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World War II: Holocaust Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp Trial Transcripts and Documents

World War II: Holocaust Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp Trial Transcripts and Documents

3,769 pages of trial transcripts, court documents, records, newspaper articles and histories concerning the first Belsen Trial (September 17, 1945 – November 17, 1945) of the commandant of Auschwitz-Birkenau (from 8 May 1944 to 25 November 1944) and of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp (from December 1944 to its liberation on 15 April 1945) Josef Kramer and 44 others. Kramer and forty-four others were alleged to have been either been full members of the staff of Belsen or Auschwitz concentration camps, or of both, others were prisoners elevated by the camp administrators to positions of authority over the other internees. 

The Belsen trial has gone down in history as the first great attempt to try and punish people responsible for war crimes in Western Europe. 

Until 1943, Bergen-Belsen was exclusively a POW camp in Germany housing allied prisoners. In April 1943, the SS Economic-Administration Main Office, SS Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt (WVHA) which administered the German concentration camp system, converted a portion of the camp into a civilian residence camp and, then into a concentration camp. Beginning in the fall of 1944, the SS deported to Bergen-Belsen large numbers of prisoners evacuated from Nazi camps further east. Approximately 50,000 people died in the Bergen-Belsen camp complex.

In late 1944, Anne Frank and her younger sister Margot were taken from Auschwitz to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. The two Frank children at Bergen-Belsen contracted spotted typhus and died in February 1945. British forces liberated Bergen-Belsen on 15 April 1945.  The British 11th Armoured Division on that day discovered approximately 60,000 living prisoners at the camp and approximately 13,000 corpses lying throughout the camp.

In the Fall of 1945, the British Government established a British Military Tribunal in Lüneburg, Germany, to put on trial camp commandant Josef Kramer, SS personnel and prisoner functionaries. The tribunal sentenced eleven of the defendants including Kramer to death. Nineteen other defendants were convicted and sentenced to prison terms; the tribunal acquitted fourteen. On December 12, 1945, British military authorities executed Kramer and ten of his co-defendants.

The Belsen Trial established practices for further war crimes trials such as the Nuremberg trials held by the International Military Tribunal 1-year later.

This collection contains:

United Nations War Crimes Commission Law Reports of Trials of War Criminals - Volume II the Belsen Trial

A 172-page report on the aspects and results of the trial published in 1947 by the United Nations War Crimes Commission.

 
Belsen Trial Transcript & Tribunal Papers

2,283 pages of transcripts and documents related to the first Belsen Trial (September 17, 1945 – November 17, 1945).

The documents begin with a 5-page typed introduction to the trial by the Polish prosecutor participating in the trial Tadeusz Cyprian.  He wrote, “The Belsen trial is, in my opinion, an outstanding event from the historical point of view. It is the first mass-trial of war criminals, it deals with the atrocities committed in two German concentration camps which became the symbol of German rule in occupied Europe, and it can be considered the final stage of the work we are doing in the Commission.”

Followed by 2,053 pages of English language official trial transcripts. Plus 193 document pages including a synopsis of the case, charge sheet, findings & sentences, death warrants, summary of proceedings, petitions, and defendant summaries.


U.S. Army's War Crimes Branch Deposition of First Lieutenant Kurt Gerstein

Gerstein was head of Technical Disinfection Services for the SS. He was barred from State service in 1936 for anti-Nazi activity. Gerstein was head of "disinfection" procedures, with intimate knowledge of gas chambers and the prussic acid used at Belsen, Auschwitz, Mauthausen, and Oranienburg and an eyewitness to multiple gassings of concentration camp inmates. Includes listing of anti-Nazis with whom Gerstein associated in Berlin; testimony on the use of prussic acid; and a transcript of a letter from the "German Company for the Control of Vermin," regarding the storage and use of "disinfectant," June 9, 1944. 

 
Newspapers

48 pages of full-sheet American Newspapers with coverage of the Belsen Trial in regional newspapers from Washington D.C. and the states of Michigan, Connecticut, and North Carolina.

 
Film

Prosecution Exhibit 230 Concentration Camps, Belsen Concentration Camp. A 10 minute and 19 seconds film created by the War Department's Office of the Chief Signal Officer. Includes an officer (of the British Royal Artillery) in charge of the camp after liberation who speaks of conditions at Belsen. A woman doctor, who was a prisoner and in charge of the female section, describes conditions. Includes views of Josef Kramer, camp guards, and inmates.

 
Bergen-Belsen Captured Camp Records

1,200 pages of German captured records composed of death records from the Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp along with several information sheets originated or collected by the International Tracing Service (Arolsen).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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