Franz Suchomel

Franz Suchomel (3 December 1907 – 18 December 1979)[1] was a Sudeten German Nazi war criminal. He participated in the Action T4 euthanasia program, in Operation Reinhard, and the Einsatzgruppen actions in the Adriatic operational zone. He was convicted at the Treblinka trials in September 1965 and spent four years in prison.

Franz Suchomel
Born(1907-12-03)3 December 1907
Krumau, Austro-Hungarian Empire
Died18 December 1979(1979-12-18) (aged 72)
Altötting, Bavaria, West Germany
Allegiance Nazi Germany
Service/branch Schutzstaffel
RankUnterscharführer

Career

Franz Suchomel was born in Krumau, Bohemia in 1907, when it was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After leaving school he worked as an apprentice in his father's tailor shop and took over the family business in 1936. At the end of the 1920s, and again briefly in the fall of 1938, he served in the Czechoslovak Army. Suchomel joined the Sudeten German Party (SdP) in 1938. After the incorporation of the Sudetenland to the Third Reich as a result of the Munich Agreement, he became a member of the National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK), a paramilitary organization of the Nazi Party.[2] At the beginning of the Second World War, Suchomel was a tailor in the German Army and served in the Battle of France in 1940.[2] In March 1941 he became a photographer at the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre in the Action T4 headquarters in Berlin, where he took photographs of victims before their killing.[3]

Operation Reinhardt

In August 1942, Suchomel was transferred to the Treblinka extermination camp.[2] There he was responsible for handling incoming transports of Jewish victims as well as the confiscation and collection of valuables. He urged Jewish women on their way to the gas chambers disguised as showers:[4] "Dear ladies, quickly, quickly, quickly, the water is getting cold."[3]

In October 1943 he served at the Sobibor extermination camp for a short time. After Operation Reinhard ended in November 1943, Suchomel was transferred along with the rest of Globocnik's staff to Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral in Trieste. Here he was a member of Sonderabteilung Einsatz R (English: "Special Action Unit R"), involved in extermination of Jews, confiscation of Jewish assets, and fighting partisan activity.[3] As the end of the war approached, the "Special Unit" withdrew from northern Italy at the end of April 1945. Suchomel wound up in American captivity there as a prisoner of war and was released in August 1945.[5] After 1949 Suchomel lived in Altötting, Bavaria. There he was again employed as a tailor, and served in five amateur orchestras as well as in the Catholic church choir.[3]

Trial, conviction, later life

Twenty years after the end of the war, in the framework of first official investigations into crimes against humanity at the Treblinka extermination camp, German authorities collected evidence of Suchomel's participation in the Holocaust. He was arrested on 11 July 1963.[5] The Treblinka trials took place from 12 October 1964 until 3 September 1965 against ten defendants before the 3rd District Court of Düsseldorf. The charges consisted of the murder of at least 700,000 mainly Jewish people in the gas chambers, as well as deadly assault, shootings, and hangings of individual prisoners. Suchomel was convicted of accessory to murder and sentenced to six years in jail.[4] Suchomel was released from prison on 20 December 1967.[1]

Franz Suchomel was secretly recorded during an interview for the documentary film Shoah, directed by Claude Lanzmann and released in 1985. During the interview at the Hotel Post in Braunau am Inn, he provided details of Treblinka criminal operations. He performed the Treblinka song which prisoners had to learn upon arrival at the camp. The lyrics in English translation were: "We know only the word of our commandant. We know only obedience and duty. We want to serve, to go on serving until a little luck once awaits us. Hurray!"[6] He died on 18 December 1979.[1]

References

  1. Samuel Willenberg: Treblinka Lager. Revolte. Flucht. Warschauer Aufstand. Anm. 9, p. 217. Unrast-Verlag, Münster 2009, ISBN 978-3-89771-820-3
  2. Henry Friedländer: The Origins of Nazi Genocide – From Euthanasia to the Final Solution, Chapel Hill 1995, p. 240.
  3. Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich: Wer war was vor und nach 1945., Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 615
  4. Treblinka Trial at Shoah.de (in German)
  5. Short Biography of Franz Suchomel at deathcamps.org, retrieved 07-May-2012
  6. Micha Brumlik: Der zähe Schaum der Verdrängung, in Der Spiegel, Edition 8/1986, 17 February 1986, pp. 192–197.

Literature

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