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New book: Righteous behind Barbed Wire

Discussion in 'WWII Books & Publications' started by Kevin_P, Jan 30, 2026.

  1. Kevin_P

    Kevin_P New Member

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    Righteous behind Barbed Wire is my latest book. It tells the history of Armin T. Wegner and Ludwig Wörl.

    In Germany, there are few reminders of human rights activist Armin T. Wegner and Auschwitz survivor Ludwig Wörl. In the Nazi period, both of these non-Jewish Germans stood up for their Jewish compatriots, actions for which they were honored after the war as Righteous among the Nations by the Israeli Holocaust Memorial Center, Yad Vashem.

    Unlike the Righteous from neutral, hostile or German-occupied countries, Wegner and Wörl opposed the policy of their own government headed by dictator Adolf Hitler. Although they were citizens of the ‘perpetrators’ nation’, they stood up for the victims. In that way they showed themselves as immune to anti-Semitism and the murderous lust many compatriots either did not resist or, worse, took part in.

    In addition to caring about the fate of Jews in Germany, Wegner and Wörl had another thing in common: they were themselves victims of persecution by the Nazis and were political prisoners in Hitler’s concentration camps. How did they get there, and what did they do to defend their fellow Jews from Nazi hatred?

    You can find the book on Amazon and other suppliers.

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  2. Kevin_P

    Kevin_P New Member

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    Oswald Kaduk, ‘Papa Kaduk’ or a monster??
    When Oswald Kaduk was called a swine on April 6, 1964, the news spread like wildfire all over the world. The insult was made in Frankfurt am Main, in a hall converted into a courtroom. Here, 22 men stood trial for crimes they had committed in the concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz during the war. The man who was insulted was one of them. Between 1942 and 1945 he had grown into one of the most feared and brutal guards in the Nazi camp in Poland. ‘Outburst stirs Auschwitz Trial,’ the New York Times reported the next day. According to a reporter, someone in the audience had disturbed the trial by yelling loudly ‘beat that swine to death,’ referring to Kaduk.

    This was shouted out after a witness had testified that the SS guard had herded a group of 12 Jewish children between four and 11 years old to the gas chambers at gun point where they all would have been gassed. The defendant immediately denied the accusation. ‘Liar, liar,’ he yelled at the witness. The latter didn’t hold back and retorted, ‘Now you don't have a gun and at long last we can speak to one another!’[1] This triggered the insult from the audience mentioned before. After a failed attempt by Kaduk’s lawyer to determine who had yelled, the trial was resumed.

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    Police photos of former guard Oswald Kaduk prior to the Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt-am-Main. Source: Berlin Police, via Google Arts & Culture

    A swine
    A journalist of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, however, would write in his article about the trial that it hadn’t been someone from the audience, but the witness who had called the defendant a swine. The witness did this after having testified how ‘a dozen little Jewish girls, ages 3 to 11’ had begged him to save them from the gas chamber. ‘They said they were strong and could work and didn’t want to die,’ the man continued his testimony. ‘There was Oswald Kaduk, with gun in hand. That murderer Kaduk drove them away to the gas chamber.’ Thereupon he pointed to Kaduk in the dock who then called him a liar. After that, the witness is said to have called him a swine. The article continued with: ‘Spectators yelled, “Beat him to death!” It took presiding Justice Hans Hofmeyer several minutes to bring order back to the court room.’[2]

    The reports about the event differed in detail, but we can be certain about the identity of the witness, as well as about the brutality of the defendant. The witness was Ludwig Wörl. If he were the one to call Kaduk a swine, he had all sorts of reasons to do so. The Munich resident himself had been imprisoned for 11 years in the camps of Nazi Germany, almost as long as the Third Reich had existed. During that period, he had to endure the denigration, the cruelty and the dismal conditions for which men like Kaduk had been responsible. To Wörl, Kaduk and his codefendants were the personification of the injustice imposed on him. During the so-called Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt it was his mission to contribute to ensure that justice would be done and the defendants put behind bars.

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    The reconstructed execution wall between Blocks 10 and 11 in the Stammlager (main camp) Auschwitz. This is where prisoners were executed by Oswald Kaduk and his colleagues. Source: Richard Broekhuijzen / Wikimedia Commons

    Sadistic executioner
    During the trial, Kaduk’s cruelty became crystal clear. ‘No defendant appeared more unsophisticated and brutish than Oswald Kaduk,’[3] historian Rebecca Wittmann wrote in Beyond Justice, her study about the West-German Auschwitz trial. Based on testimonies of former prisoners, including Ludwig Wörl, an image emerged of a sadistic executioner with many deaths on his conscience. Wörl testified how he had seen the SS man frequently participating in executions on Tuesdays near the so-called black wall between Block 10, where medical experiments on inmates were conducted, and Block 11, the camp prison. In his words, 26,000 inmates from Block 11, where he had been imprisoned himself for a few months, had been executed. ‘I can state with certainty that Kaduk has taken part in it,’ he said during an interrogation. ‘He has also fired at prisoners without killing them right away.’[4]

    In addition to shooting and gassing, Kaduk killed his victims by drowning, strangulation and hanging. When he appeared, frequently drunk with his whip in hand, inmates knew they had to get away. If he was in a bad mood, he would randomly select one or more prisoners to let loose his cruelty. Particularly notorious was his preference to kill prisoners with a walking stick which he, with his victims lying on the ground, laid across their necks and stood on until they suffocated. The description of these and other atrocities by the camp guard filled no fewer than 15 pages in the indictment against him.

    Normal life
    Kaduk was one of the many Nazi war criminals who had lived a perfectly normal life before and after his career as camp guard. He was born on August 26, as one of seven children of a blacksmith in Königshütte in the coal region of Upper-Silesia. Today, the largest part of the area is Polish territory, and Kaduk’s place of birth can be found on the map as Chorzów. Some 25 miles from the former German village is the location where the Auschwitz concentration camp would be opened in 1940. Before Kaduk entered service as camp guard, he completed the Volksschule (elementary school) and worked as a butcher’s apprentice. In 1924 he passed his butcher’s exam. After employment in a local slaughterhouse, he subsequently worked as a professional local firefighter and in a chemical factory.

    At the end of 1939, Kaduk enrolled in the Allgemeine-SS and then took basic training in the Waffen-SS in the 15. Totenkopfstandarte in Oranienburg. Fighting on the Eastern Front, he contracted malaria, causing him to stay in an army hospital for a long time. Subsequently he was declared unfit for duty at the front. At the end of 1942, he was transferred to Auschwitz which was described, he said, as a training camp for troops. According to him, he was told he would return to the front after a training of six months. In an interview with a German documentary filmmaker in 1978, Kaduk declared he had been shocked on entering the camp. He had felt particularly shocked by the large number of prisoners. Instead of receiving military training in Auschwitz, he was deployed as a camp guard.

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  3. Kevin_P

    Kevin_P New Member

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    Apologies for the duplicate post.
     

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