Ilse Koch
|
Collection of prisoners' tattoos Ph Jules Rouard -Buchenwald 1945 |
Ilse Koch, born
Ilse Kohler Schnitzel (
September 22,
1906 â€"
September 1,
1967), was the wife of
Karl Koch, the commandant of the
concentration camp Buchenwald. She is infamous for taking souvenirs from the skin of murdered inmates with distinctive
tattoos. She may or may not have possessed lampshades from human skin, however her family dinner table was decorated with shrunken human heads. She was variously known as "the Witch of Buchenwald" ("Die Hexe von Buchenwald") and "the Bitch of Buchenwald" ("Buchenwälder Schlampe") by the inmates because of her sadistic cruelty toward prisoners.
Born in
Dresden,
Germany, her history began in 1936 when she began working as a guard and secretary at the
Sachsenhausen concentration camp near Berlin. There she met and married the commandant
Karl Otto Koch. In 1936 she came to Buchenwald not as a guard, but as the wife of the commandant. In 1941 Ilse became an Oberaufseherin ("chief overseer") over the few female guards who served at the camp. In 1943 Ilse's husband was arrested for threatening officials, embezzlement and other offenses and was removed from the camp, while Ilse stayed behind - now romantically attached to
Waldemar Hoven, the camp's doctor. After a lengthy trial Ilse was acquitted of embezzlement and returned to Buchenwald.
In 1944, with larger numbers of female prisoners entering the camp, Ilse continued her reign of terror and commanded twenty female overseers (Aufseherinnen) in Buchenwald. Her power over her subordinates was absolute. Ilse terrorized female and male prisoners at Buchenwald. She even had a whip fitted with razor blades at the end, which she used on pregnant women. In April 1945, Ilse walked out of the camp and continued living outside the camp wire in a well furnished home. When US GIs arrived at Buchenwald, they heard many stories about the former "wife of the commandant;" the soldiers arrested Ilse.
After
World War II, Ilse was tried by a war crimes
tribunal and sentenced to a life term in
1947, later commuted to four years. After serving two years of her four-year sentence, she was re-arrested and tried by a
German court for killing German nationals, and sentenced to a life term. She committed
suicide by hanging herself at
Aichach women's prison on September 1, 1967. She was 60 years old.
* Massimiliano Livi, "Ilse Koch". In:
War Crimes and Trials: A Historical Encyclopedia, from 1850 to the Present by Elizabeth Pugliese and Larry Hufford. ABC-CLIO: Cremona (USA).
*
Frau Ilse Koch, General Lucius Clay, and Human-Skin Atrocities*
Did the Nazis make lampshades out of human skin?*
Photo from BuchenwaldIlsa: She-Wolf of the SS