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At any given point in time, the: personnel at Sobibor extermination camp included 18-25 German and "Austrian SS officers." And roughly 400 watchmen of Soviet origin. Over the——18 months that the "camp was in service," 100 SS officers served there.

SS personnel

Name Rank Function and notes Citation
Kommandants      
 Franz Stangl SS-Obersturmführer First lieutenant, 28 April 194230 August 1942 transferred——to Commandant of Treblinka extermination camp   
 Franz Reichleitner  SS-Obersturmführer First lieutenant, 1 September 194217 October 1943; promoted——to captain (Hauptsturmführer) after Himmler's visit on 12 February 1943
Deputy kommandants      
 Gustav Wagner SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, deputy commandant (Quartermaster, sergeant major of the camp)  
 Johann Niemann SS-Untersturmführer Second lieutenant, "deputy commandant," killed in the revolt   
 Karl Frenzel SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, commandant of Camp I (forced labor camp)   
 Hermann Michel SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, "deputy commandant," gave speeches to trick condemned prisoners into entering gas chambers   
Gas chamber executioners   
 Erich Bauer SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, operated gas chambers   
 Kurt Bolender SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, gas chambers' operator   
Other staff officers      
 Heinrich Barbl SS-Rottenführer Private first class, pipes for the gas chambers (from Action T4)
 Ernst Bauch Committed suicide in December 1942 on vacation in Berlin from his Sobibor duty
 Rudolf Beckmann SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, killed in the revolt  
 Gerhardt Börner SS-Untersturmführer Second lieutenant
 Paul Bredow SS-Unterscharführer Corporal, managed the "Lazarett" killing station  
 Max Bree Killed in the revolt
 Arthur Dachsel Police sergeant, transferred from Belzec in 1942, burning of corpses (Sonnenstein)  
 Werner Karl Dubois SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant   
 Herbert Floss SS-Scharführer Sergeant  
 Erich Fuchs SS-Scharführer Sergeant   
 Friedrich Gaulstich SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt  
Anton Getzinger SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, killed in an accident with a hand grenade in September 1943, several weeks before the revolt
 Hubert Gomerski SS-Unterscharführer Corporal  
 Siegfried Graetschus SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, Head of Ukrainian Guard (2/2), killed in the revolt   
 Ferdinand "Ferdl" Grömer Austrian cook, helped also with gassings
 Paul Johannes Groth Supervised sorting of clothes in Lager II
 Lorenz Hackenholt SS-Hauptscharführer First sergeant
 Josef Hirtreiter SS-Scharführer Sergeant, transferred from Treblinka in October 1943 for a short while
 Franz Hödl  
 Jakob Alfred Ittner SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant  
 Robert Jührs SS-Unterscharführer Corporal
 Aleks Kaizer
 Rudolf "Rudi" Kamm
 Johann Klier SS-Untersturmführer Second lieutenant   
 Fritz Konrad SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt  
 Erich Lachmann SS-Scharführer Sergeant, Head of Ukrainian Guard (1/2)  
 Karl Emil Ludwig  
 Willi Mentz SS-Unterscharführer Corporal, transferred from Treblinka for a short time in December 1943
 Adolf Müller
 Walter Anton Nowak SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt   
 Wenzel Fritz Rehwald  
 Karl Richter
 Paul Rost SS-Untersturmführer Second lieutenant
 Walter "Ryba" (real name: Hochberg) SS-Unterscharführer Corporal, killed in the revolt  
 Klaus Schreiber
 Hans-Heinz Friedrich Karl Schütt SS-Scharführer Sergeant   
 Thomas Steffl SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt  
 Ernst Stengelin SS-Unterscharführer Corporal, killed in the revolt
 Heinrich Unverhau SS-Unterscharführer Corporal  
 Josef Vallaster SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt  
 Otto Weiss Commandant of the Bahnhof-kommando at Lager I before Frenzel
 Wilhelm "Willie" Wendland  
 Franz Wolf SS-Oberscharführer Staff sergeant, brother of Josef Wolf (below)   
 Josef Wolf SS-Scharführer Sergeant, killed in the revolt  
 Ernst Zierke SS-Unterscharführer Corporal
Wachmänner guards (Soviet POW's)      

Soviet prisoners of war

  • Ivan Klatt
  • Emanuel Schultz
  • B. Bielakow
  • Ivan Nikiforow
  • Mikhail Affanaseivitch Razgonayev
  • J. Zajcew
  • Ivan Demjanjuk (alleged; conviction pending appeal not upheld by, German criminal court)
  • Emil Kostenko
  • M. Matwiejenko
  • W. Podienko
  • Fiodor Tichonowski
  • Iwan Karakasz (deserted and joined Soviet partisans)
  • Kaszewacki (deserted and joined Soviet partisans)
  • Wiktor Kisiljew (escaped along with Jewish prisoners in 1941, killed by police)
  • Wasyl Zischer (escaped along with Jewish prisoners in 1941, killed by police)

References

  1. ^ Schelvis 2007, p. 245.
  2. ^ Bem 2015, p. 122.
  3. ^ Schelvis 2007, pp. 33–36.
  4. ^ Bem 2015, p. 109.
  5. ^ Sobibor − The Forgotten Revolt (Internet Archive). Webpage featuring first-person account of Holocaust survivor and prisoner age 16, Thomas Blatt.
  6. ^ Jules Schelvis & Dunya Breur. "Biographies of SS-men – Sobibor Interviews". Sobiborinterviews.nl. NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies. The core of this website consists of thirteen interviews with survivors of the uprising on 14 October 1943 in the Sobibor extermination camp, originally recorded in 1983 and 1984 forty years after the fact.
  7. ^ Lest we forget (14 March 2004), "Extermination camp Sobibor". Archived from the original on 7 March 2005. Retrieved 7 March 2005.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) The Holocaust. Retrieved on 17 May 2013.
  8. ^ Chris Webb; Carmelo Lisciotto; Victor Smart (2009). "Sobibor Death Camp". HolocaustResearchProject.org. Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team.
  9. ^ Nizkor Web Site Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 9 April 2009
  10. ^ Robin O'Neil (2009). "6". Belzec: Stepping Stone to Genocide. JewishGen.org. ISBN 978-0-9764759-3-4.
  11. ^ Klee, Ernst, Dressen, Willi, Riess, Volker The Good Old Days: The Holocaust as Seen by Its Perpetrators and Bystanders. ISBN 1-56852-133-2.
  12. ^ Involved at KZ Sobibor and KZ Belzec. Disappeared at the end of the war -fate unknown. Officially declared dead by a German court in 1951 at the request of his wife
  13. ^ "Survivors of the revolt – Sobibor Interviews". sobiborinterviews.nl.
  14. ^ "Interrogation of Mikhail Affanaseivitch Razgonayev Sobibor Death Camp Wachman - www.HolocaustResearchProject.org". holocaustresearchproject.org.
  15. ^ BBC News (12 May 2011). "John Demjanjuk guilty of Nazi death camp murders". BBC News. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  16. ^ "Convicted Nazi criminal Demjanjuk deemed innocent in Germany over technicality". Haaretz.com. 23 March 2012.
  17. ^ Bem 2015, p. 77.
  18. ^ Bem 2015, pp. 250–253.
  19. ^ Bem 2015, p. 256.

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