49°15' / 23°51'
Schupo-Kriegsverbrecher von Stryj vor dem
Wiener Volksgericht
Published in Haifa, June 1957
Acknowledgments
Project Coordinator
Uriel Zur Schützer
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THE PROTECTIVE POLICE WAR CRIMINALS OF STRYJ
TRIED BY THE PEOPLE'S COURT, VIENNA
Collection of Documents
how Jewish men and women were pressed into forced labor, treated like slaves, and how the SS was paid 5 Zloty per work day for every day (as evinced by a report written by the head of the SS and police for Galicia, SS-General Katzmann);how the Jews were robbed of their valuables and all their property, which was then sent to the German Reich (according to a report by SS-team leader Frank, dated September 26, 1942, Re: Utilization of Property occasioned by the settlement and resettlement of the Jews);
how the gassing of the Jews was carried out by the Nazis in the extermination camp of Belzec outside of Lviv.
The arrest of the Protective Policemen from Stryj occurred as follows:
A Vienna State Police inspector was convinced that a list of those policemen
who were sent from Vienna to serve in the East between 1940 and 1944 still
existed. It turned out that a list of 7,000 Protective Policemen who were on
duty in Europe was indeed discovered in the Human Resources Division of the
Secretary General's Office of Police Headquarters in Vienna. Three shorthand
typists were dispatched to the Human Resources Division and transcribed the
entire Protective Police list over two days. The list contained the following
information: personal data, Viennese home address, war-time location and
residence, duration of duty, rank, etc. The lists we prepared were organized by
the different towns in which groups of Protective Policemen were present during
the war.
It was decided to collect evidence against the Protective Policemen from
Stryj and to prepare for their arrest.
It was our task to find witnesses from Stryj, to collect testimony implicating
the ignored Protective Policemen, who were still on duty with the Vienna Police
Department. We had in our possession lists that contained thousands of war
criminals' names. Instead of arranging for witnesses giving us the names of the
war criminals, our task consisted of locating surviving witnesses from each
town.
On the basis of a list of Vienna's Jewish population between 1945 and 1948,
which we owned, we were familiar with every Jewish refugee, as well as with the
ghetto in which he [/she] lived during the war. After a few days we succeeded
in presenting several Jewish witnesses, who had survived the Stryj ghetto and
now resided in Vienna, to the inspectors and examiners of the Vienna State
Police.
Following are the names of the witnesses who were present at Vienna Police
Headquarters in October 1947:
Bernhard Wien, Arthur Sobol, Wilhelm Taub, Moses Süssholz, Henryk Rosen, as well as a Christian witness from Vienna, Eduard Janca, who worked as a master builder in Stryj and gave very interesting testimony.A few days after the witnesses' depositions, the arrest of the war criminals was begun. In mid-October 1947, 13 former Protective Policemen from Stryj were already under arrest:
The deputy of the Protective Police Commander in Stryj, First Lieutenant Kranzler; First Lieutenant Pflamitzer; Policeman Garber; Policeman Christament; Hauptwachtmeister Alois Bidmon; Hauptwachtmeister Alois Klein; Policeman Max Preuer; Hauptwachtmeister Rudolf Rohrhofer; Policeman Johann Schaffner; First Lieutenant Franz Schöpf; Policeman Franz Venhoda.Coincidentally, we possess evidence against the 13 war criminals from Stryj. Although witnesses from Stryj, now in Israel, have already contacted us to testify against the 13 defendants, there is no urgent need for such testimony, given that 5 of the defendants, namely Garber, Christament, Rohrhofer, Schaffner, and Venhoda, have already admitted that they personally shot and killed hundreds of Jews. At the same time, they also implicated all their other fellow policemen.
The Jews of Stryj and Environs
Of the 33,000 inhabitants of Stryj (1938), 13,000 were Jews. When German troops
invaded Poland in September 1939 and occupied city after city, thousands of
Jewish citizens left their home towns to avoid being captured by the Germans.
They fled to the towns in the eastern part of Poland. Thus, many refugees
arrived in Stryj. As is known, the eastern part of Poland was occupied by the
Red Army from September 1939 through June 1941. When war erupted between
Germany and Russia on June 22, 1941, Stryj was occupied by German troops on
July 1, 1941.
Pursuant to the corrected order of SS-Obergruppenführer Heydrich, the Head of SD Headquarters in Berlin, all Jews living in villages
and small towns were to be concentrated in district towns. Around Stryj, there
were 52 villages with Jewish families, who were evacuated to Stryj as early as
the fall of 1941. In addition, more Jewish families from the smallish towns
around Stryj arrived there as well. By the end of 1941, the Jewish population
of Stryj had grown to 30,000. According to Policeman Garber, 2,000 Jews were
shot and killed in the Holobutov grove; 1,500 were shot and killed in the
Jewish cemetery. Every operation in the ghetto, as well as evacuation
operations, provoked shoot-and-kill actions against Jews on the spot.
According to surviving witnesses, 10,000 Jews out of that number were shot and
killed. The other 20,000 were taken by train to the extermination camp of
Belzec outside of Lviv. It is clear from their own police transcripts to what
degree the Protective Policemen participated in the extermination of the Jews
of Stryj. The Protective Police force of Stryj was led by Police Commander
Klarmann from Cologne, who had previously been a church painter.
The Protective Policemen from Stryj are also responsible for the annihilation
of Jews in the environs of Stryj, viz. from the small towns of Skole, Bolekhov,
Dolina, Zhidachiv, Zhuravno, Bibrka Chodoriw, Mikolajov, Lavoczne, Synevidsko,
Sokolov, Rozdol, and others, where 25,000 Jews lived, who were liquidated by
the Protective Police, together with the Gestapo.
Account by the Protective Policemen of their Activity in Stryj
One of the cruelest war criminals, who personally shot and killed hundreds of
men, women and children in Stryj, was Policeman Garber. Garber testifies as
follows in this transcript from October 16, 1947:
"On October 7, 1941, I was detailed to Stryj, together with about 20
fellow policemen from Vienna. Initially we, i.e., our entire office, were used
in cordoning off operations of certain Jewish city blocks. The Jews were herded
into the cordoned-off area and then, under guard of the Protective Police,
Gendarmerie, and Ukrainian militia, brought to the Stryj train station, were they were
crowded into waiting railroad cars, ready for departure.
The first liquidation in Holobutov was carried out around April 1942. I, as
well as Beilner, Hick, Scheiflinger, Venhoda, Heinrich, and Zeman, stood at the
edge of the pit. Besides us, there were also a few SD people. The Jews, who had
been ordered to disrobe, were now led, in groups of 20, to the opposite side of
the pit and ordered to line at the pit's edge, with their backs towards us.
Then I and the mentioned individuals shot those who had lined up in the head,
from a distance of about 6m (we used Russian machine pistols; some of us used
Russian carbines). Upon seeing that one of the Jews who fell into the pit was
not dead yet, I gave him the coup de grâce.
In this manner, we liquidated about 300 women, men and children during this
operation. The entire office, to my knowledge, served guard duty, with the
exception of one individual, who was on emergency service. I actively
participated in three liquidation operations in Holobutov.
I can state with certainty that the following individuals fired during each of
the three mentioned operations: Klarmann, Bischinger, Beilinger, Christament,
Hartmann, Hick, Rohrhofer, Scheiflinger, Venhoda, Zeman.
It occurred occasionally that our office was notified of Jews who were in
hiding. We were ordered to hunt them down and liquidate them on the spot. This
operation was carried out by groups from our office. The members of my group
were Hick, Thibes, Peter, Scheiflinger, Heinrich, and several Ukrainian
policemen. Individuals were dragged by us out of their hiding places, so-called
bunkers, herded together in front of a wall in the ghetto, and blindly shot to
death by us. The Judenrat, despite our orders to the contrary, buried the corpses in the Jewish
cemetery. The other group, which had the same order to hunt Jews out of their
hiding places, consisted of Beilner, Klein, Scheiflinger, Heinrich, Thibes,
Zeman, and several Ukrainians.
Later we also carried out liquidations in the Jewish cemetery.
The Jews were rounded up in the ghetto, brought to the prison, and transported
to the Jewish cemetery once a large-enough number had accumulated. There the
same procedure [as above] was carried out, and all members of the department
fired. Typically one individual remained in the office to take care of business
there; we took turns doing this.
About 2,000 Jews were liquidated in Holobutov, about 1,500 in the Jewish
cemetery
At the end of 1943 a Jew raid occurred in the area around the glass factory.
The entire department participated in this operation. It was planned to hand
over the arrested Jews, about 140, to the court jail. During the operation a
young lad jumped me and attempted to stab me with a long knife. As a result, he
was shot by First Lieutenant Klarmann. At this point, all other Jews attempted
to flee into all directions, and I saw that a First Lieutenant of the Ukrainian
police named Wachtchuk was injured by Jews. This was the signal for opening
fire on the crowd from everywhere, and I myself blindly fired into the crowd
with my machine pistol."
First Lieutenant Pflamitzer, Deputy of the Protective Police Commander in
Stryj from 1941 to 1942, testified as follows in his police transcript,
dated October
3, 1947:
"On October 6, 1941, I was transferred from Vienna to Stryj, Galicia,
where a Protective Police Department was being established. Together with me,
19 of my fellow policemen went to Stryj as well: Division Head Albin Hauptmann,
Bischinger, Christament, Garber, Venhoda, Klein, Pabisch, Heinrich [,] Tibes,
Zeman, Schöpf, Hick, Johann Kranzler, Schaffner, Scheiflinger, Rohrhofer,
Bidmon. We left Vienna on October 6, 1941, and arrived in Stryj approximately
six days later. First Lieutenant Hauptmann was the Division Head, I was his
deputy. Our order was to maintain law and order in the town of Stryj. Our
division reported to the Commander of the Protective Police in Lviv, Colonel
Stach, a Reichs German. Prior to our arrival in Stryj, the unit on duty was the
Gendarmerie, headed by Second Lieutenant Richtsfeld from Saxony. There existed no Gestapo
office in Stryj. Gestapo duties were carried out by a Hauptscharführer from the Drogobych office. First Lieutenant Hauptmann was charged from Lviv to
deploy a certain number of Ukrainian militia.
On this matter, Hauptmann had several talks with the Local Commander of
Stryj, Dr. von Dorwitz. As it turned out, about 70 Ukrainian policemen
were
available to the Protective Police division. They were commanded by Nykolin,
who was a Captain in the old Austrian army.
After my arrival in Stryj in October 1941, I noticed that Jews were marked with
blue-and-white armbands. I knew that during my stay in Stryj a Judenrat existed. Furthermore I was aware of the fact that a Jewish Order Enforcement
Division reported to the Judenrat. We used the Judenrat when we furnished our offices. The individual items were then delivered by the Judenrat. Before my departure from Stryj in April 1942 I heard that Lviv ordered the
Local Commander to establish a ghetto in Stryj."
First Lieutenant Kranzler's account, dated October 18, 1947
On June 3, 1941, I was ordered to report to the Protective Police in Stryj, in
the stead of Second Lieutenant Pflamitzer. My area of responsibility was office
duty of the division, viz. processing of files, secret orders, and reports to
higher authorities. In October 1942, First Lieutenant Hauptmann was transferred
and replaced in Stryj by First Lieutenant Klarmann, the Commander of the
Protective Police. I recall that immediately after Klarmann's arrival the
Gestapo officers Gabriel and Bock put in an appearance in Klarmann's office and
suggested to him that he and his staff participate in liquidation operations.
At the end of October, the first large-scale operation against the Jews
occurred.
At that time Klarmann ordered me to repair early in the morning to the main
square, together with some Protective Policemen and Ukrainian militia men, to
receive the Jews who were apprehended there by other Protective Policemen and
to guard them. After about 200 to 300 Jews had accumulated there, Klarmann and
I brought them to the synagogue. We crowded more than 1,000 individuals into
the synagogue who had to stand squeezed together due to lack of space. At the
end of the operation, the synagogue was closed and the Jews remained in this
inhumane condition for three days. To my knowledge, these individuals were then
trucked to the Holobutov grove. It was our task to load the Jews onto the
trucks which arrived in rotation. To my knowledge, the entire Stryj division
was used for this operation.
"Klarmann decided on me to go to Holobutov and carry out the next
liquidation operation, which occurred roughly 8 weeks later. This liquidation
operation involved 800 individuals--men, women, and children. The liquidation
unit comprised me and
Bischinger, Zeman, Schaffner, Christament, Venhoda, Garber, Rohrhofer, Tibes,
Peter, Heinrich, and about 10 to 15 Ukrainian policemen.
The liquidation operation was carried out as follows: we drove our trucks on
the road from Stryj to Drogobych. Roughly 6km outside of Stryj a gravel path
split off from the main road on the left. We turned onto the gravel path and
drove for about 140m. The Jews now had to alight from the trucks and disrobe in
groups of about 10-15. They were accompanied by Ukrainian militia, which was
positioned in a semi-circle and secured the site. At the edge of the grove a
Protective Policeman was positioned with two Ukrainian militia soldiers; he
took over the group. On top of the knoll there was a pit which was 7m deep. The
Jews now had to line up on the side of the pit opposite to the liquidation
unit, with their backs turned on those individuals, and were then shot and
killed by shots in the head from a distance of about 6m. The unit used Russian
machine pistols and guns. I was positioned at the edge of the woods, with the
second sentry, and wanted to go up to witness the liquidation, when a group of
naked Jews was led uphill. An elderly woman at that point asked me to save her
daughter who was about 18 or 19 years old. I demurred, turned around, and
returned to the collecting point."
Policeman Josef Christament states in his transcript, dated October 17, 1947.
"I admit having participated twice in liquidation operations in Holobutov.
The Jews were loaded onto trucks in Stryj, picked up at the prison, and then
brought out to Holobutov. I admit that Klarmann assigned me twice to the
execution unit and that I fired a German carbine."
Continuation of Christament's testimony, dated October 23, 1947.
"At the beginning of 1943 I also participated in an operation in the
Jewish hospital. As I recall, Klarmann, Garber, Hick, Schaffner, Bischinger
participated as well. It was our order to transfer Jews who were moveable to
the Stryj prison. As I recall, the Jews fled from their beds and we caught up
with them and shot them up in the hospital's courtyard. Individuals who could
not flee due to their illnesses were shot and killed in their beds by Klarmann.
Excerpt from Rudolf Rohrhofer's transcript, dated October 18, 1947.
"During the first liquidation of Jews I was ordered to lead the Jews up to
the pit, where they were shot and killed by members of the Gestapo. Later we
Protective Policemen were ordered by First Lieutenant Klarmann to carry out the
shootings ourselves. I admit that I once participated in a liquidation
operation. First Lieutenant Klarmann ordered me to fire with a ten-rounds
automatic rifle. After this rifle malfunctioned, I used my carbine.
Christament, Garber, Beiler, Venhoda, Garber and Venhoda [sic] used machine
pistols. As I recall, the Judenrat of Stryj was liquidated in the courtyard of the building it worked in, after
the ghetto had been liquidated. Around the same time, the Jewish Order
Enforcement Division was liquidated in another part of the building."
Excerpt from Johann Schaffner's transcript, dated November 11, 1947
"In 1943, I believe in the spring, our division was ordered to carry out
the liquidation of the Stryj Judenrat. I recall that First Lieutenant Klarmann
set off with Venhoda, Christament, Garber, and a Bavarian (from the Protective Railroad Police) to
carry out that order. After carrying out this liquidation the mentioned
individuals returned to the office and related that they carried out the
shooting of members of the Judenrat (about 10 to 12 individuals).
Regarding the slaughter at the "Asa" glass factory, the events were
as follows: the entire division, excepting Schöpf and the guard, were to
lead the Jewish workers of the glass factory to the prison. When the Jews were
led from the factory, the Ukrainian militia colonel Waczuck was positioned
across from the factory gate. A Jewish worker injured his face by throwing a
rock. The restlessness caused by this event amongst the Jewish workers had
already begun to die down when G a r b e r suddenly yelled "Down!"
and began to fire his machine pistol at the Jews. Garber acted as if he was
possessed and was shooting until all Jews were lying on the ground. To
facilitate understanding of the local topography, I enclose a sketch of
Garber's location. Garber seemed to derive special pleasure from the
executions. Hick was especially rough and brutal, too."
Ten xerox copies of police transcripts of Policeman Garber, Policeman
Christament, Hauptwachtmeister Rohrhofer, Policeman Schaffner, Policeman Venhoda, and First Lieutenant Kranzler are enclosed.
Translator's Notes
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