Camp Commandant Amon Goeth, infamous from the movie “Schindler’s List”, standing on his balcony preparing to shoot prisoners, 1943
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Camp Commandant Amon Goeth, infamous from the movie “Schindler’s List”, standing on his balcony preparing to shoot prisoners, 1943
Amon Leopold Goeth was camp commander of the Plaszow concentration camp from February 1943 until September 1944. In the photograph, he can be seen standing on his balcony preparing to shoot prisoners.
Amon Leopold Goeth (German: Amon Göth)
the villain of the movie Schindler’s List, was born in 1908 in Vienna,
Austria. At the age of 24, he joined the Nazi party. In 1940, Amon Goeth
became a member of the Waffen-SS.
He was assigned to the SS headquarters for Operation Reinhard in Lublin in German-occupied Poland in 1942.
Operation
Reinhard was the plan to evacuate the Jews from the Ghettos in Poland
to three death camps: Treblinka, Sobibor, and Belzec, all of which were
in eastern Poland.
In February 1943, Goeth received a promotion and
became the third SS officer to hold the job of Commandant of the Plaszow
labor camp.
While he was the Commandant of Plaszow, Goeth was
assigned to supervise the liquidation of the Podgorze ghetto on March
13, 1943, and later the labor camp at Szebnie. The liquidation of the
Podgorze ghetto in Krakow is shown in the movie, Schindler’s List.
On
3 September 1943, in addition to his duties at Plaszow, Goeth was the
officer in charge of the liquidation of another ghetto at Tarnów, which
had been home to 25,000 Jews (about 45 percent of the city’s population)
at the start of World War II. By the time the ghetto was liquidated,
8,000 Jews remained.
They were loaded on a train to Auschwitz
concentration camp, but less than half survived the journey. Most of the
survivors were deemed unsuitable for forced labor and were murdered
immediately upon their arrival at Auschwitz.
According to the
testimony of several witnesses, as recorded in his 1946 indictment for
war crimes, Goeth personally shot between 30 and 90 women and children
during the liquidation of the ghetto.
In
early 1944 the status of the Kraków-Płaszów Labour Camp changed to a
permanent concentration camp under the direct authority of the
SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt.
It was during the earlier period that Goeth committed most of the random and brutal killings for which he became notorious.
Concentration
camps were more closely monitored by the SS than labor camps, so
conditions improved slightly when the designation was changed.
The
camp housed about 2,000 inmates when it opened. At its peak of
operations in 1944, a staff of 636 guards oversaw 25,000 permanent
inmates, and an additional 150,000 people passed through the camp in its
role as a transit camp. Goeth personally murdered prisoners on a daily
basis.
His two dogs, Rolf and Ralf, were trained to tear inmates to
death. He shot people from the window of his office if they appeared to
be moving too slowly or resting in the yard.
He shot to death a
Jewish cook because the soup was too hot. He brutally mistreated his two
maids, Helen Jonas-Rosenzweig and Helen Hirsch, who were in constant
fear for their lives, as were all the inmates.
Commandant Amon Goeth’s dog (Rolf) together with another dog. Arthur Kuhnreich, a Holocaust survivor: “I saw Goeth set his dog on a Jewish prisoner. The dog tore the victim apart. When he did not move anymore, Goeth shot him”.
This is how prisoner Joseph Bau (Prisoner Number 69084) described Goeth:
“A
hideous and terrible monster who reached the height of more than two
meters. He set the fear of death in people, terrified masses, and
accounted for much chattering of teeth.
He
ran the camp through extremes of cruelty that are beyond the
comprehension of a compassionate mind – employing tortures which
dispatched his victims to hell.
For
even the slightest infraction of the rules, he would rain blow after
blow upon the face of the helpless offender and would observe with
satisfaction born of sadism, how the cheek of his victim would swell and
turn blue, how the teeth would fall out and the eyes would fill with
tears.
Anyone
who was being whipped by him was forced to count in a loud voice, each
stroke of the whip and if he made a mistake was forced to start counting
over again.
During
interrogations, which were conducted in his office, he would set his
dog on the accused, who was strung by his legs from a specially placed
hook in the ceiling.
In
the event of an escape from the camp, he would order the entire group
from which the escapee had come, to form a row, would give the order to
count ten, and would, personally kill every tenth person.
At
one morning parade, in the presence of all the prisoners he shot a Jew,
because, as he complained, the man was too tall. Then as the man lay
dying he urinated on him.
Once he caught a boy who was sick with diarrhea and was unable to
restrain himself. Goeth forced him to eat all the excrement and then
shot him”.
Helen Jonas-Rosenzweig, his maid: “As
a survivor, I can tell you that we are all traumatized people. Never
would I, never, believe that any human being would be capable of such
horror, of such atrocities. When we saw him from a distance, everybody
was hiding, in latrines, wherever they could hide. I can’t tell you how
people feared him”.

Camp
Commandant Amon Goeth with his mistress, Majola (Ruth Irene Kalder).
Kalder first met Göth in 1942 or early 1943 when she worked as a
secretary at Oskar Schindler’s enamelware factory in Kraków. She soon
moved in with Göth and the two had an affair. She took Göth’s name
shortly after his death.
Amon Goeth with his daughter, 1943. He married Anny Geiger in a civil SS ceremony on 23 October 1938. The couple had three children, Peter, born in 1939, who died of diphtheria at age 7 months, Werner, born in 1940, and a daughter, Ingeborg, born in 1941.
On
13 September 1944 Goeth was relieved of his position and charged by the
SS with theft of Jewish property (which belonged to the state,
according to Nazi legislation), failure to provide adequate food to the
prisoners under his charge, violation of concentration camp regulations
regarding the treatment and punishment of prisoners, and allowing
unauthorized access to camp personnel records by prisoners and
non-commissioned officers.
After the war, Goeth was extradited to
Poland, where he was tried by the Supreme National Tribunal of Poland in
Kraków between 27 August and 5 September 1946.
Goeth was found
guilty of membership in the Nazi Party (which had been declared a
criminal organization) and personally ordering the imprisonment,
torture, and extermination of individuals and groups of people.
He
was also convicted of homicide, the first such conviction at a war
crimes trial, for “personally killing, maiming and torturing a
substantial, albeit an unidentified number of people”.
During his trial, Goeth displayed provocative indifference. He accepted responsibility for what happened at Plaszow.
He
had been given authority and permission to do everything he had done,
he said, and was only carrying out orders and instructions received from
his superiors.
He also contended that the penalties he was
inflicting upon the inmates including putting them to death, were within
his disciplinary jurisdiction as commandant of the camp, and were in
accordance with the German regulations in force.
Goth was sentenced
to death and was hanged on 13 September 1946 at the Montelupich Prison
in Kraków, not far from the site of the Plaszów camp.
Goeth’s last words were “Heil Hitler”. His remains were cremated and the ashes were scattered in the Vistula River.
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