The Jewish Chronicle

Demjajuk ‘pictured’ as camp guard

- BY LIAM HOARE VIENNA charts this portion

ONE OF Berlin’s leading museums is due to publish never-before-seen photograph­s next week that purport to show John Demjanjuk at work in the exterminat­ion camp Sobibor.

According to officials at the Topography of Terror, Berlin’s museum of the history of the Nazi regime’s security services, a newly-unearthed photograph­ic archive, places the convicted SS guard at the exterminat­ion camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

In 2011, a court in Germany sentenced Demjanjuk to five years imprisonme­nt on over 27,900 counts of accessory to murder for his role at Sobibor.

But until his death in March 2012, in spite of documentar­y evidence proving the contrary, Demjanjuk denied he had ever been a concentrat­ion camp guard there.

Demjanjuk became known to the world when, in 1988, an Israeli court convicted him of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The Ukrainian had been a Trawniki man — a Nazi collaborat­or who partook in the Final Solution — during the Second World War.

At the time, he was believed to be the notorious Sobibor guard “Ivan the Terrible”.

When doubt was cast upon that presumptio­n, Israel’s Supreme Court overturned his death sentence and released him in 1993. A Netflix documentar­y by Israeli filmmakers Daniel Sivan and Yossi

John Demjanjuk, pictured in 1993 surrounded by security at the Israeli Supreme Court in Jerusalem. He was released later that year

Bloch, The Devil Next Door, of his story.

The Topography of Terror’s tranche of photograph­s was taken by Sobibor’s former deputy commandant, Johann Niemann.

Niemann died in October 1943 during an uprising by the exterminat­ion camp’s prisoners.

Regarding Demjanjuk, German historians have tried to lower expectatio­ns ahead of Tuesday’s publicatio­n.

Stuttgart University’s Martin Cüppers

has said that one cannot say with “absolute certainty” that Demjanjuk will be identifiab­le from the photograph­s.

But Niemann’s archive of more than 350 photos should prove to be revelatory nonetheles­s, documentin­g the working life of a camp of which few traces remain.

Following the October 1943 uprising, Sobibor was closed, its buildings including the gas chambers raised and foundation­s paved over, and its grounds planted with trees.

Prior to its demolition, around 250,000 Jews were murdered there.

Until his death he denied he had ever been a camp guard

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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