Posted in

The ROUGH Execution of Sadistic Nazi Guard Elisabeth Becker *Warning REAL FOOTAGE

She started as an ordinary young woman  but later got involved in abuse, beatings,   and made life and death decisions.

And When World War II ended,   Elisabeth Becker s crimes took her to trial.

What followed was a public execution leaving   behind one of the most raw and disturbing  moments from the aftermath of the war.

Becker was born on July 20, 1923,  in a rural area near Danzig,   which at that time was known as the Free City  of Danzig, a semi-independent region caught   between Germany and Poland after World War I.

This place wasn t stable.

It was tense, poor,   and politically divided.

Her family lived a basic  life, likely tied to farm work or small labor,   where money was limited and survival  came first.

For people growing up there   in the 1920s and 1930s, life was not about big  dreams.

It was about getting through each day.

As a child, there s no record showing she  was violent or extreme.

She went through   normal schooling for that time, which  was basic and often short.

Many children,   especially in rural areas, left school early  to help their families.

Becker s early years   followed that same path.

She worked, lived  simply, and stayed within a small social world.

There was nothing in her background that clearly  pointed toward what she would later become.

But the environment around her started shifting  fast in the 1930s.

The rise of Adolf Hitler and   the Nazi Party changed everything, even  in places like Danzig.

By the mid-1930s,   Nazi influence had spread deeply  into the region.

Schools began   pushing Nazi ideology.

Youth groups  encouraged loyalty to the regime.

Jobs and opportunities increasingly depended on  political alignment.

For young people like Becker,   this wasn t something they could easily  ignore.

It shaped how they saw the world.

At the same time, economic pressure  made things worse.

Jobs were scarce,   especially for women without strong education  or connections.

Many were pushed into limited   roles like domestic work, factory  labor, or state-controlled jobs.

The Nazi system offered something  that stood out, stability, income,   and a defined role.

For someone coming from  poverty, that mattered more than politics.

This is where things start to  turn.

Not because she suddenly   believed in extreme ideas, but because  the system made itself hard to refuse.

By 1944, the war had already been going on for  years, and Nazi Germany was under pressure on   multiple fronts.

At just 21 years old, Becker  entered the concentration camp system as a   guard.

She was sent to Stutthof concentration  camp, located about 34 kilometers east of   Danzig.

This camp had been established back  in 1939, right after Germany invaded Poland,   and over time it had grown into a  major site of imprisonment and death.

By the time Becker arrived, Stutthof was no  longer just a detention camp.

It had become   part of the wider system of forced labor  and extermination.

Around 110,000 prisoners   passed through Stutthof during its existence,  including Jews, Poles, Soviet prisoners of war,   and others considered enemies by the Nazi  regime.

It s estimated that around 65,000   people died there due to starvation,  disease, executions, and gas chambers.

This was the environment Becker stepped into.

She trained as an Aufseherin, which was the title  given to female guards in the SS camp system.

These women were not officially part of the SS in  the same way men were, but they operated under SS   authority and followed the same structure.

Their  duties included guarding prisoners, supervising   labor, and enforcing discipline.

But in reality,  that role went far beyond basic supervision.

Inside camps like Stutthof, guards  had direct control over prisoners   lives.

They could punish,  beat, or report prisoners,   which often led to severe consequences.

The  power they held was immediate and physical.

Becker would have seen the conditions from her  very first days.

Prisoners were extremely thin,   often barely able to stand.

Clothing was  worn out.

Hygiene was almost nonexistent.

Barracks were overcrowded, sometimes holding far  more people than they were built for.

Disease   spread easily, especially typhus, which became  a major problem in the later stages of the war.

None of this was hidden from guards.

The idea that camp workers didn t know  what was happening doesn t hold up,   especially by 1944.

The suffering was  visible everywhere.

Dead bodies were   part of daily life.

Executions  and punishments were routine.

Instead of rejecting it, Becker adapted to it.

Witnesses later described her as someone who didn  t just stand by.

She became active in enforcing   the system.

She used a whip to beat prisoners.

These beatings were part of daily control.

Guards   often used violence to maintain order, but in  many cases, it went beyond that into cruelty.

She was also involved in selections.

This was  one of the most feared parts of camp life.

Prisoners would be lined up and  inspected.

Those who appeared weak,   sick, or unable to work were separated from  the rest.

For many, this meant being sent   to the gas chamber or otherwise killed.

These  decisions weren t always made by high-ranking   officers alone.

Guards like Becker played a  role in identifying and separating prisoners.

That means she directly influenced  life and death outcomes.

What makes this even more serious is that there  s no strong evidence suggesting she was forced to   act this way under immediate threat.

While  the Nazi system was strict and dangerous,   many guards had some level of choice in  how they treated prisoners.

Some were less   brutal.

Others, like Becker according  to testimony, became more involved.

Over time, this kind of environment  changes people.

When violence becomes   normal, it stops feeling extreme.

The line  between discipline and cruelty disappears.

By late 1944, the situation inside Stutthof  concentration camp became even worse.

Nazi Germany   was losing the war.

Supplies were running low.

The Eastern Front was collapsing as Soviet forces   pushed closer.

Camps like Stutthof were under  pressure, overcrowded, and falling into chaos.

The number of prisoners increased as people  were transferred from other camps and occupied   territories.

Barracks that were already full  became packed beyond capacity.

In some cases,   people had no space to lie down  properly.

They slept on wooden bunks,   often several to a level,  or directly on the floor.

Food was extremely limited.

Daily rations dropped  to survival levels, sometimes just a thin soup and   a small piece of bread.

Malnutrition became  widespread.

Prisoners lost weight rapidly   and became weak.

Many couldn t work properly,  which then made them targets during selections.

Disease spread quickly in these conditions.

Without proper sanitation, clean water,   or medical care, infections moved fast through   the camp.

Sick prisoners were often left  untreated, and many died where they lay.

There were times when corpses remained in the   barracks because there weren t enough  workers to remove them immediately.

Witness testimonies from survivors  described Becker s behavior during   this period as aggressive and harsh.

Selections became more frequent as the   camp tried to manage its growing  population and limited resources.

At the same time, executions inside the camp  increased.

Some prisoners were shot.

Others   died slowly from starvation, exhaustion, or  untreated illness.

Forced labor continued,   even as conditions worsened, pushing  prisoners beyond their limits.

Despite all of this, Becker  remained in her position.

By early 1945, Nazi Germany was collapsing fast.

The Red Army of the Soviet Union was pushing hard   from the east, and areas that had once been  under tight Nazi control were now falling one   after another.

Camps like Stutthof suddenly  became dangerous for the SS to keep running   because they were at risk of being captured  along with all the evidence inside them.

The SS made a decision that would turn into one of  the most brutal final chapters of the war.

Instead   of leaving prisoners behind, they began evacuating  them.

On paper, this sounded like relocation,   but in reality, it became what we now call  death marches.

Starting around January 1945,   thousands of prisoners were forced out of  Stutthof and its subcamps and pushed onto   long marches through snow and freezing wind.

Temperatures dropped well below zero.

Many   prisoners had thin clothing, worn-out shoes, and  bodies already weakened by starvation and disease.

They were forced to walk for days, sometimes  weeks.

Food was almost nonexistent.

Water was   limited.

Guards drove them forward  constantly.

If someone collapsed,   they were often shot on the spot.

There  was no system to help the weak.

Survival   depended on being able to keep moving, even  when the body was already shutting down.

Around 50,000 prisoners were evacuated from  Stutthof during this period, and thousands   died along the way.

The roads and forests  around the region became scattered with bodies.

Some prisoners froze to death during the night.

Others died while walking.

The marches didn t   follow a clean path.

They moved in different  directions depending on military pressure,   which made the whole situation even more chaotic.

Becker remained part of this system during these  final months.

As a guard, her role didn t stop   when prisoners left the camp.

Guards were  responsible for controlling these marches,   making sure prisoners stayed in line and  continued moving.

That meant she was present   during this phase, where the brutality didn t  decrease, it just moved outside the camp walls.

At the same time, discipline among the guards  started to break down.

Some SS personnel realized   the war was lost and tried to escape.

Others  removed their uniforms and attempted to blend   into civilian populations.

But many continued  to follow orders, either out of fear, habit,   or belief.

There was no single pattern.

It was confusion mixed with desperation.

Inside Stutthof itself, the situation also became  unstable.

Some prisoners were left behind due to   illness or because they couldn t be moved.

Conditions inside the camp got even worse   as supplies ran out completely.

By the  time Soviet forces reached the area in   early May 1945, the camp had been  mostly abandoned by SS personnel.

What they found was overwhelming.

Thousands of dead bodies were still   in the camp or nearby areas.

Survivors  were in extremely weak condition,   many unable to stand or speak properly.

Disease  was still spreading.

The camp showed clear signs   of long-term suffering, neglect, and  mass death.

It wasn t hidden anymore.

On May 8, 1945, Nazi Germany officially  surrendered, marking the end of the   war in Europe.

For the prisoners who  survived Stutthof and the death marches,   it meant freedom, but it also  meant facing the reality of what   they had lived through.

Many had lost family  members, friends, and years of their lives.

But while survivors were trying to rebuild,   another process began at the same  time.

The search for those responsible.

Allied forces and local authorities  across Europe started identifying and   arresting individuals connected to the Nazi  system.

This included high-ranking officials,   but also camp guards, administrators, and  anyone directly involved in the operation of   concentration camps.

The scale of the crimes  meant that investigations had to move fast.

In areas that came under Polish control,   authorities began organizing their own  efforts to track down those responsible   for crimes committed on their territory.

Camps like Stutthof became central to   these investigations because of the number of  victims and the clear evidence left behind.

Becker was eventually identified and captured.

Unlike some Nazi personnel who managed to escape   or hide under false identities, she did not  disappear completely.

Survivors who had been   inside Stutthof recognized her.

Her actions  had been visible, and her role as a guard meant   she had been seen regularly by prisoners.

This  made it difficult for her to avoid being named.

Once arrested, she was taken into custody and  placed under investigation.

Interrogations   began as authorities worked to build cases  against those involved in camp operations.

These interrogations were detailed.

Investigators wanted to understand not   just who was present in the camps,  but what each person actually did.

During questioning, Becker used a defense  that became very common among former camp   personnel.

She claimed she was following  orders.

She said she didn t have real   authority and that refusing orders  would have put her in danger.

She   presented herself as someone who was part  of a larger system she couldn t control.

But by this stage, investigators  were no longer focusing only on   the existence of orders.

They were focusing  on individual behavior within that system.

The key question wasn t just whether  someone was present, but how they acted.

Survivor testimonies played a major role here.

Former prisoners came forward and described what   they had experienced.

They connected her  directly to acts of violence and control.

At the same time, investigators  compared statements, checked records,   and built a clearer picture of her  role.

By mid-1945 and into 1946,   enough evidence had been gathered  to move forward with formal charges.

By 1946, the focus in post-war Poland had shifted  fully toward justice.

The crimes committed inside   Stutthof were too large and too visible to ignore,  so Polish authorities organized a series of trials   specifically targeting the people who had worked  there.

These became known as the Stutthof trials,   and they were separate from the bigger  international trials like Nuremberg.

These were local, direct, and focused  on what happened inside that one camp.

Becker was brought before a Polish court as  part of the first major Stutthof trial in 1946,   held in the city of Gda?sk, which had just  come under Polish control after the war.

She was not alone.

Around her were other former  guards and officials, both men and women,   all facing charges related to crimes committed  inside the camp.

Some had higher ranks, others   were lower-level personnel, but they were all  being judged for their roles in the same system.

The court proceedings moved quickly compared to  modern standards.

There was no long delay.

The war   had just ended, evidence was fresh, and survivors  were still nearby.

The courtroom became a place   where those survivors could finally speak openly  about what had happened.

Many of them had spent   months or years inside Stutthof, and they came  forward to describe their experiences in detail.

The trial itself didn t drag on for  years.

It moved fast because the goal   was to establish responsibility and deliver  judgment.

By the end of the proceedings,   the court reached a decision based on  the evidence and testimonies presented.

Becker was found guilty of crimes against  prisoners.

The sentence was death.

This wasn t unusual for cases involving  direct involvement in killings or extreme   brutality.

Several other defendants in the  same trial also received death sentences,   while others were given long prison terms  depending on their level of involvement.

But what made Becker s case stand out wasn  t just the verdict.

It was what came next.

On July 4, 1946, the sentence against  her was carried out near the former   grounds of Stutthof concentration camp,  not far from Gda?sk.

The location itself   mattered.

This wasn t chosen randomly.

Executing those responsible close to   the place where the crimes happened  made the moment feel more direct,   almost like a final connection between what  had been done and the punishment that followed.

The method was hanging, which was commonly  used in these post-war executions in Poland.

But this wasn t done behind closed  doors.

It was a public execution,   meaning ordinary people were allowed to  gather and watch.

A large crowd formed   that day.

Among them were survivors of the  camp, people who had lost family members,   and locals who had lived near Stutthof and had  seen the effects of the camp during the war.

The atmosphere was intense from the beginning.

This wasn t just a legal event.

It was emotional.

For many in the crowd, this moment represented  justice after years of fear, loss, and suffering.

At the same time, there was tension because  public executions are unpredictable.

They don   t always go smoothly, especially in the immediate  aftermath of war when systems are still unstable.

Becker was brought to the gallows along with  other condemned guards from the same trial.

They were placed on trucks under the  structure, a method sometimes used in   these executions.

Instead of a traditional  drop platform, the trucks would drive away,   leaving the condemned hanging.

It sounds simple,  but in practice, it could be rough and uneven.

Accounts from that day describe the process as  chaotic.

There were delays in organizing the   execution.

The setup wasn t precise.

When  the moment came, it didn t happen cleanly   or instantly.

Hanging, especially without a  proper drop, often leads to a slower death   rather than immediate neck break.

That means  the person can struggle for several minutes.

This is what made the scene difficult to watch.

What makes this execution stand out even more is  that it was partially recorded.

Footage from the   event still exists today, showing parts of what  happened.

This wasn t staged or edited.

It was a   real moment captured as it unfolded, which is why  it continues to be discussed even decades later.

By the end of that day, Becker was  dead.

She was 23 years old.

Her life   had started in a quiet rural area,  but it ended in front of a crowd,   tied to one of the darkest chapters of World War  II.

And the way it ended left behind an image   that still stays with people.

Not because it was  dramatic or controlled.

But because it was real.