
Archive/File: holocaust/germany/dora reuter.040395
Last-Modified: 1995/04/10
Survivors of V2 Nazi slave camp mark liberation
By Richard Murphy
MITTELBAU DORA, Germany, April 3 (Reuter) - ``This is what
hell must be like.''
The words of French survivor Jean Mialet express, better
than any others, the horrors of the underground concentration
camp at Mittelbau Dora in which slave labourers were worked to
death making Nazi Germany's V2 ``wonder weapon'' rockets.
From late 1943, thousands of prisoners from dozens of
countries toiled in appalling conditions to produce the rockets
that rained destruction on London and other cities.
Mittelbau Dora, on the outskirts of Nordhausen in east
Germany, was established as a top-secret satellite camp of
Buchenwald in 1943 after British bombers destroyed the main
missile research base at Peenemuende on the Baltic coast.
Adolf Hitler hoped the supersonic V2s -- the ``V'' stood for
Vergeltung, meaning retaliation -- would turn the tide of war
back in Germany's favour. An estimated 20,000 prisoners died
making them.
Franz Rosenbach is still astonished that he survived.
Arrested in Austria because he was a gypsy and therefore
deemed ``racially inferior,'' he was sent first to Auschwitz,
then Buchenwald and finally, in early 1944, to Mittelbau Dora.
He was 15 years old.
``I am still amazed today that anyone survived,'' he
recalls.
``We got almost nothing to eat, a piece of bread, perhaps
two or three potatoes. But you know, when you are young, you can
take an awful lot. And if you are careful not to attract
attention...I always thought this was not the end for me.''
Mialet and Rosenbach will be among around 800 survivors at
ceremonies at Mittelbau Dora on April 11 marking the 50th
anniversary of its liberation by U.S. soldiers.
The tunnels and caves, the entrances to which were blown up
by Russian troops in 1948, will be partly reopened to serve as a
memorial to the victims.
The V2 was developed by Wernher von Braun, who after World
War Two directed the U.S. space programme. In all, around 5,000
V2s were fired from sites along the English Channel, killing
thousands of British civilians.
The first 107 prisoners from Buchenwald were shipped to
Mittelbau Dora in August 1943 and put to work carving out new
tunnels to enlarge an existing storage depot. Within six months,
12,000 prisoners were toiling in dark, unventilated caverns.
Enduring back-breaking labour, malnutrition and disease as
well as the random brutality of their guards, they were also
exposed to the gas, noise and dust of explosions. By the spring
of 1945, the number of prisoners had reached 40,000.
The death toll was horrendous, with nearly 3,000 prisoners
dying between October 1943 and March 1944 alone. Most were
Russian, French or Polish.
Thousands of others deemed no longer fit to work were sent
to other death camps.
``Until the spring of 1994 the prisoners lived
underground,'' says Angela Fiedermann, a member of staff at the
memorial site.
``The sanitation was totally inhuman. There were no toilets
and there was no water. The temperature was eight or nine
degrees Celsius (46-48 Fahrenheit) and humidity was 90 percent.
They died like flies.''
Rosenbach, who arrived as accommodation blocks were being
built above ground, worked gruelling eight-hour shifts drilling
holes in the rock to prepare for blasting.
``When the explosives were set off, prisoners had to start
clearing up immediately. There were lots of accidents, people
buried alive under rocks and rubble,'' he says.
Rene Steenbeke, a retired Belgian army officer, says his
worst memories are of the executions on the camp parade ground.
``I saw 51 prisoners being hanged, their hands behind their
backs, a piece of wood in their mouths, hanged in groups of
about 12. They could see their comrades being killed before them
and they had to watch.''
By early 1945, Mittelbau Dora was producing around 690 V2s a
month. The monthly death toll among prisoners in the first three
months of that year averaged 2,000.
Production ground to a halt in March as Allied troops pushed
deep into Germany from both east and west. In April, a partial
evacuation began, with already weakened prisoners sent on brutal
forced marches to other camps which few survived.
Rosenbach managed to escape from a party of around 500 which
set off for Oranienburg concentration camp. Only half a dozen of
his group arrived. The others died or were murdered by their
guards on the way.
Liberation for the survivors came on April 11, when Aurio
Pierro, an acting platoon leader from the U.S. 33rd Armoured
Regiment, drove his tank up to the gates. They were opened by
surprised prisoners, the guards having apparently fled.
Before his unit moved on, Pierro obtained a glimpse of what
lurked within when he entered a building on the periphery.
``There were dead bodies there, naked, emaciated, tied hand
and foot,'' the retired lawyer told Reuters from his home in
Massachusetts.
The rocket equipment was spirited away by U.S. troops in
June 1945, filling more than 300 railway wagons, and shipped to
the United States to help with its space programme.
Today, the grim subterranean passages where the V2s were
made are still littered with footwear, tools and eating
utensils. Visitors will gain some sense of the cold, damp and
sheer awfulness of the place.
Rene Steenbeke hopes they may also reflect on the part
Mittelbau Dora played in launching modern space travel.
``Everything that is now in space had its origins here, not
in America or Russia,'' he says. ``This is where a new science
started, but it is also where science and death met.''
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