Grafenort concentration camp


The Grafenort concentration camp as treated in the present article is a conventional name for three separate Nazi concentration camps that functioned in the village of Grafenort on the territory of Nazi Germany during the Second World War.
Located in an expropriated Renaissance castle, the concentration camp was operational throughout the War, but for 68 days was formally run as an all-female subcamp of Gross-Rosen between 1 March 1945 and 8 May 1945 in the aftermath of the strategic liquidation of the Mit­tel­steine concentration camp in the latter weeks of the War a move which the Nazis initiated owing to the advancing Eastern Front. In the course of liquidating Mittel­steine, the Nazis transferred between 250 and 300 female prisoners from Mittelsteine to Grafenort. Some sources put the documented number of prisoners evacuated from Mittelsteine to Grafenort in April 1945 at 400. All of the prisoners in the transfer were women of Jewish ethnicity originally deported from the region of Łódź. The distance between the Mittelsteine and Grafenort concentration camps is about 21 kilometres as the crow flies or 28 km by road. The reasons behind the liquidation of the Mittelsteine concentration camp and the transfer of its inmates to two other camps one of them being Grafenort have not been fully understood by historians.
The Grafenort concentration camp was one of the Krkonoše group of thirteen subcamps of Gross-Rosen located in the Riesengebirge the so-called Riese group which were concentrated primarily in the region of the Owl Mountains. The group of camps held collectively over 13,000 prisoners of whom approximately 40 percent perished from hunger and exhaustion brought about by slave labour.

Location

The camp was situated in the locality called since the latter part of the 17th century Grafenort in what was at the time of the camp's existence the territory of the Third Reich, about 10½ kilometres to the north of Bystrzyca Kłodzka, the nearest larger town within the region of Lower Silesia that was awarded to Poland after the War.
The regional metropolis of Wrocław is 103 kilometres to the north-east, while Prague in the Czech Republic is 203 km away in the opposite direction.

The camp

The camp was located on the premises of Grafenort Castle in the village of Grafenort. Grafenort Castle had been used for the quartering of military gar­ri­sons in earlier times. Some works of reference indicate simply a preexisting "masonry building" lying on the periphery of the village as the site of the camp. Sara Zyskind, a survivor, recalls that the truck in which the female prisoners were deported from Mittel­steine to Grafen­ort pulled up in front of one of the mansions of which the village of Grafenort was full, but one "much larger than the others and situated somewhat apart" which is consistent with the description of Grafenort Castle. Another famous survivor, Sara Selver-Urbach, writes about the prisoners' delusions indulged in for the sake of mutual moral support and survival:
Already in Mittelsteine, we heard about the princely palaces in which we would be housed , about the regal, mag­nif­i­cent beds that would be ours, about the gold plate off which we would be served meat and every other delicacy. Scornfully, we'd tell each other those tales with cynical disbelief.
But the joke was of another kind altogether. The old building of the new camp had indeed been a regal palace previously, but its looks and accommodations have been transformed thoroughly for the purpose of housing us. The first impression was a shock: all the windows were boarded and barred with barbed wire, ex­act­ly like the Gypsy compound adjoining the Lodz Ghetto. Our second impression, when we entered the "Palatial Hall", was even more horrifying: the place was not divided into "rooms" and contained no bunks whatsoever, not even our former tiered shelves. All the inmates lay sprawled on the floor, all of them together in that one single hall which, to us, looked suddenly like a morgue, filthy blankets, bulging pallets almost glued to one another all over the floor.
However, the physical description of the camp in the report of Ruth Minsky Sender, another survivor, differs markedly, suggesting more than one facility associated with the Grafenort concentration camp. Sender, in her book The Cage, speaks about "many barracks spread about a large field" with "rows and rows of wooden bunks reach to the ceiling". Clearly, the Grafenort concentration camp consisted of at least two parts where the prisoners were held.
The slave labour consisted in building fortifications against the advancing Eastern Front of the Allies, and the camp was perhaps the most notorious among all Nazi female concentration camps for the brutality of the treatment of prisoners. Bella Gutterman, the director of the International Institute for Holocaust Research, singles out Grafenort as the only camp where women prisoners were employed exactly like men in gruelling excavation work.

Liberation

The Grafenort concentration camp was liberated, according to best sources, on 8 May 1945. Some sources indicate the date of the liberation of the camp as 7 May 1945 or 9 May 1945. According to the information collected by the Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team and other researchers, no Gross-Rosen subcamp was liberated on 7 May all of the Gross-Rosen subcamps were liberated between 8 and 9 May 1945.
The first Soviet soldier to enter Grafenort, a Russian Jew, was overcome with emotion when he realized that there were still some survivors left at the camp.

Notable inmates