Hitler’s monsters:

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[h=1]Hitler’s monsters: Faces of Nazi guards who helped oversee the death of more than a million Jews at Auschwitz revealed as Poland publishes details of 10,000 of Adolf’s men[/h]
  • Poland's Institute of National Remembrance has published details of 9,686 guards who worked at Auschwitz
  • Nearly all of them are German and the INR is seeking to dispel claims that Auschwitz was staffed by Poles
  • Auschwitz-Birkenau held Polish prisoners from 1940 but 1.1 million Jews died there between 1942 and 1945
By CHRIS SUMMERS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 21:27, 31 January 2017 | UPDATED: 23:48, 31 January 2017
 

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The names of almost 10,000 Nazi SS commanders and guards who helped in the extermination of more than a million Jews at Auschwitz have been posted online for the first time.
The huge searchable database, which includes hundreds of photographs, has been uploaded by Poland's Institute of National Remembrance (INR) in an attempt to dispel false claims that many of the guards were Polish.
The list of 9,686 names are predominantly German and their pre-war occupations are listed as farmers, butchers, teachers, cobblers and all manner of jobs.
 

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Fritz Taddiken (pictured, left) was promoted to Unterscharführer (Junior Squad Leader) in the SS in 1944. Four years later he was convicted of war crimes by a court in Krakow. Stormtrooper Walter Salawey (centre) was dealt with by the same court. Horst Panitzsch (right) was a former member of the Hitler Youth, who transferred to the SS from the Wehrmacht in 1944

Hitler's forces invaded Poland in 1939 and the following year he ordered the construction of Auschwitz-Birkenau in the Polish countryside.
It was originally used to house Polish political prisoners but was later handed over to the infamous SS and between 1942 and 1945 around 1.1 million Jews died there, either in the gas chambers or through starvation or beatings.
INR chief Jaroslaw Szarek told the BBC the online archive was 'a tool to fight lies' and he added: 'We're not expressing an opinion, we're presenting the cold, hard facts.'
 

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After the war the camp's former commandant, Arthur Liebehenschel, and 33 other senior officers went on trial in nearby Krakow. Most were executed by hanging.
But most of the SS guards - including 200 women - spent time in Polish or Russian prisoner-of-war camps but were released in the 1950s and went back to spend the rest of their life in obscurity in Germany.
In 1963 more than 20 middle- to lower-ranking SS officers were put on trial for crimes against humanity in Frankfurt, West Germany. Some, like Wilhelm Boger, the 'Tiger of Auschwitz', were jailed for life and died in prison, but many, like camp dentist Willi Schatz, were acquitted and released.


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Detlef Nebbe (left) had been in the SS since 1933 and was promoted to the highest rank, Hauptscharführer, by war's end. A committed Nazi, he would have been one of those giving orders. Gottfried Paggen (left), born in Mönchengladbach, was 47 when the war ended, making him one of the oldest SS guards. Robert Nagy (right) is one of the minority of non-German SS guards, being an ethnic Hungarian from what was then Yugoslavia
 

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Johannes Maranca (left) had served in the German Army in the First World War and worked as a plumber and roofer before being called up again, at the age of 53, in 1944. Richard Lamb (centre) was a coal miner before the war, while Willi Heindorf (right) was awarded a medal, the Kriegsverdienstkreuz (War Merit Cross) in 1943
 

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Before the war Johannnes Gunesch (left) was an ethnic German farmer in Romania, while Helmut Grundschok (centre) was an apprentice plumber, who joined the SS in 1939 and rose rapidly through the ranks. He was awarded two medals during the war, one of which was after he was wounded. Little is known about baby-faced Josef Hefner (right), except he was Croatian
 

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Martin Flohr (left) was a locksmith before the war in his native Croatia. Hans Fischer (centre), who had been a farmer, rose to the rank of corporal by 1944. Ernst Fischer (right) had been a pharmacist in the Sudetenland, the ethnically German area of Czechoslovakia that Hitler demanded in 1938, leading to Neville Chamberlain's famous appeasement at Munich
 

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Samuel Exler (left) was a farmer who lived close to the border with Austria and joined the Hungarian Army at the outbreak of the war but later transferred to the SS. Hungary, under its dictator Miklós Horthy, was an ally of Nazi Germany in the Second World War. Kolomann Bistritz (centre) was also from Hungary. Felix Becker (right) was another farmer, from Croatia
 

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Albin Ackermann (left) was a waiter before the war but joined the Wehrmacht (German Army) in 1941, before transferring to the SS. Johannes Badstubner (centre) was a coal miner from Planitz, near Zwickau in eastern Germany. Hans Ansorg (right) had worked in a bank before the war but enthusiastically joined the SS in 1933 and rose to the rank of Oberscharführer (Senior Squad Leader)
 

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Unimaginable evil on a mass scale.

I just finished watching "Woman In Gold" on Showtime onDemand. Good movie about a woman fighting the Austrian government to get her family's art back from the Austrian government and the Nazis who stole it.
 

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“Hitler didn’t want to exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel the Jews,”

“And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said, ‘If you expel them, they’ll all come here.’

“’So what should I do with them?’” said Hitler asked the mufti, who responded: “Burn them.”

-- PM Benjamin Netanyahu





 

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Hitler's phone, "which sent millions to their deaths," to be sold at auction

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London (CNN)Adolf Hitler's telephone, recovered from the Fuhrerbunker and kept in a box at an English country house since 1945, will be sold at auction in the United States later this month.
The phone was presented to Hitler by the Wehrmacht and was used by the Nazi leader to issue most of his commands during the last two years of World War II, according to a description in the catalog for Alexander Historical Auctions in Maryland.
Made by Siemens as a black Bakelite phone, it was later painted red and engraved with Hitler's name and a swastika, the catalog says.
The auction house describes the telephone as "Hitler's mobile device of destruction" and called it "arguably the most destructive 'weapon' of all time, which sent millions to their deaths around the world."
British officer Ralph Rayner recovered the phone from Hitler's bunker while visiting Berlin on the orders of Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery just a few days after the end of the war, according to Rayner's personal account and shipping documents from that time period, according to the auction house.
His son Ranulf Rayner, 82, inherited the phone after his father's death in 1977. "My father didn't see it as a relic of Hitler's glory days, more a battered remnant of his defeat, a sort of war trophy," he told CNN. "He never thought it would become an important artifact."
Sent to the shattered German capital to establish contact with the Russian forces who had captured the city, Ralph Rayner was probably the very first non-Soviet victor to enter Hitler's bunker.

"He could still smell burning flesh," Ranulf Rayner said, recalling his father's description of the underground shelter where Hitler spent his final days. In his words, it was a "dreadful hellhole."
First offered the black telephone found in the room of Eva Braun, Hitler's bride, Ralph Rayner instead chose the red phone next to Hitler's bed. "He told the Russians that red was his favorite color," Ranulf Rayner said, "which the Russians rather liked."
In a letter to his wife Elizabeth on May 18, 1945, Ralph Rayner wrote of the "utter horror" he witnessed in Berlin, but did not mention the remarkable souvenir he had in his possession.
If British soldiers were caught looting from the Germans, Ranulf Rayner explained, they would face a court martial.
Ralph Rayner returned to Devon in western England with both the phone and a porcelain model of an Alsatian, also taken from the bunker, hidden in his suitcase.
The china dog, made by slave laborers at Dachau concentration camp and probably presented to Hitler by Heinrich Himmler, SS chief and architect of the Final Solution, is also due to be auctioned.
"It's a pretty nasty thing, just as sinister as the phone," said Ranulf Rayner.
He hopes these objects will be bought by a museum, rather than a private collector. "I don't want them to be hidden again," he said. "I want them to remind the world of the horrors of war."
The auction house estimates the phone will be sold for $200,000-$300,000 and the Alsatian figure for $25,000-$35,000.
 

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Hitler's name is engraved on the back of the phone, along with an eagle and swastika.

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