Only old bunkers and casemates such as this one remain.

The Alderney camps were camps built and operated by Nazi Germany during its World War II occupation of the Channel Islands.[1] Alderney island had four forced/slave labour sites including Lager Sylt the only Nazi concentration camp on British soil during the wartime occupation.[2]

Camps

In 1941 Nazi military engineers built four labour camps on Alderney.[3] The Nazi Organisation Todt (OT) operated each subcamp and used forced labour to build fortifications in Alderney including bunkers, gun emplacements, air raid shelters, tunnels and concrete fortifications. The camps commenced operating in January 1942. They were named after the Frisian Islands.

The four camps on the island had a total inmate population that fluctuated but is estimated at about 6,000. The exact details are impossible to determine as many records were destroyed.

In 2022, studies indicated that as many as nine camps were built at Alderney.[3]

Two work camps

The two work camps were:

The Borkum and Helgoland camps were "volunteer" (Hilfswillige) labour camps[4] and the labourers in those camps were treated harshly but better than the inmates at the Sylt and Norderney camps.

Borkum camp was used for German technicians and "volunteers" from different countries of Europe. Helgoland camp was used for Russian Organisation Todt workers.

Two concentration camps

The other two camps became concentration camps when they were handed over to be run by the SS from 1 March 1943, they became subcamps of the Neuengamme camp outside Hamburg:

The prisoners in Lager Sylt and Lager Norderney were slave labourers forced to build the many military fortifications and installations throughout Alderney. Sylt camp held Jewish enforced labourers.[5]

Norderney camp housed European (mainly Eastern but including Spanish) and Russian enforced labourers. The Lager Sylt commandant, Karl Tietz, had a black French colonial as an under officer. Tietz was brought before a court-martial in April 1943 and sentenced to 18 months' penal servitude for the crime of selling on the black market after he sold cigarettes, watches, and valuables he had bought from Dutch OT workers.[6]:147

In March 1943, Lager Norderney, containing Russian and Polish POWs, and Lager Sylt, holding Jews, were placed under the control of the SS, with SS Hauptsturmführer Max List commanding.

Deaths

Alderney concentration camps memorial plaque

More than 700 camp inmates lost their lives before the camps were closed and the remaining inmates transferred to France in 1944.[5]

There are 397 known graves in Alderney. Apart from malnutrition, accidents and ill treatment, there were losses on ships bringing OT workers to or taking them from Alderney. In January 1943 there was a big storm and two ships, the Xaver Dorsch and the Franks, anchored in Alderney harbour were blown ashore onto the beach, they contained about 1,000 Russian OT workers. Being kept locked in the holds for two weeks whilst the ships were salvaged resulted in a number of deaths.[7]:77[8]

On 4 July 1944 the Minotaure an ocean going tug sailing from Alderney to St Malo with about 500 OT workers was hit three times by torpedoes but somehow managed to stay afloat, some 250 died with the ship being towed into St Malo. Two of the escort vessels, V 208 R. Walther Darré and V 210 Hinrich Hey were sunk. V 209 Dr. Rudolf Wahrendorff and the minesweeper M 4622 were damaged.[7]:81[9]

Documents from the ITS Archives in Germany show prisoners of numerous nationalities were incarcerated in Alderney, with many dying on the island. The causes of death included suicide, pneumonia, being shot, heart failure and explosions. Detailed death certificates were filled out and the deaths were reported to OT in St Malo.[10]:212–4

Post-war

After World War II, a court-martial case was prepared against former SS Hauptsturmführer Max List, citing atrocities on Alderney.[11] However, he did not stand trial, and is believed to have lived near Hamburg until his death in the 1980s.[12]

In 1949, an East German court convicted an SS man named Peter Bikar of crimes against humanity for the non-fatal abuse of prisoners in the Alderney camps. He was sentenced to five years in prison for beating multiple prisoners with the butt of his rifle.[13][14][15]

The four German camps in Alderney have not been preserved or commemorated, aside from a small plaque at the former SS camp Lager Sylt. One camp is now a tourist camping site, while the gates to another form the entrance to the island's rubbish tip. The other two have been left to fall into ruin and become overgrown by brambles.

In 2017, military authors Colonel Richard Camp and John Weigold wrote in the Daily Mail that they believed between 40,000 and 70,000 slave workers had died at Alderney,[16][3] and that Alderney had been turned into "a secret base to launch V1 missiles with chemical warheads on the South Coast."[16][17][3] Their estimates of the deaths at Alderney were much greater than the largest estimates made by other historians, and caused consternation in Alderney.[3] Trevor Davenport, the director of the Alderney museum, dismissed their estimates as "rubbish"[3] and their claim of Alderney being turned into a secret base as "utter nonsense".[17] Archaeologist Caroline Sturdy Colls of Staffordshire University said that there was "no evidence... to suggest that numbers in the tens of thousands of deaths are in any way credible whatsoever. There is no evidence to suggest that that many people were even sent to Alderney."[18]

Gillian Carr, a Senior Lecturer at St Catharine's College of the University of Cambridge, researched the German occupation of the Channel Islands and persecution of over 2,000 islanders from 1940 to 1945. Her findings were the subject of an exhibition titled: On British Soil: Victims of Nazi Persecution in the Channel Islands at the Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide from October 2017 to February 2018. The exhibit is a permanent online exhibition at the library.[19][20]

When a Staffordshire University team led by Sturdy Colls visited the island to investigate for a 2019 Smithsonian Channel documentary, entitled Adolf Island,[14] the Alderney Government withdrew previously-agreed permission for them to excavate the Lager Sylt site.[21] There were also complaints from the Jewish community regarding the potential disturbance of remains.[22][23] In 2022, Sturdy Colls said her investigations of the island gave her an estimate of between 701 and 986 deaths.[3]

In 2023, Lord Pickles, UK special envoy on post-Holocaust issues, ordered an inquiry into the atrocities committed in Alderney and started gathering a panel of Holocaust experts who will published their findings in March 2024.[24]

See also

Notes

  1. Matisson Consultants, Aurigny ; un camp de concentration nazi sur une île anglo-normande (English: Alderney, a Nazi concentration camp on an Anglo-Norman island ) (in French), archived from the original on 2014-02-20, retrieved 2009-06-06
  2. Owen, Brodie (2023-07-27). "Alderney WW2 deaths review aims to put conspiracies to rest". BBC News.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Cockerell, Isobel (2022-07-26). "The Nazi concentration camps on British soil the UK government tried to forget". Coda Media. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
  4. Christian Streit: Keine Kameraden: Die Wehrmacht und die Sowjetischen Kriegsgefangenen, 1941-1945, Bonn: Dietz (3. Aufl., 1. Aufl. 1978), ISBN 3-8012-5016-4 - "Between 22 June 1941 and the end of the war, roughly 5.7 million members of the Red Army fell into German hands. In January 1945, 930,000 were still in German camps. A million at most had been released, most of whom were so-called "volunteers" (Hilfswillige) for (often compulsory) auxiliary service in the Wehrmacht. Another 500,000, as estimated by the Army High Command, had either fled or been liberated. The remaining 3,300,000 (57.5% of the total) had perished."
  5. 1 2 Subterranea Britannica (February 2003), SiteName: Lager Sylt Concentration Camp, retrieved 2009-06-06
  6. Turner, Barry (1 April 2011). Outpost of Occupation: The Nazi Occupation of the Channel Islands, 1940-1945. Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1845136222.
  7. 1 2 Dafter, Ray (2001). Guernsey Wrecks. Matfield Books. ISBN 0-9540595-0-6.
  8. "M/V XAVER DORSCH (1940-1944)". archeosousmarine.net. Archived from the original on 2016-03-27. Retrieved 2015-12-27.
  9. Rohwer, Jürgen; Gerhard Hümmelchen. "Seekrieg 1942, Juli" (in German). Württemberg State Library. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  10. Cruickshank, Charles (30 June 2004). The German Occupation of the Channel Islands. The History Press. ISBN 978-0750937498.
  11. Frederick Cohen, President of the Jersey Jewish Congregation The Jews in the Channel Islands During the German Occupation 1940-1945
  12. Guy Walters, The Occupation; ISBN 0-7553-2066-2
  13. "Nazi Crimes on Trial". expostfacto.nl. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  14. 1 2 Adolf Island, 2019-06-19, retrieved 2020-11-13
  15. Colls, Caroline Sturdy; Colls, Kevin (2022-03-15). 'Adolf Island': The Nazi occupation of Alderney. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-4905-3.
  16. 1 2 "Authors claim UK covered up tens of thousands dead at Nazi camps on Channel Island". The Times of Israel. 8 May 2017. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  17. 1 2 "Alderney historian challenges new Nazi occupation claims". BBC News. 2017-05-09. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  18. Philpot, Robert (11 July 2020). "'The most terrible camp': After 80 years, cruelty of SS site on UK soil revealed". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  19. "On British Soil: Victims of Nazi Persecution in the Channel Islands". Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  20. Cruikshank, Charles (1975). The German Occupation of the Channel Islands. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192158086.
  21. "States of Alderney denies cover up on wartime deaths". guernseypress.com.
  22. Sugarman, Daniel (18 June 2019). "Historian accused of having tried to dig up Holocaust dead against Jewish wishes". The Jewish Chronicle.
  23. Steckoll, Solomon H. (1982). Alderney Death Camp.
  24. Pogrund, Gabriel (2023-07-22). "Inquiry into Channel Island Nazi death camps". The Times & The Sunday Times.

49°43′N 2°12′W / 49.717°N 2.200°W / 49.717; -2.200

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.