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  • War History Online

    Dwight D. Eisenhower's Took Critical Actions At The End of World War II To Ensure Justice After the Holocaust

    By Samantha Franco,

    2 days ago

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    During World War II, General Dwight D. Eisenhower personally witnessed the horrors inflicted by the Germans in concentration camps, especially during his visit to the recently liberated Ohrdruf. The scale of the atrocities he encountered highlighted the importance of informing the American public and preserving the truth, and his efforts played a crucial role in ensuring that the Holocaust was neither ignored nor distorted.

    Ohrdruf concentration camp

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    Ohrdruf concentration camp, 1940. (Photo Credit: Keystone-France / Gamma-Rapho / Getty Images)

    Established in November 1944 near Gotha, Germany, the Ohrdruf concentration camp operated as a satellite of Buchenwald , located just 30 miles away. Its main purpose was to supply forced labor for building a railway intended to connect to a planned communications center in the basement of Mühlberg Castle.

    At Ohrdruf, prisoners were responsible for constructing the railway, starting with the excavation of tunnels through nearby mountains. Local workers were hired to set off explosions to clear the mountains, after which prisoners collected the rocks and continued the digging. These tunnels also acted as emergency shelters for the Führersonderzug , the Führer's train and headquarters, in case of an evacuation from Berlin.

    The forced labor imposed on Ohrdruf prisoners exposed them to numerous hazards as they worked under severe conditions without protective gear. Besides physical dangers, many experienced malnutrition and weakness, often leading to serious injuries or death during their grueling tasks.

    Death march to Buchenwald

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2mfJbm_0uW4Xlpo00
    Gen. Dwight E. Eisenhower and Troy Middleton tour Ohrdruf concentration camp, 1945. (Photo Credit: William Newhouse / United States Holocaust Memorial Museum / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

    By March 1945, the Ohrdruf concentration camp housed approximately 11,700 prisoners from various nationalities, including French, Belgian, German, Polish, Hungarian, Czech, Russian, Latvian, Italian, Ukrainian and Yugoslavian backgrounds. The camp also held homosexuals and Jewish people.

    In early April 1945, as the Allied forces advanced into the area, the German guards began evacuating large numbers of prisoners, forcing them into a death march toward Buchenwald. Those who were too weak, sick or unable to continue were executed.

    Eisenhower witnesses the horrors of the Holocaust firsthand

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1lXhu6_0uW4Xlpo00
    Survivors of Ohrdruf concentration camp demonstrate SS torture methods to top-ranking American generals, 1945. (Photo Credit: Moore / United States Holocaust Memorial Museum / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

    Ohrdruf was the first camp liberated by American forces. Led by units from the 602nd Tank Destroyers' Battalion, along with the 4th Armored and 89th Infantry Divisions, the initial entry exposed haunting scenes of decaying bodies and the emaciated figures of the last surviving prisoners, all in desperate need of medical attention.

    On April 12, 1945, Gen. Eisenhower, accompanied by Gen. George Patton and Omar Bradley , traversed Ohrdruf completely unprepared for the sights that awaited them. Until that moment, Eisenhower had been unaware of the atrocities committed by the Germans and the grim reality of the Holocaust.

    During their tour of the camp, the delegation encountered a smoldering pyre, its charred remnants evidence of the horrors inflicted on prisoners. It was clear that the guards had hastily attempted to conceal their barbaric acts. Survivors courageously recounted the torturous methods employed by their captors.

    Patton couldn't enter one area of the concentration camp

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0dvOlx_0uW4Xlpo00
    An American soldier drives past buildings set afire by survivors after the SS evacuated the Ohrdruf concentration camp, April 1945. (Photo Credit: Walter E. Cummings/ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum/ Wikimedia Commons/ Public domain)

    A closer look at Ohrdruf led to the discovery of a shed containing about 30 emaciated corpses. The bodies were dusted with lime, seemingly an attempt to mask the overpowering stench. The sight and odor were so appalling that Patton could not bring himself to enter the room.

    Eisenhower explained this in a cable, stating, "In one room, where they were piled up twenty or thirty naked men, killed by starvation, George Patton would not even enter. He said that he would get sick if he did so. I made the visit deliberately, in order to be in a position to give first-hand evidence of these things if ever, in the future, there develops a tendency to charge these allegations merely to 'propaganda.'"

    American soldiers and Congressmen were called to bear witness

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2RLaEL_0uW4Xlpo00
    Gen. George Patton and Omar Bradley with Maj. Gen. Troy Middleton at Ohrdruf concentration camp, 1945. (Photo Credit: Photo12 / UIG / Getty Images)

    Utterly shocked by what he'd witnessed, Eisenhower worried there may come a day when the atrocities committed during the Holocaust would be rewritten, forgotten or denied. In order to preserve the truth, he took extra steps to expose the conditions of Ohrdruf.

    He invited American media and Congressmen to visit the camp and observe the conditions for themselves. He then had pictures taken, to preserve the grueling sights. Additionally, he ordered all nearby American units not engaged in battle to come and observe the enemy's crimes.

    In what later became common practice for liberated concentration camps during the the Second World War , Eisenhower had German civilians living in the area tour Ohrdruf and bury the dead.

    More from us: Looking Back At the Red Army's Liberation of Auschwitz

    Following the discovery and liberation of the concentration camp, Eisenhower succinctly said, "We are told the American soldier does not know what he is fighting for. Now, at least, we know what he is fighting against."

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