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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Jäger Report (6)

The Jäger Report (1)

The Jäger Report (2)

The Jäger Report (3)

The Jäger Report (4)

The Jäger Report (5)

The Jäger Report (7)

The Jäger Report (8)

The present blog is about the massacre by Einsatzkommando 3 of Jews deported to Kaunas (Kowno) in November 1941. Like in the previous blogs of this series, the information presented in this blog is mostly based on German historian Wolfram Wette’s biography of Karl Jäger (Wolfram Wette, Karl Jäger. Mörder der litauischen Juden, S. Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2011, hereinafter "Wette, Jäger").




On 25 and 29 November 1941 about 5,000 German, Austrian and Czechoslovakian Jews were shot in Kaunas' Fort IX. These executions are mentioned as follows on page 5 of the Jäger Report:
Nov. 25, 41 Kauen - F. IX 1159 [Jews] 1600 [Jewesses] 175 [Jewish children] (evacuees from Berlin, Munich and Frankfurt am Main) 2,934
Nov. 29, 41 " " 693 " 1155 " 152 " (evacuees from Vienna and Breslau) 2,000

These deportees had arrived on the following trains:

Date_Place of departure_number of persons
17.11.1941_Berlin_1,006
20. 11.1941_Munich_999
22.11.1941_Frankfurt/Main_988
23.11.1941_Vienna_998
25.11.1941_Breslau_1005

The deportees had been told that they would be "resettled" to Eastern Europe. Neither they nor the German railway men and policemen accompanying the transports had any idea of the fate awaiting the deportees at the place of arrival.

Hitler had in the first half of September 1941 authorized the deportation of German Jews to the occupied Soviet territories. Pursuant to this authorization a total of 19,836 Jews had been transported in October 1941 to the city of Łódź in the Polish territories annexed to the German Reich, where most of them either succumbed to the precarious living conditions or were transported to the Chełmno extermination camp. It was furthermore planned to transport about 50,000 Jews to Riga and Minsk. The deportation trains that arrived at Kaunas were originally meant to go to Riga. However, as the local ghetto were overfilled, some of the transports were directed to Kaunas on short notice.

As far as known Jäger had no instructions from Berlin or from his direct superior Stahlecker about what to do with the deportees. He must therefore have taken the decision to shoot them on his own initiative. This decision doesn’t seem to have got him into trouble, unlike the SS and Police Commander of Riga, Friedrich Jeckeln, who had murdered the occupants of a transport arriving from Berlin on 30 November 1941 along with about 24,000 Latvian Jews on 30 November and 8/9 December 1941 in the Rumbula Forest, in ignorance of an instruction of Himmler's (amply discussed in the course of the Irving-Lipstadt trial) whereby this transport was not to be liquidated ("Judentransport aus Berlin keine Liquidierung", according to a note of Himmler's about a telephone conversation with Heydrich). Jeckeln was reprimanded for "Eigenmächtigkeiten" (arbitrary actions) and "Zuwiderhandlung" (acting against orders) and had to present himself in Berlin for this purpose. The reason for the rebuke was the insistence of civilian and Wehrmacht authorities that Jews be kept alive as laborers for the armament industry. (Wette, Jäger, p. 127).

As there were no survivors from among the deportees processed by Jäger on 25 and 29 November 1941, information about their fate comes from local Jews of the Kaunas ghetto, from Lithuanian inmates who managed to escape from Fort IX, and from identification documents found in the deportees’ luggage, which had been stamped "evacuated to Riga" or "evacuated to the east". Dr. Elchanan Elkes, the president of the Kaunas Ghetto's Jewish council, described how he saw columns of Jews passing by the ghetto, who were obviously shouting where they were coming from (Wette, Jäger, pp. 127-128, quoting after Wolfgang Scheffler, "Massenmord in Kowno", p. 84, in: Scheffler/Schulle, Buch der Erinnerung; my translation):
Two hours ago there passed in front of our eyes, before the windows of our houses, many thousand Jews from southern Germany and Vienna who were taken with their luggage to Fort IX, which was some kilometers away from us. There they were killed with extreme cruelty. We later learned that they had been deceived. They had been told that they would be accommodated in the Kowno ghetto.

A Jewish child from Munich by the name of Alfred Koppel managed to emigrate from Germany to the United States in the spring of 1941 with the help of a children's assistance organization. His family was murdered in Kaunas. Koppel later collected the scattered reports about the murder of the Jews from the Munich area, and summarized them as follows (Wette, Jäger, page 128, quoting Al Koppel, Zuerst an der Reihe. Das Schicksal meiner Familie. Munich City Archive; my translation):
Upon arrival at Kaunas the crowd of people coming from the station was chased up a hill, a long, long way on foot to one of the forts on the hill. […] Finally the one thousand people of the Munich transport, having reached the menacing Fort IX, were chased with blows and under threats into the cells in the fort’s cellars. […] They languished for three days in these horrible cells in the fort's cellars. Then, on 25 November 1941, the prisoners were taken in groups of 50 to a pit in the area of Fort IX. My relatives were in one of these groups. […] When they arrived at the pit mother and Günther all of a sudden realized the whole dimension of the horror awaiting them. They saw the Sonderkommando squatting behind machine guns, ready to shoot them.[…]

An eyewitness by the name of Kulisch provided the following account of the massacre on 25 November 1941 (Wette, Jäger, p. 128, quoting from Dina Porat, "The Legend of the Struggle of Jews from the Third Reich in the Ninth Fort near Kowno, 1941-1942.", p. 382. In: Tel Aviv Yearbook for German History 20 (1991); my translation):
The Gestapo men and the Lithuanians ordered the people to line up in a row, in groups of 80 persons, and seemingly ordered morning calisthenics in the fort's yard. Then they made the people run in the direction of the pits. At the pits they beat the victims as soon as they tried to run away. Most victims were shot after they had fallen into the pits. The shots were fired from machine guns set up on the wooded hill by the graves. Those who did not run or ran in another direction were shot on site by those Lithuanians and Germans who had earlier grouped them together.

A German policeman who had himself taken part in the executions shortly thereafter told Breslau Cardinal Adolf Bertram which police units had carried out this massacre. Bertram recorded the following (Wette, Jäger, page 129, quoting after Scheffler, "Massenmord in Kowno", p. 84; my translation):
The execution detachment was made up of members of the SS and the Security Police and local Lithuanians. German soldiers had not taken part in the shootings in Kowno. All were clad in Lithuanian uniforms. The shootings had even been filmed. These films are supposed to prove that not the Germans but the Lithuanians had shot the Jews.

Whereas most Lithuanian Jews murdered by Einsatzkommando 3 died anonymously, the German Federal Archives managed to establish the names of many German Jews murdered at Kaunas. The online version of the memorial book Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945 (Victims of the Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Rule of Violence in Germany 1933-1945) includes a search engine in which names of German citizens of Jewish faith or descent who fell victim to Nazi persecution can be found according to various criteria (last name, first name, maiden name, date of birth, domicile, place of imprisonment, place of expulsion, country of emigration, place of deportation, country of emigration, place of death, departure place of deportation). A search for place of death (Todesort) "Kowno" turned up 3,782 names in alphabetic order at the time this article was first written; at the time of this update (see note at the end of this article) the number for place of death "Kowno" is 3,771, and the number for place of deportation (Deportationsort) "Kowno" is 4,000, while checking both place of deportation and place of death yields 4,002 results. The slight difference in place of death records between October 2012 and now (April 2018) may also be related to the fact that there are several names for the city. For "Kauen", checking place of death yields 3,768 names, checking place of deportation yields 4,000 names and checking both fields yields the same number. For each name the database contains date and place of birth, domicile, deportation place of departure and destination, deportation date of departure and date and place of death.Ernst Abeles, for instance, was born on 21 Juni 1895 in Chyse (German Chiesch) / Zlutice / Bohemia (present-day Czech Republic). He lived in Munich. On 20 November 1941 he was deported from Munich to Kowno, where he died at Fort IX on 25 November 1941.

The 3,782 names from the aforementioned previous search have been copied onto the HC Reference Library’s thread German Jews killed at Kaunas Fort IX.

Next part:
The Jäger Report (7)

[Update, 25.04.2018: Broken links were replaced with working links to the same sources or sources about the same subject. Several typos were corrected. A note regarding the current records of the German Federal Archives' memorial database about the German Jews deported to and killed in Kaunas ("Kowno" or "Kauen") was added.]

2 comments:

  1. Robert Muehlenkamp, I am very impressed by your documentation on the massacres of Jews in Lithuania. Unlike other revisionists, I don't see any reason to question the authenticity of this report. I do, however, have one small question regarding this quote "Jäger had no instructions from". Now correct if I am wrong, but how does it prove that there was a plan to exterminate the Jews overall. You have admitted essentially that he did it without any order, is that right? Correct me if I am wrong.

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  2. YThe "no instructions" part refers to one specific massacre, that of Jewish deportees from Germany and the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia. At the time when Jäger’s EK3 killed these people, it had already been decided to wipe out the Jews in the occupied Soviet territories. However, a general decision on what to do with the Jews elsewhere in Europe, especially German Jews, had not yet been taken. The "go ahead" for that was given by Hitler only on 12 December 1941, according to German historian Christian Gerlach. And even after that, Jews belonging to "our cultural sphere" were temporarily spared. See Christopher Browning, An Insidious Evil.

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