Horrors of the Nazi paedophile who headed unit of murderers and rapists so sadistic even the SS were sickened
EVEN by the standards of the murderous Nazi regime, Oskar Dirlewanger’s crimes stand out for their sheer depravity.
During the Second World War, the convicted paedophile led a unit of murderers, psychopaths and sex offenders that carried out acts of barbarism other Nazis found sickening.
Dirlewanger himself was imprisoned for the rape of a 13-year-old girl in 1934 and a Nazi police report from the era described his personality.
He is a “mentally unstable, violent fanatic and alcoholic who had the habit of erupting into violence under the influence of drugs”, they said.
In the course of the war, men of the SS-Dirlewanger Sturmbrigade murdered tens of thousands of civilians, including burning alive and bayonetting babies and children.
Among his acts of unimaginable sadism was undressing and whipping female Jewish prisoners, then injecting them with the poison strychnine to watch them die in agony for entertainment.
British military historian Mark Felton describes the Dirlewanger Brigade as the “absolute epitome of evil” led by a “violent sexual sadist even the Nazis found difficult to stomach”.
Dirlewanger was born in 1895 and served as an infantry officer during WWI, when he was awarded the Iron Cross.
After the conflict ended he became involved with far-right paramilitary groups fighting left wing opponents.
In 1922 he graduated with a degree from Goethe University Frankfurt and the following year, joined Nazi party.
Its ranks were made up of “sociopaths, psychopaths and deviants of every description, men who under normal circumstances would have been executed by the state or left to rot in prison”.
“The combination of such men being given arms and power was terrifying,” he said.
PSYCHOPATHS
To his men he was a hero, with one quoted in the German media describing him as a “great guy” who was “always at the forefront, never the rear”.
Dirlewanger’s “speciality was herding large numbers of civilians into barns which were then set alight and the victims shot down as they attempted to escape”.
Civilians were also regularly used to clear minefields while doctors and nurses were butchered in hospitals.
Some estimates put the death toll inflicted as being as high as 120,000.
After a spell fighting the Red Army in which Dirlewanger was wounded several times, the unit was sent to crush the Warsaw Uprising of 1944.
The Poles had take up arms in a bid to free themselves from the Nazis, who reacted with extreme brutality.
CHILDREN BAYONETED
Dirlewanger ordered the murder of 500 children and in order to save bullets told his men to beat and bayonet them to death.
As the fighting was coming to an end, his men came across a hospital and an SS soldier from another unit described what happened.
“Dirlewanger stood with his men and laughed," he said
"The nurses from the hospital were rushed through the square, naked with hands on their heads.
"Blood ran down their legs… When they were hanging one of the nurses, Dirlewanger kicked the bricks she was standing on. I couldn’t watch that anymore.”
At the end of the war, Dirlewanger was wounded in fighting with the Soviets and his unit began to disintegrate, before it surrendered to the Americans.
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Dirlewanger was himself captured by French troops while hiding in the mountains.
The circumstances of his death are unclear but it’s believed he was beaten to death by Polish soldiers at the camp where he was held.