The death cruise
The sea evacuation of Stutthofconcentration camp was one of
the last actions carried out by the SS men inorder to liquidate the camp. The
evacuation was organized in the last decade ofApril 1945. On 25 and 27 April,
some 4400 prisoners left the central camp intwo evacuation transports. The
April evacuation was definitive; it concernedall the prisoners that were still
in the camp, regardless their sex, age orphysical state. Most of the prisoners
were in very poor health due tolong-lasting malnutrition and living in
extremely bad conditions withoutmedical care. Many prisoners suffered from
typhus and typhoid fever.
On 23 April 1945, the evacuation order wasissued. The next
day, the prisoners were informed about the order and weregiven dry provisions
consisting of half a loaf of bread, a small piece ofmargarine and dry ham.
First, a group of 1650 Jewish femaleprisoners left the camp
and was lead along the coast toward the outlet of VistulaRiver. The second
group of prisoners, consisting of a similar number of people,was transported by
narrow-gauge railway to Mikoszewo. All prisoners weregathered in a glade near
the outlet of Vistula River. There they waited for twodays for the next
transport. During this stopover, the SS men shot at least adozen prisoners, mainly
Jewish women.
On 27 April at 2:30a.m., the prisonersembarked assault boats
that around 6a.m. reached Hel from the south. During thestopover many prisoners
were killed by the SS men and by Soviet planes thatbombed German stationing
places. Later, the prisoners embarked river barges(the exact number of the
barges is unknown; according to various reports therewere 3 to 7 barges) that
went out to sea. The barges were not adapted forseagoing or transportation of
people, they were also in very bad state. Therewas no food or water; the
prisoners had to drink sea water. These conditionsresulted in higher incidence
and death rates of the prisoners. The dead wereundressed and thrown into the
sea. Many prisoners committed suicide in despairand others were killed by their
guards. In the late afternoon, two of thebarges: “Wolfgang” and “Vaterland”
reached the port in Neustadt. On the nighton 2/3 May, the SS men uncoupled the
barges from the tugboats and sent them tothe port. The prisoners became
suspicious and thought that the Germans wantedto blow the barges up and sink
them. They hauled both barges to the shore andbegan evacuation. It was
impossible to run away because all the roads from thebeach to the town were
guarded. Around 6a.m. the prisoners of KL Stutthof werefound by the German
marines that wanted to put the prisoners in columns andtake them to the
barracks in Neustadt. An hour later, the SS men and policemenwho were guarding
the transport from Stutthof arrived to the beach. First, theywanted the
prisoners to embark barges once again but as the boats were in verybad state
they gave up that idea. They ordered to empty all the barges, wherestayed only
ill prisoners who could not walk. The ill and unable to evacuateprisoners were
shot by the young marines and the SS men. According to differentsources from
several dozen to over a hundred people were killed. The otherprisoners were
taken to a sports field of a school for sailors in Neustadt. Ontheir way there,
the local people spit on the prisoners and even poured hotwater over them. The
SS men were still killing the exhausted prisoners,shooting them or beating them
with the rifle butts. At 3:15p.m. the units ofthe Second British Army under the
command of General Dempsey entered the city.The units freed the prisoners of KL
Stutthoff and other concentration camps.The fate of the other barges carrying
the prisoners of KL Stutthof was similar.Most of the prisoners died.
About 5 thousand prisoners wereevacuated by sea in three
transports: on 25 March from Gdynia and on 25 and 26April from the central
camp. The number of victims, according to the availablesources, amounts to
about 2 500 people. The prisoners of KL Stutthofcalled the barges that carried
them “the death barges”.
Based on the book by Elżbieta Grot „Rejs śmierci, Ewakuacja MorskaWięźniów KL
Stutthof” (“The death cruise, the Evacuation of the Prisoners of KLStutthof by
Sea”), ed. Stutthof Museum in Sztutowo, 1993.
Tłumaczenie: Katarzyna Flis
Brak komentarzy:
Prześlij komentarz