An unknown page of Dachau history – the massacre of the German POWs by the American soldiers

Reading time: 4 minutes

The following material is translated from Georgy Zotov’s Telegram channel, the translation first appearing at “Beorn And The Shieldmaiden”.

The photos show the execution of the Dachau camp guards

…Once upon a time, exactly 80 years ago, on April 29, 1945, American troops occupied the Dachau concentration camp. Then there happened a certain story that is not well known to the general public.

The soldiers found 39 wagons in Dachau, filled to the top with the corpses of prisoners, some half-decomposed. A lot of bodies were lying around on the grass. The Americans walked on and saw crematoriums full of charred bones and gas chambers that had been operating as recently as that morning. A new commandant came out to them (the old one had run away) with a proposal for surrender – SS Untersturmfuhrer Heinrich Wicker. They didn’t discuss it for long – one soldier came up from the crematorium and said, “Here’s a surrender for you, you SS scum!”, and shot Wicker in the eye.

Half an hour later, American soldiers kill 122 of the surrendered SS soldiers. Another 40 SS prisoners are beaten to death with shovels, sticks and stones. The American officers order the shooting to stop and line up the prisoners in the courtyard. A machine gunner named “Bird’s Eye” says with a smile: “Don’t you see? They’re trying to escape!” He opens fire and kills 12 more Germans. Lieutenant Colonel Felix Sparks pushes him away from the machine gun with the words “What the hell are you doing?” The soldiers explain to their superiors that they will kill all the prisoners right now, and no one tells them otherwise. Senior officers are leaving the camp.

At 2:45 p.m., the U.S. military begins killing SS men throughout the camp. At least 346 prisoners were shot in the so-called “coal yard”. Wounded SS soldiers, nurses, and doctors are dragged out of the SS hospital by the hair and immediately put against the wall. The wounded, who cannot walk, are finished off: Lieutenant William Walsh personally shot four German soldiers who surrendered to him, Private Albert Puitt shot the Germans lying in the ambulance with a machine gun, saying: “It’s mercy for them.”

The senior officers returned with reinforcements, but it was too late. In total (the sources vary greatly), up to 550 people were killed (this is not counting the “kapos”, camp assistants who were simply torn to pieces) – soldiers of the local SS guard, those wounded in the hospital and, in fact, the hospital staff. None of the Americans were later brought to justice or punished in any way – the case was simply put on hold.

So, what I’m getting at? I understand Americans perfectly. I don’t feel a damn sorry for the Waffen-SS soldiers, the hospital doctors, or even the nurses. They were lucky that they died a quick death, they got off cheap. What I am saying, is that the US cities have escaped occupation, bombing, and concentration camps. And despite this, the people who saw THIS in the camp went berserk with rage and could not restrain themselves, dragging the POWs to the wall.

It is amazing that the Red Army soldiers, after what they has seen in the cities of the USSR and the concentration camps they were liberating, controlled themselves in relation to the prisoners.

For there was not a single such massacre by the Red Army.

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Beorn And The Shieldmaiden notes

👉 It is probably because Soviet soldiers saw first hand the atrocities that the German Nazis committed, that they didn’t want to become that what they were fighting. The American soldiers didn’t have that safeguard.

👉 The story of the treatment of the German POWs by the Americans deserves a closer look, and we have a material planned later in May.

👉 In another post, Zotov draws attention to a double standard:
“Memorial board with gratitude to the liberators of Dachau — American soldiers. Right at the entrance. And today they installed even the third (!) such board, guests from the US Embassy came to the event. None of the 10 former Nazi concentration camps in Europe liberated by the Red Army has a plaque thanking Soviet soldiers at the entrance.”

International May 1st Greetings!

Reading time: 2 minutes

From the family archive has emerged this beautiful 1961 May Day card from Red Square by artist A.A. Gorpenko – a reminder of happier times.

Today, on the eve of the outbreak of the most sincere systemic crisis in the western capitalist economy, we, the working people of the world, need to stand united against the parasitic class of imperialist global exploiters, getting increasingly desperate and having no scruples sacrificing our common future to hold on to their accumulated wealth and dominance.
The fascist “solution” is already being incorporated throughout the so-called western democracies and the delusional US elites dream of WWIII to reset their economic and political hegemony.

The only way for us to change the cause of events and block the trajectory to our ruin is to organise.

“In its struggle for power the proletariat has no other weapon but organisation. Disunited by the rule of anarchical competition in the bourgeois world, ground down by forced labour for capital, constantly thrust back into the ‘lower depths’ of utter destitution, savagery and degeneration, the proletariat can and will inevitably become an invincible force only when its ideological unification in accordance with the principles of Marxism is consolidated by the material unity of and organisation, which welds millions of toilers into an army of the working class.” ~ Lenin

Therefore, let the old communist wake-up call “Workers of the World, Unite!” sound loud and decisive on this 1st of May and let its necessity take root in the hearts and minds of all.

Special greetings of solidarity and hope to our fighting anti-fascist spearheads in Donbass and Palestine and to the countless numbers of selfless organisers of working people all over the world.


“Bukvar” Greets You on the 1st of May

This May Day greetings card was created out of a photo of an illustration in the Russian ABC for first graders, “Bukvar”, the 1983 edition in The Shieldmaiden’s library.

We wish all of our readers and all working people a happy International Workers Day!

Support and trust each other, stand together against imperialism and remember, the future is unwritten!