The
mere mention of Germany’s role in World War II evokes images of mass
slaughter, concentration camps, and people being herded like animals
into ghettos and labor camps.
The Nazis committed unspeakable
atrocities. But there was one German leader went too far even for his
fellow officers. And that was in the massacre at Le Paradis, in France,
in June 1940.
The episode began with the evacuation of thousands
of British troops at Dunkirk. Not every soldier was fortunate enough to
be on one of those boats. Some had to stay, to help “buy time” for the
men who were going.
Two units, the British 2nd Battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment and the 8th Lancaster Fusiliers, had to man three French villages to help keep the Allies’ position secure. The 2nd Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment on February 26, 1940, in France receiving their rum rations before patrol duty.One
of those villages was Le Paradis. The name “Paradise” is especially
ironic in light of what happened there that hot summer day in June 1940.
These
men knew the odds of rescue, but they had a duty to protect the Allies’
position in France. The two units settled in at a farmhouse, Cornet
Farm, by the Paradise Road. Just across that road were their comrades,
the Royal Scots. They knew their spot was precarious at best, but they
dug trenches and held firm. The farmhouse where the survivors of the Royal Norfolks surrendered. Fair useUnfortunately
for them, they were soon to meet Theodore Eicke. This was the man whom
even the Nazis felt was cruel and overzealous. He was head of the
Totenkopf, one of the German Army’s most brutal forces.
There were
two German units at Cornet Farm that day. Eicke led one unit while
Fritz Knöchlein, deputy head of the Totenkampf, led the other. They
attacked, and though the British and Scottish men fought hard, they soon
ran out of ammunition.
Major Lisle Ryder ordered his men to surrender. Shortly thereafter, the Scots followed suit. Fritz Knöchlein. Photo: Llorenzi – CC BY-SA 4.0Knöchlein
was a terrible man. He thrived in the gung-ho fanatical atmosphere of
the Totenkampf. He demanded that the Allied soldiers surrender all
weapons, then forced them to march to a nearby barn. He lined them up
then had them shot. Almost 100 men were killed.
It was a flagrant
violation of conduct regulations, which stated that soldiers who
surrendered were to be taken as prisoners of war (POWs). He told his men
to be certain that none survived. If shooting failed, the prisoners
should be stabbed. British prisoners of war with a Pz.Kpfw Ib German tank in Calais in May 1940. By Bundesarchiv – CC BY-SA 3.0 deA
journalist had seen the episode but mistakenly believed the men had
received a fair trial. Word about the incident soon spread, and at least
one Nazi officer, General Erich Hoepner, tried to have Eicke dismissed
for his actions. Nothing came of it, and Eicke and Knöchlein went
unpunished.
Little did the German officers know that two men had
survived the ordeal by playing dead: Albert Pooley and William
O’Callaghan. Pooley lost a leg as a result of the gunshot, but both
managed to escape with their lives. General Erich Hoepner. By Bundesarchiv – CC BY-SA 3.0 deAfter
receiving help from the farmer’s wife and son, they were taken as POWs
by a passing German patrol. Pooley was sent back to Britain in 1943
because of his leg, but O’Callaghan remained as a POW for the rest of
the war.
Although Pooley told the story of what had happened, no
army officials believed him. It took a long time, but eventually Pooley
was vindicated when he returned to France in 1946 and found other
witnesses to the massacre. Bill O’Callaghan and Bert Pooley at the trial of Fritz Knoechlein. Photo: leparadismassacre.comPooley
and the witnesses repeated their story to the War Crimes Investigation
Unit in London, which then tracked down Knöchlein. He was living a quiet
life as a civilian when the British knocked on his door and took him to
prison at the London District POW Cage. The massacre site taken during the 1950s. Photo: leparadismassacre.comAll
bullies are cowards beneath the surface and Knöchlein was no different.
He denied ever being at Le Paradis, let alone giving orders to have
almost 100 men slaughtered. When witnesses told the court what really
happened, Knöchlein began inventing excuses.
First, he told the
court that the killings were justifiable because the British soldiers
had used “dum dum” bullets, which were expressly forbidden by the Hague
Convention. (They had not.)
Then he claimed that the British had
set up his soldiers by pretending to surrender, then gunning them down.
(Again, they did not). Massacre site from the 1950s. Photo: leparadismassacre.comIn
a desperate bid to save his own skin, Knöchlein also insisted his
current jailers were guilty of beating him and inflicting psychological
torture.
The court saw these accusations for what they were: an
attempt to outwit justice by someone with a ruthless disregard for the
lives of others. The court sentenced him to death, and Knoöhlein was
hanged for war crimes on January 28, 1949.
Of all the men involved in the terrible events of that day, only Knöchlein had to answer for the massacre. Scene of the fighting and subsequent massacre. Photo: leparadismassacre.comIt’s
fair to ask: what happened to Eicke? And what of all the other war
criminals who did not play by the internationally accepted rules of war?
Did they get out, or simply melt back into civilian life? Read another story from us: SS Soldiers Destroyed Town and Everyone in It – Drone Footage of Devastated Oradour
It’s
impossible to know whether all the men at Le Paradise – or all the men
who committed war crimes elsewhere during the conflict – were made to
answer for their grave misdeeds. But at least Knöchlein was one man who
didn’t escape justice
No comments:
Post a Comment