Elfriede Rinkel

Elfriede Rinkel
Born (1922-07-14) 14 July 1922
Leipzig, Germany
Nationality German
Occupation Guard at the Ravensbrück concentration camp

Elfriede Lina Rinkel (née Huth, born 14 July 1922, Leipzig, Germany) was a Nazi guard at the Ravensbrück concentration camp from June 1944 until April 1945 handling an SS-trained guard dog.

Life

Ravensbrück was the Nazi's largest concentration camp for women. There, 132,000 women and children (and 20,000 men) were imprisoned. In 1945, while Rinkel worked there, thousands of prisoners were killed on the orders of the SS in the gas chambers.

She left Germany for the United States and was admitted as an immigrant on or around 21 September 1959 in San Francisco, California. At a German-American club in San Francisco she met Fred William Rinkel, a German Jew whose family had been murdered in the Holocaust,[1] and they married about 1962. He died in 2004. Rinkel stated she never told her husband of her past.[2] He was an escaped Jew from Germany.

Eventually, the Office of Special Investigations uncovered her whereabouts, and approached her on 4 October 2004. Rinkel confessed to having worked in the Ravensbruck concentration camp, as a voluntary dog handler: this activity was better paid than the ordinary work of supervisors.

She claimed that she did not use her dog as a weapon against prisoners, and that she did not join the Nazi party. However, other information contradicts this: "One prisoner reported that women were even worse than men in commanding their dogs to brutally attack inmates."[3] Rinkel claimed to have always behaved correctly. Insa Eschebach, a historian and the director of the Museum of the Ravensbrück concentration camp, deemed this a protective claim.

Dogs could be used recklessly. Some guards let the animals go on prisoners, on whom they, with sometimes fatal consequence, inflicted severe bite wounds.

Since other crimes were barred, the Central Office of the State Justice Administration for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes in Ludwigsburg examined only whether it is possible to prove whether Rinkel murdered any inmates. If that could be proved, it risked a life sentence. Also, the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem insisted on a trial.

On 1 September 2006 Rinkel was deported to Germany under a settlement agreement signed in June 2006 after being charged by a federal law requiring removal of aliens who took part in acts of Nazi-sponsored persecution filed by the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations (OSI) and the United States Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).[2] The German authorities were informed by the American authorities after her departure. She spent some time on a farm in the Rhineland with relatives, then she is thought to have traveled to Switzerland where she presumably lives. Kurt Schrimm from the Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes stated that her files were given to the prosecutor in Cologne.

References

  1. Guard Who Married a Jew Who Lost Parents in Holocaust Among ex-Nazis Who Got Social Security
  2. 1 2 Blumenthal, Ralph (April 4, 2010). "The Last Nazi Hunter". Parade via The Virginian Pilot. pp. 4–5.
  3. Women Camp Guards
  • "US widow deported over Nazi past". BBC News. 21 September 2006.
  • Serrano, Richard A. ""Sweet lady" surprise: Nazi prison-guard past". Los Angeles Times. The Seattle Times.
  • Photograph
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