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The Auschwitz SS Guard Who Screamed for Her Life: Maria Mandl

12 March 1938, Austria.

German troops cross the border without resistance,  and crowds gather to cheer and wave flags.

Flowers   are thrown, church bells ring, and the new order  announces itself with confidence and noise.

At the same time, fear spreads quietly  through Jewish homes, left wing circles,   and families marked as enemies of the new  regime.

Jobs are lost, loyalties are tested,   and opportunities open for those willing to serve  power without question.

Among the many Austrians   whose lives will be reshaped by this moment is a  young woman who will later become one of the most   feared figures in the Nazi concentration  camp system.

Her name is Maria Mandl.

Maria Mandl was born on 10 January  1912 in the village of Münzkirchen,   then part of Austria-Hungary.

She grew up in a  Catholic family that was well known locally and   considered respectable.

Her father Franz Mandl  worked as a master shoemaker and supported the   Christian Social Party, openly opposing the  Nazis in Austria.

Her mother Anna Streibl was   a housewife and was raising Maria and her  three other siblings.

Maria´s mother also   suffered from depressive episodes and had a  nervous breakdown during Mandl’s childhood.

Mandl attended school but her formal education  ended early.

At the age of twelve, she was   withdrawn from school to help on the farm, a  common practice in rural communities of that time.

Later, she graduated from a Catholic boarding  school, but was unable to find steady employment.

In her late teens and early twenties, Mandl moved  repeatedly.

She worked as a domestic servant in   the town of Brig in southern Switzerland, then  she became home-sick and went back to Austria,   where she worked as a chambermaid in the city  of Innsbruck, before returning home to care for   her parents.

After she came home, she found  secure employment at the local post office   and became engaged to a soldier of the German  army.

Her prospects were modest but stable.

The annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in  March 1938 shattered this stability – Mandl   lost her job because of her family’s political  background, and her fiancé ended their engagement,   fearing that association with her could  harm his future within the Third Reich.

Mandl found herself suddenly excluded from  normal life in a rapidly Nazifying society.

She learned soon that the new system rewarded  obedience and punished those who did not conform.

In September 1938, Mandl left Austria and moved  to Munich to live with her uncle, a policeman,   with the intention of having him get her a  position in the police force.

None were available,   however, and he instead encouraged her to apply  for the position at the Lichtenburg concentration   camp in the town of Prettin.

Later she would say  that she took the position only because the salary   was higher than that of a nurse, and that she  had known “nothing” about concentration camps.

On 15 October 1938, she began working as  a guard at Lichtenburg concentration camp,   one of the earliest camps operated by the SS,  the Nazi paramilitary unit also responsible   for the guarding of the camps.

At that time, the  camp held only female prisoners.

At Lichtenburg,   Mandl underwent ideological training and swore  loyalty to the Nazi Party and Adolf Hitler.

She   undertook this training with her cousin, Maria  Gruber, but the latter resigned early on because   she was disgusted by the violence at the camp.

On the other hand, Maria Mandl quickly adapted   to the camp environment and started to torment  the prisoners.

According to testimonies from   survivors Emilie Neu and Lina Haag, Mandl  subjected prisoners to whippings, beatings,   and strenuous exercises.

In one incident, Mandl  struck a prisoner repeatedly with a metal key   until she lost consciousness, then dragged her  across the camp and put her in a solitary cell.

On 15 May 1939, Mandl was transferred  to Ravensbrück concentration camp,   the main women’s camp in the Nazi system.

More than 130 000 women passed through the   camp during it´s existence, and the majority  of them did not survive.

In Ravensbrück,   Maria Mandl would patrol the camp with a  dog, and if she took a disliking to someone,   she would set the dog on the prisoner until the  inmate was torn to pieces.

When she approached,   prisoners would whisper warnings that Mandl  was coming, and everyone would fall silent.

She   always carried a whip, using it to beat and kick  prisoners all over their bodies.

On one occasion,   Mandl viciously beat a prisoner who dared to pick  up scraps of discarded food.

On another occasion,   she brutally kicked and beat an elderly  prisoner in the corridor near the camp cells,   causing the woman to collapse on the stone floor.

Mandl continued to kick her until the old prisoner   was dead.

She often confined prisoners in cells  with straitjackets and beat them unconscious.

At Ravensbrück, Maria Mandl’s presence was  a symbol of relentless cruelty and terror,   making roll calls with her among the worst  experiences inmates had to endure.

In the   early spring and autumn, when the ground was  covered with frost, she forbade prisoners   from wearing shoes, allowing them only during  work.

Otherwise, they had to walk barefoot.

Prisoners often had to stand barefoot from  4:00 a.

m.

through the entire roll call,   until about 6:00 a.

m.

If a prisoner, usually  an older woman, placed a piece of paper under   her feet for some relief, Mandl would punch  and kick her senseless.

For this offense,   the beaten victims were often carried  away to a dark cell or the penal block.

The Second World War started on 1 September  1939 with the German invasion of Poland.

As   the war expanded, the concentration camp  system became central to German occupation   and policy of mass murder.

In 1942, the  SS leadership decided to establish a large   women’s camp at Auschwitz and Mandl was promoted  and transferred to Auschwitz II – Birkenau, where   she became the chief guard of the women’s camp.

At Birkenau, Mandl exercised near total power.

Her only superior was the camp commandant Rudolf  Höss, who trusted her completely.

In the camp,   she controlled all female guards and thousands  of prisoners and decided who would live die.

According to survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch,  Mandl would stand in front of the camp’s front   gate while prisoners were lined up.

If a prisoner  made eye contact with her, they were removed from   the line and killed.

She also signed death lists  on a weekly basis and showed particular cruelty   toward Jewish prisoners and Polish women.

She tore children from their mothers’ arms   and sent them to be killed.

When mothers tried  to follow, she beat them until they collapsed.

Mandl also embodied the contradictions of the  camp system.

She organized the famous Women’s   Orchestra of Auschwitz, which was formed in 1943  from the inmates in the camp.

In this way Mandl   was cynically forcing music into a place built for  mass murder.

Prisoners played as others marched   to forced labour, returned exhausted, or were  led to their deaths.

Concerts were also held,   every Sunday, for SS personnel.

What is  interesting in Mandl’s story of cruelty   is that a small number of women survived because  of their role in the orchestra, while millions of   others were murdered.

Under Mandl’s authority,  culture and killing existed side by side.

As the Soviet Red Army advanced in late  1944, Mandl was transferred to the Mühldorf   concentration camp complex, a subcamp system of  Dachau concentration camp.

She arrived in December   1944.

At Mühldorf, prisoners were worked to death  constructing underground factories for German jet   aircraft like Messerschmitt Me 262.

Conditions  were brutal, food was scarce, and mortality was   extreme.

In this brutal territory Mandl started an  intimate relationship with Walter Adolf Langleist,   the commandant of the Mühldorf camp.

As  Allied forces closed in the spring of 1945,   Mandl and Langliest fled.

Soon afterwards, she  turned up in her birthplace of Münzkirchen.

However, her father refused to let her stay in  her parents’ house, so she sought refuge with her   sister.

On 10 August 1945, she was arrested and  imprisoned at the premises of the former Dachau   concentration camp, where she was interrogated  by the Americans, and later extradited to Poland.

She was imprisoned in Kraków and tried before  the Polish Supreme National Tribunal during the   Auschwitz Trial, which started on 24 November  1947.

A total of 44 SS personnel were accused,   with Mandl being one of only five  women brought before the tribunal.

During the trial, survivor testimonies described  her beatings, selections, and killings in detail.

At first, Mandl denied responsibility,  but later, she admitted.

Based on the   number of lists signed with her name, Mandl is  believed to have been complicit in the deaths   of approximately 500,000 people during the war.

On 22 December 1947, the Polish Supreme National   Tribunal in Kraków sentenced  Maria Mandl to death by hanging.

Mandl decided to fight for her life and begged for  mercy asking for clemency but the Polish president   Bolesław Bierut rejected her request.

In the  days leading up to her execution, she cried,   prayed in her cell and withdrew into herself.

On 24 January 1948, the 36-year-old Maria Mandl   was the last in the group to be hanged and because  she had probably witnessed the first executions,   she showed the most resistance.

As former  Auschwitz staff members were being executed,   the prosecutor, prison guards, and the prison  director were all intoxicated.

Mandl proved the   most difficult to handle —screaming and  resisting as the guards forcibly dragged   her across the courtyard toward the gallows –  her execution turned into a grotesque scene.

During this time, they were all laughing and  ridiculing Mandl and poking fun at her.

As the   guards teased and taunted Maria Mandl, she just  closed her eyes, and said her last words “Poland   Lives”.

Afterwards, Mandl, still struggling, was  hanged.

At 7:32 AM her execution was completed.

Hours after her execution, Mandl’s body was  sent to the Jagiellonian University Medical   College for students to experiment on for a  six-week period.

On 6 March 1948, her body   was moved to the Rakowicki Cemetery in Kraków  and buried in a wooden box at an unmarked spot.

Mandl’s father had been aware of the atrocities  his daughter committed and did not request for   her remains to be sent home.

Her mother had  already died by that time, but while she lived,   she prayed for her daughter’s eternal soul.

Yet prayers could not erase the harm done,   nor the lives lost because of Mandl’s actions.