Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Ukrainian guards worse than Nazis, survivor says
The Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk, a retired auto worker who was deported from the U.S. in May, is charged with 27,900 counts of accessory to murder for his alleged activities as a guard at Sobibor.
Jules Schelvis, an 88-year-old from the Netherlands, recalled being deported to Sobibor in 1943 along with his family. He told the Munich state court that he lost 18 relatives -- including his wife, Rachel -- at the camp.
Schelvis, one of dozens of victims' relatives who have joined the trial as co-plaintiffs, as allowed under German law, recounted his 72-hour journey from the Dutch transit camp of Westerbork in a cramped freight car, with no food and little water or fresh air.
"We were crammed in like herrings in a barrel," Schelvis testified.
At Sobibor, Schelvis recalled, the new arrivals were made to leave all their belongings in a hut before an SS man separated the men from the women, who "disappeared from view."
Another SS man selected strong young men -- including Schelvis' brother-in-law -- and the witness said he also was allowed to join the group after giving an assurance that he was healthy and spoke German.
The group was taken on a long drive and march from Sobibor to Dorohucza, where they were put to work digging up peat to serve as fuel, Schelvis said.
Schelvis said he first came across Ukrainian guards at Dorohucza. "We knew that the Ukrainian guards were worse than the SS," he told the court.
He said that, near Lublin, he saw two Ukrainian guards pass by with two Jewish prisoners.
"We heard shots, and they came back without the two men and with their clothes," he said. "Then we knew that they were worse than the others."
Schelvis said he passed through a series of camps in occupied eastern Europe, among them Auschwitz, before being liberated from a camp in Vaihingen, in western Germany, at the end of the war.
The paramilitary SS, short for Schutzstaffel or Protective Squadron, ran concentration camps and carried out mass killings.
The 89-year-old Demjanjuk -- who suffers from medical problems -- was wheeled in to the Munich state court on a stretcher Tuesday and lay on a bed with his eyes shut throughout the day.
There are no direct living witnesses to Demjanjuk's alleged activities at Sobibor. Prosecutors argue that, if he was a guard at the death camp, that means he was involved in the Nazi machinery of destruction.
The prosecution argues that Demjanjuk, a Soviet Red Army soldier, volunteered to serve as a guard for the SS after his capture by the Germans in 1942. Demjanjuk denies ever having served as a guard.
The trial resumes on Jan. 12.
-- The Associated Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition December 23, 2009 A9
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2 Comments
Posted by: Tammy
December 23, 2009 at 2:39 PM
This defamatory headline based on "two guards" ? I guess the Judenratt or the Germans weren't around for WWII?
Posted by: SPBartlette
December 23, 2009 at 11:44 AM
There were other anti-semites, other than the Nazis? You don't say.