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What Female Nazi Guards Did to Their Victims is Hard to Stomach!

“What Female Nazi Guards Did to Their  Victims is Hard to Stomach!”   The female guards in Nazi concentration camps  smiled for photos, wrote love letters, and lived   ordinary lives outside the camps.

But inside those  walls, they were active participants in violence,   humiliation, and murder.

Their victims faced  cruelty beyond imagination.

And what these   women did to them has left scars that history  still struggles to comprehend.

It all started when Adolf Hitler came to power  in 1933.

He promised to rebuild Germany from the   chaos that followed World War I.

But instead, he  had a dark plan to control every part of society   and create a “pure” German nation based on Nazi  ideas.

The regime soon took control of schools,   workplaces, and homes.

Men were told to  serve in the army or work in the police,   while women were pushed into roles that served  the state, including raising children, running   households, and promoting Nazi values.

At first, women were kept away from military   or police work.

The Nazis believed their main  duty was motherhood.

But as the war grew larger,   that belief began to change.

By 1942, German  forces were stretched thin across Europe,   fighting in the Soviet Union, North Africa, and  Western Europe.

At the same time, the Nazis were   expanding their network of concentration  camps.

More prisoners were arriving every   day.

The camps needed guards, and there simply  weren’t enough men left to control them.

The SS, the organization responsible for  running the camps, began recruiting women.

They sent out calls for female volunteers through  job centers and newspapers.

Many of these women   didn’t come from military backgrounds.

They  were everyday citizens who had worked as nurses,   clerks, teachers, or factory employees.

Most  were young, between the ages of 20 and 35,   and came from small towns.

Some joined because of the promise   of a steady income and better living  conditions during wartime.

Others were   drawn by the sense of authority and the  opportunity to rise above the restrictions   placed on women in Nazi society.

For the first  time, they could wear uniforms, give orders,   and be part of something powerful.

But they had  no idea how dark that path would become.

What began as a simple “service to the state”  quickly turned into participation in one of   the most brutal systems of oppression in  history.

Once they put on the SS uniform,   they were no longer seen as ordinary  women.

And soon, their training at camps   like Ravensbrück would turn them into  something far worse.

Ravensbrück stood about fifty miles north of  Berlin and was built in 1939, right before the   war began.

It was the largest concentration camp  made specifically for women.

Over the years, more   than 130,000 female prisoners were held there,  including Jewish women, Polish resistance members,   Roma women, and even children as young as eight.

Many were arrested for speaking against the Nazis,   hiding Jews, or simply being in the wrong place at  the wrong time.

The camp was surrounded by barbed   wire and guard towers, with long wooden barracks  where prisoners slept side by side on wooden   planks, barely given enough food to survive.

Hundreds of women were sent to the camp from   across Germany and occupied countries  to learn how to control prisoners.

Training usually lasted only a few weeks, but  it was enough to strip away compassion.

The   new recruits were taught that prisoners were  enemies of the state, not human beings.

They   learned how to give orders, use weapons, and  carry out punishments without hesitation.

One of the most feared trainers was Dorothea Binz,  who quickly rose to power.

She walked through the   camp with a whip and a pistol, always ready to  strike.

New guards were told to watch her and   follow her example.

She showed them how to use  violence as a way to keep control.

Under her,   cruelty became routine.

Prisoners were beaten for  the smallest mistake, like missing a step during   roll call or speaking without permission.

The daily life for prisoners was unbearable.

They   worked from sunrise to sunset, digging trenches,  carrying heavy stones, or sewing uniforms for the   German army.

Many fainted from hunger, and those  who couldn’t stand were beaten or killed on the   spot.

Food was limited to a piece of bread and  thin soup, barely enough to keep them alive.

Ravensbrück also became known for its brutal  medical experiments.

Women were forced to test   new drugs, have bones broken and infected with  bacteria, or be injected with diseases to study   how their bodies reacted.

These experiments  often ended in death, and the guards were the   ones who brought the women in, held them down, and  laughed as doctors performed the procedures.

By 1944, Ravensbrück had grown into a network  of over thirty subcamps, each with its own group   of female guards.

Many of these women completed  their training and were then sent to other camps,   taking their cruelty with them.

And one of the worst places they   were sent to was Auschwitz.

Auschwitz was the heart of the Nazi death machine.

It was the largest and most deadly camp in the  entire Nazi system.

Built in occupied Poland in   1940, it began as a prison for political captives  but soon turned into a massive complex of death.

It had several parts: Auschwitz I, the main  camp; Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the extermination   camp with gas chambers and crematoria; and  Auschwitz III-Monowitz, a labor camp where   prisoners worked for German industries.

By the  end of the war, more than 1.

1 million people,   most of them Jews, had been murdered there through  gas, starvation, disease, and exhaustion.

While many imagine male SS officers running  Auschwitz, hundreds of women also held power   there.

Between 1942 and 1945, around 200  female guards, known as Aufseherinnen,   were stationed across the camp system.

They  were responsible for watching over female   prisoners, supervising forced labor, and  maintaining order during selections.

They wore gray uniforms with black boots and  carried whips or pistols.

Their training taught   them to treat prisoners as animals.

They shouted  orders, insulted women, and punished anyone who   disobeyed.

Beatings, humiliation, and starvation  became part of daily life under their supervision.

The guards also took part in selections,  where prisoners were divided between those   who would work and those who would be  sent directly to the gas chambers.

One of the most feared guards was Irma Grese,  who arrived at Auschwitz in 1943.

She was   only 19 years old, but her cruelty shocked even  other SS members.

She beat women with her whip,   set her trained dogs on them, and forced  prisoners to stand naked in the freezing   cold for hours as punishment.

She seemed to  take pleasure in the pain she caused.

Above her stood Maria Mandel, the senior overseer  of all female prisoners at Auschwitz.

Mandel had   total control over who lived and who died.

During roll calls, she would walk through the   rows of women and point out those who looked  weak or sick.

Those selected were sent straight   to the gas chambers.

Historians estimate she was  responsible for the deaths of over half a million   women.

She also organized the camp’s so-called  “orchestra,” forcing female prisoners to play   music as others were marched to their deaths.

Other female guards, such as Therese Brandl and   Elisabeth Volkenrath, also became infamous  for their brutality.

Brandl was known to beat   prisoners unconscious for minor mistakes, while  Volkenrath oversaw selections and punishments in   both Auschwitz and later Bergen-Belsen.

The female guards often competed with each   other to show who could be the toughest.

They  saw kindness as weakness.

Some stole food,   jewelry, or clothing from prisoners, while  others used hunger and fear to control them.

Even small acts of mercy, like sharing a  piece of bread, could lead to death.

For the women prisoners, these guards were  symbols of terror.

Many survivors later   said that they feared the female guards more than  the men because their cruelty felt more personal.

The guards insulted, mocked, and tortured  women in ways meant to destroy not just   their bodies but also their dignity.

But Auschwitz wasn’t the only place where   this happened.

The horror spread to  camps like Majdanek.

Majdanek, near Lublin in Poland, was one of the  first concentration camps where industrial killing   began on a large scale.

It combined forced labor  with systematic extermination, making it a place   of constant horror.

Prisoners were forced to build  their own barracks, dig trenches, and sort through   the belongings of those who were murdered.

The  camp’s gas chambers could kill hundreds at a time,   and the crematorium burned day and night.

Among the guards, Hermine Braunsteiner stood   out for her shocking brutality.

She was not  just cruel; she seemed to enjoy it.

Survivors   remembered her dragging women by their hair,  kicking them repeatedly until they stopped moving,   and shouting with anger at the weakest ones.

Her nickname, “The Stomping Mare,” came from   the sound of her boots as she struck prisoners  who fell behind during roll calls or work shifts.

She was young, but her behavior made her one  of the most feared figures in the camp.

Elsa Ehrich, another guard, was no different.

She carried out orders with chilling precision,   deciding who would live or die with no hesitation.

She often oversaw the selections that sent men,   women, and even small children to the gas  chambers.

Like many of her fellow guards,   she seemed completely detached from  human emotion, treating every act of   cruelty as just another part of her job.

Majdanek was also used to process prisoners from   other parts of occupied Europe.

People arrived on  crowded trains, thinking they were being relocated   for work, but most never left alive.

The guards,  both male and female, took part in the daily   terror that kept the camp running smoothly.

And as the war went on, the Nazis moved   prisoners to new camps like Bergen-Belsen, where  conditions became even worse.

Located in northern Germany, Bergen-Belsen began  as a place to keep political prisoners and those   who could be exchanged for German captives.

But as the war dragged on and the Nazis began   losing control, it turned into a dumping ground  for prisoners from other camps.

Trains packed   with weak and dying people kept arriving,  but there was no food, no proper shelter,   and no medical care waiting for them.

By 1944, Bergen-Belsen had become a scene of   absolute despair.

Thousands of people lay on the  ground without the strength to move.

The smell   of death filled the air.

Hunger drove prisoners  to eat grass, bark, or anything they could find.

Disease spread quickly, especially  typhus and dysentery, as bodies piled   up faster than they could be buried.

Among the guards, Irma Grese continued her   reign of terror after being transferred from  Auschwitz.

Elisabeth Volkenrath enforced strict   and brutal discipline.

Both women treated  human suffering as if it meant nothing.

As Germany’s defeat became certain, order  inside the camp collapsed completely.

The SS guards stopped even pretending to maintain  control.

They abandoned the sick and dying,   leaving them without food or water.

When British troops entered Bergen-Belsen   on April 15, 1945, they were met with a sight that  defied belief.

Over 60,000 starving prisoners were   still alive, lying among more than 10,000 rotting  corpses.

The ground was covered in human remains,   and the stench of death was unbearable.

Soldiers and doctors were shocked to see   how thin and weak the survivors were.

Many weighed less than 70 pounds.

The liberation of Bergen-Belsen was  one of the first times the world saw   the full horror of the Nazi camps.

Cameras  filmed every moment, showing the world the   crimes they had tried to hide.

The female guards now knew the Allies were coming   for them, and many were terrified of being  recognized.

Some burned their SS uniforms,   cut their hair short, or tried to blend in with  refugees.

Others used false names or claimed   they had been forced laborers themselves.

In those first few weeks, it was easy to   disappear due to confusion, destruction, and  millions of displaced people in Germany.

But the Allies were determined to bring the  guilty to justice.

Teams of investigators   and soldiers began visiting liberated camps,  collecting testimonies from survivors who could   identify their tormentors.

Photographs,  ID cards, and camp records were gathered   as evidence.

Survivors, though weak and sick,  described the guards in heartbreaking detail.

The information helped Allied forces track down  many who had tried to escape punishment.

Irma Grese and Elisabeth Volkenrath were caught  shortly after the liberation of Bergen-Belsen.

They had stayed near the camp, perhaps thinking  they could hide among the captured SS soldiers.

But survivors immediately recognized them.

Their  arrests shocked British troops.

Grese was only 21   years old, yet her crimes were already infamous.

Dorothea Binz tried to hide within Germany but   was discovered and arrested by Soviet forces.

Hermine Braunsteiner managed to flee to Austria,   but her past followed her.

She lived under  a false name for years before finally being   identified and put on trial.

When these women were questioned,   many of them showed no regret.

Some insisted  they had simply obeyed orders from higher-ranking   officers, as if that could excuse what they  had done.

Others claimed they had no choice,   that refusing to serve would have meant  death.

But survivors who faced them again   in court remembered them laughing while beating  prisoners, making games out of torture, and taking   pleasure in the suffering of others.

For the Allies, capturing these women was   not just about justice; it was about proving to  the world that even those who didn’t fight on   the battlefield could still commit terrible  crimes.

The arrests marked the beginning of   a long and painful process of accountability for  the horrors they helped create.

The first major trial involving female guards  was the Belsen Trial in 1945.

Held by the British   in the German city of Lüneburg, it brought  together 45 defendants, including 11 female   guards from Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen.

Survivors  testified about what these women had done.

In the courtroom, the female guards often appeared  calm, even emotionless.

Irma Grese, only 22 years   old, stood out the most.

She was described as  beautiful and confident, yet the crimes linked   to her were horrifying.

The evidence was so  strong that the court sentenced her to death.

Alongside her were Elisabeth Volkenrath and  Juana Bormann, both also condemned for their   brutal actions.

All three women were executed by  hanging on December 13, 1945, marking one of the   earliest examples of female perpetrators facing  the ultimate punishment for war crimes.

In the Soviet zone, justice was also being  served.

Dorothea Binz was brought before a Soviet   military court.

The testimonies against her were  overwhelming, survivors remembered her cruelty in   every detail.

She was convicted and executed in  1947.

These early trials sent a strong message   that gender would not protect anyone from being  held accountable for crimes against humanity.

But not every guard faced justice so  quickly.

Hermine Braunsteiner’s story   showed how many managed to hide for years.

After being briefly imprisoned in 1946,   she was released and fled Europe altogether.

She  started a new life in Canada, then settled in   New York under the name “Mrs.

Ryan.

” For almost  two decades, she lived quietly as a housewife,   her past forgotten, until Nazi hunter Simon  Wiesenthal uncovered her true identity in   1964.

The exposure led to her extradition to  Germany, where she stood trial for participating   in mass killings at Majdanek.

In 1981, she  was finally sentenced to life in prison.

Maria Mandel faced her fate earlier.

Captured by  American forces, she was extradited to Poland and   put on trial in Kraków.

In 1948, she was  executed for her crimes.

Some of these women worked in smaller,  lesser-known camps spread across German-occupied   Europe, where the same horrors took place on  a smaller but equally terrifying scale.

At Stutthof, near Gdańsk, Poland, more than  115 female guards served between 1942 and   1945.

It was one of the first concentration camps  built outside Germany and one of the last to be   liberated.

Thousands of Jews, Poles, and Soviet  prisoners died there from starvation, disease,   or in the gas chambers.

Among the guards was  Gerda Steinhoff, just 23 years old, who actively   took part in sending prisoners to their deaths.

Witnesses said she often smiled as she selected   victims.

After the war, she was captured,  put on trial by a Polish court, and publicly   executed in 1946, one of the youngest female  war criminals to face the death penalty.

At Plaszów, the camp made infamous by the film  Schindler’s List, conditions were equally brutal.

Under the command of Amon Göth, female  guards such as Luise Danz were responsible   for overseeing female prisoners who worked in  grueling labor details.

Beatings were common,   and prisoners were punished for the smallest  mistakes, sometimes for crying or slowing   down from exhaustion.

Danz later served in  multiple camps, showing how these women were   transferred across the Nazi network to spread  their cruelty wherever it was needed.

In Helmbrechts, a small subcamp of Flossenbürg,  the female guards forced a deadly death march   as Allied troops approached in 1945.

Around  580 women prisoners, many of them Jewish,   were pushed to walk hundreds of miles in freezing  temperatures with no food or rest.

Those who   collapsed were shot on the roadside.

By the time  the march ended, fewer than half were still alive.

Survivors later said that the guards, many of them  barely older than the prisoners, were merciless,   showing no pity for the dying.

There were other camps like Neuengamme,   Gross-Rosen, and Lublin, where women  served as wardens, administrators,   and even execution assistants.

Most of  these women were never tried.

After the war,   many returned quietly to normal life, blending  into society.

Their names faded, but their victims   carried the pain forever.

As years passed, historians and investigators   uncovered new pieces of evidence showing  how involved women had been in running the   camps.

Researchers found lists of female  SS guards who had worked in over 30 major   concentration camps, totaling nearly 3,700  women across the Nazi camp network.

In 2015, one of the last surviving guards,  Hilde Michnia, was investigated in Germany   for her role at Bergen-Belsen and Gross-Rosen.

She was over 90 years old when prosecutors   reopened her case.

Her trial reminded the  world that even decades later, justice still   mattered.

People were shocked that she had lived  a quiet, normal life for so long while survivors   struggled with trauma that never went away.

Over time, these discoveries forced historians to   rewrite parts of Holocaust history.

Today, museums and memorials across   Europe continue to tell their stories, not to  glorify them, but to warn future generations.