean of truth, but with many islands of lies," he said.

Kor, the first co-plaintiff to address the court, described her experience 
Wednesday and asked Groening whether he knew Mengele or details about files he 
kept in hopes of learning more about what diseases she and her sister, who both 
survived the camp, were injected with.

Groening showed no reaction to Kor's statement and his attorney, Hans 
Holtermann, said his client would try to answer what questions he could, but he 
didn't believe that Groening knew Mengele.

Groening guarded prisoners' baggage on the ramps, but his main task was to 
collect and tally money stolen from the new arrivals and then send it to Berlin 
- a job for which the German press has dubbed him the "Accountant of Auschwitz."

While he previously testified he was "horrified" by individual atrocities he 
witnessed, he suggested Wednesday his daily thoughts were more pedestrian, like 
when the guards heard a train loaded with Hungarian Jews would be arriving.

"If this is Hungary, they have bacon on board," he remembered thinking.

Though he was investigated twice before and no charges were brought, Groening 
was indicted under a new line of German legal reasoning that anyone who helped 
a death camp function can be accused of being an accessory to murder without 
evidence of participation in a specific crime. Groening, who worked for an 
insurance company after the war, has testified as a witness in other Nazi 
trials.

Outside court, Kor said she wished Groening would use the trial to try and 
dissuade "misguided young people" today from becoming neo-Nazis but she was 
still satisfied with his testimony.

"I'm going to take whatever confession he gives - it's better than no 
confession," she told reporters. "Maybe this is the best thing he has ever done 
in his life. Isn't that sad?"

 

 

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