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The Stone Crusher

Page 49

by Jeremy Dronfield


  1. Mauthausen arrivals list, February 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1307365, ITS. Fritz jumped from the train on January 26, 1945 (per Gustav’s diary), but was not entered on the records at Mauthausen until February 15, 1945 (Mauthausen transport list, AMM‑Y‑50‑03‑16, PGM)—eleven days later than would be indicated by his own reckoning of his time in custody in St. Pölten. Gustav’s record of the escape date agrees (give or take one day) with the Mauthausen record, which indicates that Fritz’s transfer from Auschwitz officially took place on January 25 (Mauthausen prisoner record card, AMM‑Y‑Karteikarten, PGM). There is thus a gap of twenty‑

  one days between Fritz’s official arrival at Mauthausen and his actual arrival.

  2. Prisoner record card AMM‑Y‑Karteikarten, PGM; Mauthausen arrivals list, Febru‑

  ary 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1307365, ITS. Mauthausen received no documentation from Auschwitz about the transport of prisoners (for reasons explained later in the chap‑

  ter); hence the fact that Fritz was able to pass himself off as Aryan.

  3. The liberation of Auschwitz attracted little attention in the international press at the time, despite Soviet attempts to publicize it (they were keen to propagandize it as an example of the inevitable end‑point of capitalism). In the eyes of the press it was a rerun of the previous summer’s revelations about Majdanek, and the whole 294265XGB_STONE_CS6_PC.indd 368

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  affair was overshadowed by coverage of the climactic Yalta conference of Febru‑

  ary 4–11. On February 16 (the day after Fritz Kleinmann entered Mauthausen) the first Western Allied serviceman to see inside Auschwitz after its liberation, Captain Robert M. Trimble of USAAF Eastern Command, was given a guided tour of Birkenau by Soviet officers (Trimble and Dronfield, Beyond the Call, p. 63ff.).

  4. Prisoner record card AMM‑Y‑Karteikarten, PGM; Mauthausen arrivals list, Febru‑

  ary 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1307365, ITS.

  5. Testimony of local priest Josef Radgeb, quoted in museum guide at www

  .mauthausen‑memorial.org/en/Visit/Virtual‑Tour#map||23 (retrieved July 10, 2017).

  6. Czech, Auschwitz Chronicle, p. 797.

  7. According to an account cited in Czech, Auschwitz Chronicles, p. 797n, the trans‑

  port reached Nordhausen on January 28. This seems highly unlikely, since it had arrived at Mauthausen on January 26 and was kept a whole day there. Gustav Kleinmann gives February 4 as the date, and in this part of his diary his dates are all accurate.

  8. The figure of 766 comes from Gustav’s diary; the other figures are from Czech, Auschwitz Chronicle, p. 797n.

  9. Michael J. Neufeld in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, pp. 966–71.

  10. Mittelbau‑Dora prisoner list, p. 434, 1.1.27.1/2536866, ITS.

  11. Michael J. Neufeld in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, pp. 979–81.

  12. According to Neufeld (in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, p. 980), this extremely early start was practiced during the summer months, but Gustav Kleinmann’s diary states that it was the case in February to March 1945.

  13. A small camp had been established by this time at Woffleben (camp B‑12) to save the journey time for workers from Ellrich (Michael J. Neufeld in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, p. 981); however, Gustav and most of the other prisoners were not among those transferred here, and they continued having to make the journey to and from the site each day.

  14. Michael J. Neufeld in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, pp. 969, 980. In his diary, Gustav gives Brinkmann’s first name as Hans; other sources give it as Otto.

  15. Langbein, Against All Hope, pp. 374–5.

  16. An alternative theory is that the SS intended to use the volunteers as decoys, to draw enemy fire while the real SS made their escape (Le Chêne, Mauthausen, p. 155).

  17. Fritz makes no mention of this episode in either his written memoir or his 1997

  interview and does not appear to have told his family about it after the war.

  However, he did talk about it in a 1976 interview with fellow Austrian Auschwitz survivor and resistance member Hermann Langbein (Langbein, Against All Hope, p. 374).

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  18. Prisoner record card AMM‑Y‑Karteikarten, PGM; Gusen II transfer list, March 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1310718; Mauthausen transfer list, March 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1280723; Gusen II prisoner register, p. 82, 1.1.26.1/1307473, ITS. Langbein’s sources ( Against All Hope, p. 384) indicate that the plan to infiltrate the SS units occurred in “mid‑

  March” 1945, but the episode must have been in early March, before Fritz’s transfer to Gusen on March 15.

  19. Robert G. Waite in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, pp. 919–21.

  20. Gusen II transfer list, March 15, 1945, 1.1.26.1/1310718, ITS; Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, pp. 144, 172. In his memoir ( Doch der Hund, p. 170), which is very sketchy at this point, Fritz erroneously identifies the aircraft as Me 109.

  21. Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, pp. 198, 210–1.

  22. Quoted in Dobosiewicz, Mauthausen-Gusen: obóz zagłady, p. 384.

  23. Dobosiewicz, Mauthausen-Gusen: obóz zagłady, p. 386.

  24. Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, p. 134ff.

  25. Ibid., p. 219ff.

  Chapter 20: The End of Days

  1. Gustav gives no further details about Erich or his sources of food; presumably, as with Fritz Kleinmann’s system of contacts in the Buna Werke, it came from civilians employed in armament production in the tunnel complex.

  2. Michael J. Neufeld in Megargee, USHMM Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, p. 980.

  3. Ibid., p. 970.

  4. Ibid., p. 980.

  5. In his diary, Gustav writes that this stopover was at Schneverdingen, a town to the north of Munster. This seems unlikely, since it would have necessitated immedi‑

  ately doubling back south to the ultimate destination, which was Bergen‑Belsen.

  However, given the chaotic nature of concentration camp evacuations at this time, that would not be out of the question.

  6. David Cesarani, “A Brief History of Bergen‑Belsen” in Bardgett and Cesarani, Belsen 1945, pp. 19–20.

  7. Sington, Belsen Uncovered, pp. 14, 18, 28; Phillips, Trial, p. 195.

  8. Langbein, People, p. 406.

  9. Josef Rosenhaft, quoted in Sington, Belsen Uncovered, pp. 180–1; testimony of Harold le Druillenec in Phillips, Trial, p. 62.

  10. Quoted in Sington, Belsen Uncovered, p. 182.

  11. An American air raid on Celle on April 8 killed many concentration camp prisoners en route to Belsen; there followed a massacre of prisoners by local SS and towns‑

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  witnessed, which was on the night of April 10/11. What he saw must have been fighting in the vicinity of Celle, which was liberated by British forces on April 12.

  12. Testimony of Captain Derrick A. Sington in Phillips, Trial, pp. 47–53; Sington, Belsen Uncovered, pp. 11–3.

  13. Testimony of Captain Derrick A. Sington in Phillips, Trial, pp. 47, 51; Sington, Belsen Uncovered, pp. 14–5.

  14. Sington, Belsen Uncovered, p. 16.

  15. Ibid., p. 18.

  16. Ibid., p. 187.

  17. The original message itself has not survived, but Edith did receive it. It told her little other than that her father was alive and in block 83 of Bergen‑Belsen (Sam‑

  uel Barnet, letter to Leverett Saltonstall, June 1, 1945, War Refugee Board 0558

  Folder 7: Requests for Specific Aid, FDR).

  18. Molly Silva Jones in “Eyewitness Accounts” in Bardgett and Cesarani,
Belsen 1945, p. 57.

  19. Major Dick Williams, “The First Day in the Camp” in Bardgett and Cesarani, Belsen 1945, p. 30.

  20. Ben Shepard, “The Medical Relief Effort at Belsen” in Bardgett and Cesarani, Belsen 1945, p. 39.

  21. Molly Silva Jones in “Eyewitness Accounts” in Bardgett and Cesarani, Belsen 1945, p. 55.

  22. Gerald Raperport in “Eyewitness Accounts” in Bardgett and Cesarani, Belsen 1945, pp. 58–9.

  23. Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, p. 219ff; Dobosiewicz, Mauthausen- Gusen: obóz zagłady, p. 387.

  24. It is unclear how many prisoners were herded into the Kellerbau tunnels, partly because of widely varying figures for the number of prisoners in the Mauthausen complex at the time. The total prisoner population of Mauthausen and Gusen has been given variously as 21,000 (Robert G. Waite in Megargee, USHMM

  Encyclopedia, vol. 1B, p. 902), 40,000 (Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, p. 203), and 63,798 (Le Chêne, Mauthausen, pp. 169–70). Fur‑

  thermore, not all went to the tunnels—such as the seven hundred who were too sick to be moved.

  25. Fritz Kleinmann in Doch der Hund, p. 171; Langbein, Against All Hope, p. 374; Le Chêne, Mauthausen, p. 165.

  26. Krisztián Ungváry, “The Hungarian Theatre of War” in Frieser, Eastern Front, pp. 950–4.

  27. Le Chêne, Mauthausen, pp. 163–4.

  28. George Dyer, quoted in Le Chêne, Mauthausen, p. 165.

  29. Haunschmied et al., St Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen, p. 226.

  30. Quoted in Langbein, Against All Hope, p. 82.

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  31. In his diary, Gustav erroneously identifies this place as Ostenholz, a village to the southwest of Bergen‑Belsen, well away from the route he and Josef Berger took, which did not have a POW camp near it.

  Chapter 21: The Long Way Home

  1. Samuel Barnet, letter to Leverett Saltonstall, June 1, 1945, War Refugee Board 0558 Folder 7: Requests for Specific Aid, FDR.

  2. O’Dwyer, letter to Samuel Barnet, June 9, 1945, War Refugee Board 0558 Folder 7: Requests for Specific Aid, FDR.

  3. Fritz does not identify the hospital, but it must have been the 107th EH, which established a facility at Regensburg on April 30, 1945, and remained there until May 20 (www.med‑dept.com/unit‑histories/107th‑evacuation‑hospital; retrieved July 16, 2017). No other American military hospital units have been identified in Regensburg at that time.

  4. In later years, Fritz recorded the names and fates of fifty‑five Jewish and non‑Jewish children who had been playmates in the Karmelitermarkt before 1938 ( Doch der Hund, p. 179). Of the twenty‑five Jews, five, including Fritz himself, survived the camps, and eight, including Kurt and Edith Kleinmann, either emigrated or hid.

  Twelve were murdered in the concentration camps. Of the thirty non‑Jewish children, nineteen stayed in or around Vienna throughout the war, and eleven served in the Wehrmacht during the war; of these, only three survived.

  5. Gustav had apparently taken up smoking since leaving Auschwitz; Fritz mentions that his father had no use for his bonus coupons because he neither smoked nor wished to use the brothel.

  6. Gustav gives the women’s names as Elly Offermann and Gerti Zimmermann, but no further information about them. He doesn’t name any of his other traveling companions, except for one, identified only in one place as “G.”

  7. Gustav names one of them as Fritz Heymann; this may be a mistaken reference to Stefan Heymann. There was a Fritz Heymann in Monowitz, but neither Fritz nor Gustav Kleinmann ever refer to him in their writings.

  8. Gustav identifies this man only as “G.”

  Epilogue: Jewish Blood

  1. Naturalization records for Richard and Edith Patten, May 14, 1954: Connecticut District Court Naturalization Indexes, 1851‑1992: NARA microfilm publication M2081.

  2. On their testimony for the Frankfurt Auschwitz trials given in 1963, Gustav gave his religion as “Mosaic” (Jewish) and Fritz as “no religious affiliation” (Abt 461

  Nr 37638/84/15904–6; Abt 461 Nr 37638/83/15661–3, FTD).

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  3. Statistics given in Gold, Geschichte der Juden, pp. 133–4.

  4. Israelitische Kultusgemeinde list of surviving Jews in Vienna, 1946, 3.1.1.3/78805412, ITS. This document gives Gustav’s address as Im Werd 9 (Olly’s building) and Fritz’s as Im Werd 11 (their old home) but doesn’t give apartment numbers.

  5. Displaced person registration card for Gustav Kleinmann, file 1655, AJJ.

  6. Pendas, Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, pp. 101–2.

  7. Trials of Burger et al. and Mulka et al., Frankfurt, 1963; testimony of Gustav Klein‑

  mann (Abt 461 Nr 37638/84/15904–6, FTD) and Fritz Kleinmann (Abt 461 Nr 37638/83/15661–3, FTD). Gustav was interviewed mainly about the death march and camp senior Jupp Windeck; Fritz’s statement is mostly concerned with Win‑

  deck and SS‑Sergeant Bernhard Rakers.

  8. Along with his father’s diary and commentaries by Reinhold Gärtner, Fritz’s memoir was included in the book Doch der Hund will nicht krepieren (Innsbruck University Press, 1995, 2012).

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  I n d e x

  able‑bodied (categorization), 26–27, 29

  Death Block, 173

  Abraham (SS‑Sergeant), 115, 126

  evacuation, 261

  Acker (civilian worker), 239

  resistance, 205–206

  Action 14f13, 124–125

  tattoos, 172–173

  Action 14f14, 126–128

  transfer from Buchenwald, 156–158

  air raids, 238, 240, 249–250, 257–259

  work at, 174–177

  Aleksiak, Johann, 166, 167

  during WWI, 162, 165, 174

  Ansbacher, Walter, 242

  Auschwitz II‑Birkenau concentration

  Anschluss, 15–17, 30

  camp

  anti‑Semitism

  bombing of, 252

  Austria, 20–21, 168

  evacuation, 269

  of friends and neighbours, 18, 25,

  as killing machine, 173, 234–236

  38, 74, 321

  theft and rape at, 184

  Hungarian army, 297

  Auschwitz III–Monowitz concentra‑

  Hungary, 234

  tion camp

  immigration policies of West,

  as administrative hub, 226

  31–32, 71, 99–100, 120

  air raids, 238, 257–258

  Polish orderlies in Auschwitz,

  barbering, 201

  173–174

  barrack conditions, 180, 184

  Soviet Union, 164

  black market, 201

  as systematized, 22

  block 7, 194–195

  Vienna, 8, 16–17, 18, 21, 319–320

  bonus coupons, 232, 255

  Arlt (SS‑Lieutenant), 147–149

  brothel, 232–233

  Arndt, Rudi, 98

  “Canada,” 227

  “asocial” prisoners, 195

  coat making, 244–245

  Aumeier, Hans, 172, 173, 191

  contraband, 244

  Auschwitz I concentration camp

  dentist, 201

  air raids, 252

  description of, 193–194

  arrival at, 170–177

  disease, 200

  375

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  376 I n d e x

  escape, 246–248, 252

  Austrian Sturmabteilung (SA), 11,

  evacuation, 261–263
/>   14–16, 18–19, 21, 23, 24, 35,

  exchange of badges, 191–192

  186–187

  families at, 236

  Avoda summer camp, 122

  feet, 200–201

  hangings in, 248–249

  Baer, Richard, 288

  hospital, 210, 212, 261–262

  ballistic missiles, 287

  informers, 220–221

  Barnet, David, 113, 122

  leaving, 1

  Barnet, Philip, 113, 122

  life expectancy at, 202

  Barnet, Samuel, 111–113, 121–122,

  liquidation of prisoners, 251

  131, 318

  location of, 178–179

  Battle Group Auschwitz, 205–206

  messages carriers, 240–241 ( see also

  Battle of Britain, 84

  Wocher, Alfred)

  Bauer, Fritz, 323

  new prisoners, 188, 227, 233–234

  Beck, Fritz, 221

  Becker (SS‑Sergeant), 92

  orchestra, 222

  Belgium, 22–23

  prisoners of war, 243, 251–252

  Bergen‑Belson concentration camp

  resistance, 202–206, 242, 244–249,

  burying bodies, 302

  250–251

  liberation, 297–302

  roll call, 206–207, 220, 222, 237, 261

  number of deaths, 295

  showering, 199–200

  starvation, 296–297

  starvation, 200, 242

  Berger, Josef, 307

  toilet paper, 200

  Berkovits, Jenö, 244

  work at, 179–183, 185, 186–187,

  Berkovits, Laczi, 244

  188–191, 204–205, 222, 237, 238 Bienenwald, Alfred, 71

  Austria. see also Vienna

  Birkenau concentration camp. see

  after war, 318

  Auschwitz II‑Birkenau concen‑

  Allies closing in, 305–306

  tration camp

  anti‑Semitism, 20–21, 168

  Blank, Johann, 53–54, 81–82

  army of, 161–167

  Blies, Ludwig, 56, 64

  independence, 6–8, 9–10, 12–13,

  Blutstrasse/Blood Road, 45–46

  18–19, 20, 321

  Bolshevism. see communists

  Nazi Germany invasion, 15–17

  Boplinsky, Petrek, 179–180, 183

  Nazi sympathizers, 12, 14, 15, 17–18

  Brinkmann, Otto, 288

  Nazi uprising, 10–11, 12–13, 14–15

  Britain

  Austria‑Hungary, 162, 167–168

 

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