Rheinwiesenlager
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Prisoner of War Temporary Enclosures (PWTE) | |
---|---|
"Rheinwiesenlager" | |
World War II | |
prisoner-of-war camp | |
Operator: | Occupant: |
April - September 1945 | |
location: | Germany |
number of camps: | 19 |
prisoners: | ~ 1,000,000 estimated |
deaths: | 3,000 - 10,000 estimated |
The Rheinwiesenlager (Rhine meadow camps), official name Prisoner of War Temporary Enclosures (PWTE) were a group of about 19 transit camps for holding about one million German POWs after World War II from spring until late summer 1945. Several thousand German POWs died from starvation, dehydration and exposure to the weather elements.
Contents |
[edit] List of Rheinwiesenlager
listing from north to south with official number
- A4 Büderich
- A1 Rheinberg
- A9 Wickrathberg
- A2 Remagen
- A5 Sinzig
- Siershahn
- A11 A14 Andernach
- Diez
- A13 Urmitz
- A10 Koblenz
- A8 Dietersheim
- A12Heidesheim
- A6 Winzenheim/Bretzenheim
- A16 A17Hechtsheim
- A7 A15 Biebelsheim
- A3 Bad Kreuznach
- C1 Ludwigshafen
- C2 Böhl-Iggelheim
- C3 C4Heilbronn
Most of the camps were established on the western side of river Rhine to prevent the imprisoned soldiers from returning to the German armies on the right side of the river.
[edit] Historical Situation
By March 1943, the general staff of the commander in chief Dwight D. Eisenhower realized that after the invasion in Europe and the victory over Germany, they would not to be able to feed the German military prisoners. Rather than adhere to the Geneva Convention of 1929, it was decided to treat the prisoners as "Disarmed Enemy Forces (DEF)". As captured former soldiers of a state that no longer existed, they could be denied the rights of prisoners of war guaranteed by the Geneva Convention. The German Wehrmacht employed a similar strategy in referring to imprisoned Italian soldiers as "Militärinternierter" in order to justify their use as forced labour.
Half of the German prisoners of war in the West were imprisoned by the US forces, half of them by the British. When the allied forces crossed the Rhine, the quantity of prisoners of war reached such numbers that the British could not accept any more prisoners in their camps. The US forces, forced to deal with the situation on their own, established the Rheinwiesenlager.
[edit] The construction of the camps
In the beginning, there were plans to bring the prisoners of war to Britain, where they would remain until capitulation, because there they could be better provided for. After the failure of the Ardennes offensive 250,000 German soldiers surrendered. After the breakdown of the Ruhr pocket another 325,000 were taken prisoner. After capitulation there were 3.4 million German soldiers in allied custody. With such large numbers of prisoners, it seemed more logical to keep them in Germany.
The camps were founded in April 1945 and remained in existence until September 1945. There was a similar plan for the construction of all the camps. Open farmland close to a village with a railroad line was enclosed with barbed wire and divided into 10 - 20 camps each housing 5,000 to 10,000 men. Existing field paths were used as streets of the camp and surrounding buildings as the administration, kitchen and hospital.[1] The prisoners of war, forced to surrender their equipment, had to dig holes in the earth by hand in which to sleep. Soon the camps were totally overcrowded. Camp Remagen, intended for 100,000, grew to 184,000 prisoners.[2]
[edit] The "disarmed enemy forces"
The term "Prisoners of war (POW)" was not applied to circumvent international regulations that deal with the handling of POWs, instead the surrendered forces were termed "Disarmed Enemy Forces (DEF)". The Americans transferred the interior administration of the camps to German prisoners. Internal administration, police, doctors, cooks and work forces were all German prisoners of war. After some weeks those who were regarded harmless were released: Hitlerjungen and women. Later those professional groups, which were important for reconstruction, were released: farmers, drivers and miners. At the end of June 1945 the first camps in Remagen, Böhl-Ingelheim and Büderich were dissolved. This first wave of release stopped again. The SHAEF offered the French, who wanted 1.75 million prisoners of war for forced labour, to take over the camps. On 10 July 1945 the camps were given to France. In the British Zone the British took over on 12 June 1945. Those prisoners of war who were able to work were transferred to France, the rest released. At the end of September 1945 all the camps were dissolved. Only the camp Bretzenheim near Bad Kreuznach served until 1948 as a transit camp for prisoners of war coming home from France.
[edit] Conditions and deaths
Official United States statistics were just over 3,000 deaths while the German villages nearby reported 4,537. R. J. Rummel calculates a most probable figure of 6,000.[3] Extremely high figures of up to a million are sometimes quoted, for instance, by James Bacque but there has been no corroboration and such large numbers of dead bodies would have been discovered and reported in the meantime since the camps were located near highly populated areas in Germany. The official German inquiry into the numbers of deaths was published by the Maschke committee (named after its head, Erich Maschke) which, on behalf of the German Federal Ministry of Displaced persons, Refugees, and War Victims (Bundesministerium für Vertriebene, Flüchtlinge und Kriegsgeschädigte) researched the history of German prisoners of war on a scientific level.[4] According to their results camps with the highest mortality were:
- Bad Kreuznach (Lager Galgenberg und Bretzenheim)
- Sinzig near Remagen
- Rheinberg
- Heidesheim
- Wickrathberg
- Büderich
In these camps 5,000 of 500,000 inmates died. An analysis of the documents of the local administrations around the camps of Remagen yields similar results.[5] Projected to a total of about 1,000,000 prisoners in all the camps there would have been at the most, 10,000 deaths and probably many less.
The lack of food and unhygienic conditions in these camps where the prisoners lived in open holes in the silty ground, were a severe danger to the lives of the imprisoned. The regular soldiers accustomed to the hard conditions of the war had fewer problems than the wounded, crippled, or the young or old members of the Volkssturm. It is said that Bretzenheim was the worst camp, where about 103,000 members of the Waffen-SS were imprisoned.
The camps were guarded by the 106th Infantry Division of the American army,[6] which was supplied with additional transport units to bring food to the camps. These transport units were not sufficient and the division was incapable of organizing the camps.[7] In April and May the US army had lost control of the situation. They did not even know the real location of some of the camps.[8] There were many more prisoners than expected and later inquiries by the medical department of the US army cited thoughtlessness and misjudgment.[9] The entire organisation of the camps was therefore left to the prisoners.
In addition to the imprisoned doctors, the 65th, 66th, 67th, 68th, and 69th Medical Groups were responsible for the medical care.[10]
The International Red Cross was prevented from visiting the prisoners because the American forces did not want their emissaries to see the situation in the camp. Dirty, wet, unhygienic conditions and malnutrition lead to common sickness. Epidemics were prevented by the Americans who supplied prisoners with soap and toilet paper, chlorinated the drinking water and used DDT.[11] The food and water supplies were insufficient during April and May 1945. The situation slowly improved and by June 1945 there was a sufficient amount of food. In May and June all camps were provided with latrines, kitchens and hospitals. [12]
[edit] References
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 381: „ In the first phase of construction, which was rather prolonged, these enclosures consisted of only barbed wire fences in fields. Later, some canvas was provided, and still later, some buildings were put up. For most of the time, prisoners were without cover and were exposed to rain and snow and mud in the ending winter, and to heat, dust, or rain and mud as spring advanced to early summer. Some of the enclosures resembled Andersonville Prison in 1864"
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 382/383
- ^ R.J. Rummel STATISTICS OF DEMOCIDE: Chapter 13: Death By American Bombing And Other Democide
- ^ Kurt W. Böhme, Die deutschen Kriegsgefangenen in amerikanischer Hand, München 1972, Page 204
- ^ Kurt Kleemann, Die Kriegsgefangenenlager Remagen und Sinzig 1945 aus der Sicht kommunaler Aktenbestände, Jahrbuch für Westdeutsche Landesgeschichte, (20), 1994, Page 52
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 381
- ^ Kurt W. Böhme,Die deutschen Kriegsgefangenen in amerikanischer Hand, München 1972, Page 105
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Table 21; on the map shown there the camp Mainz-Zahlbach (17) (Mainz Hechtsheim) is located on the wrong side of the Rhine, about 30 kilometers away from its real location.
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 392
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 382
- ^ Richard Ernest Dupuy, St. Vith: Lion in the Way, The 106. Infantry Division in World War II, Nashville 1949, ISBN 0-89839-092-3, Page 227
- ^ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, Volume IX, SPECIAL FIELDS, Prepared and published under the direction of Lieutenant General LEONARD D. HEAT0N The Surgeon General, United States Army Editor in Chief, Colonel ROBERT S. ANDERSON, MC, USA Editor for Preventive Medicine, EBBE CURTIS HOFF, Ph D, M D Assistant Editor, PHEBE M. HOFF, M.A., OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1969, Pg 278-392
[edit] See also
[edit] Further reading
- Rüdiger Overmans: Die Rheinwiesenlager 1945. In: Hans-Erich Volkmann (Hrsg.): Ende des Dritten Reiches – Ende des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Eine perspektivische Rückschau. herausgegeben im Auftrag des Militärgeschichtlichen Forschungsamtes, München 1995, ISBN 3-492-12056-3.
- Brigitte Bailer-Galanda: Eisenhower und die deutschen Kriegsgefangenen. Jahrbuch 1997. Dokumentationsarchiv des österreichischen Widerstandes, Wien 1997
[edit] External links
- Peace Museum Bridge at Remagen - PWTEs 1945
- Enemy Prisoners of War, Stanhope Bayne-Jones, M.D.