SS-Gefolge (Women's SS Division)

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SS-Gefolgen at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp after the camp was liberated on April 19, 1945, including Hildegard Kanbach (1st from left), Magdalene Kessel (2nd from left), Irene Haschke (centre, 3rd from right), Lisbeth Fritzner (mostly obscured, between Kessel and Haschke) Herta Ehlert (2nd from right, partially obscured) and Herta Bothe (1st from right) on their way to bury the victims SS women camp guards Bergen-Belsen April 19 1945.jpg
SS-Gefolgen at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp after the camp was liberated on April 19, 1945, including Hildegard Kanbach (1st from left), Magdalene Kessel (2nd from left), Irene Haschke (centre, 3rd from right), Lisbeth Fritzner (mostly obscured, between Kessel and Haschke) Herta Ehlert (2nd from right, partially obscured) and Herta Bothe (1st from right) on their way to bury the victims

SS-Gefolge was the designation for the group of female civilian employees of the Schutzstaffel in Nazi Germany. SS-Gefolge members were only allowed to serve the Schutzstaffel in a very limited capacity as the organisation was not formally a part of the SS. Members of the Gefolge worked in the Nazi concentration camps as guards and nurses. [1]

Contents

Recruitment

During the early stages of the war the Gefolge was primarily staffed by volunteers, but as the war progressed, more women were either conscripted or recruited from wartime factories with the false promise of high pay and easier working conditions. [2]

Training

Virtually all of the Gefolge recruits were trained at Ravensbrück, trainees would have spent anywhere from one week to six months receiving instruction on disciplinary techniques, subterfuge detection, and escape prevention. Recruits were instructed to show no sympathy for their prisoners and any Gefolge member suspected of helping a prisoner was severely punished. [3]

In Concentration Camps

By mid-January 1945, around 3,500 women were said to have been on guard duty in the concentration camps, along with around 37,000 men. In general, based on the sparse literature on this subject, it is assumed that around 10% of the concentration camp guards were women. In addition to 8,000 SS men, about 200 female guards were on duty in the Auschwitz concentration camp between May 1940 and January 1945. SS Gefolge Women were the main Guards at female specific concentration camps of Ravensbrück, Auschwitz-Birkenau, Mauthausen, and Bergen-Belsen. [2] Male SS members were not permitted to enter the female camps. [4]

Notable members of the Gefolge

Literature

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References

  1. Schäfer, Silke (2002-10-21). "Zum Selbstverständnis von Frauen im Konzentrationslager" (in German). doi:10.14279/depositonce-528.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. 1 2 Sofsky, Wolfgang (2013-06-17). The Order of Terror: The Concentration Camp. Princeton University Press. p. 109. ISBN   978-1-4008-2218-8.
  3. Baxter, Ian (2014). Belsen and it's Liberation : Rare photographs from Wartime Archives. Havertown: Pen and Sword. ISBN   978-1-4738-3930-4. OCLC   893732060.
  4. "Täter und Täterinnen (WK II) (Referat, Hausarbeit, Hausaufgabe)". 2008-03-27. Archived from the original on 27 March 2008. Retrieved 2022-05-04.