THE
INDEPENDENT London,
December 29, 1998
Israel
protects concentration camp
boss by
Adam LeBor AN extradition request
by Polish authorities for an alleged
former commander of a Stalinist-era
detention camp now living in Tel Aviv has
been rejected by Israel. Salomon Morel is wanted by the
prosecutor's office in the southern Polish
city of Katowice. He is charged with
crimes against humanity while he was
commander of the Swietochlowice camp where
more than 3,000 prisoners, mainly Germans,
but also including several citizens of
allied and neutral nations, were held
during 1945. A
reply sent to the Polish Justice
Ministry from Israeli authorities said
that Israel would not extradite Mr
Morel. Officials said the crimes with
which he is charged are not perceived
in Israel as genocide, and so are
subject to the statute of limitations,
the Polish news agency PAP
reported. The
demand by Polish authorities for Mr
Morel's extradition is the second attempt
this month to bring back former Communist
officials. The Polish military prosecutor
in Warsaw recently issued an arrest
warrant for Helena Brus, formerly
Wolinska
[photo
left. Two stories
| ],
now married to an Oxford don. During the 1950s Ms Wolinska worked as
a military prosecutor in Warsaw, issuing
arrest warrants. Many of those detained
under her orders were later hanged. Both
Mr Morel and Mrs Brus are Jewish. Swietochlowice was set up by the Soviet
NKVD - forerunner of the KGB - after the
Red Army's liberation of southern
Poland. The camp was later handed over to the
Polish secret service, the notorious UB.
Stalin's policy was to put Jews in charge
of camps. Their experiences during the
Nazi Holocaust would mean that Germans and
Poles held there could expect little
mercy. More than half of the 3,000
prisoners at Swietochlowice were murdered
or died there, according to PAP. Dorota Boriczek, a camp
survivor, remembers Salomon Morel as a
barbaric and cruel man who, with his
colleagues, was responsible for many
killings of inmates. "I knew Morel in the
camp. He was a very brutal man. He was
young then. He would come in at night. We
could hear the cries of the men then. They
would beat them and throw the bodies out
of the window," Mrs Boriczek, now 68 and
living in Ludswigburg, Germany, told The
Independent. "I was taken there when I was 14, with
my mother. I still don't know why we were
there and I still want to know. They told
us when we arrived, 'You are here, and you
are here to die, although nobody will
shoot you, because ammunition is too
expensive'." Conditions in the camp were horrific,
said Mrs Boriczek, who has begun a legal
process in Katowice to try to find out why
she was sent to the camp. "There was nothing to eat, a hunger
that you cannot imagine. We were lucky to
have a piece of bread once a day, nothing
else, and water. Both my mother and I had
typhus. We were separated and I didn't
know she was alive. I had a high fever and
when I opened my eyes, I was sleeping next
to a lady from Switzerland. I slept with
her under one blanket. I was happy that
she was dead, because that meant I could
have her blanket." Mr
Morel, born in 1919, lost much of his
family in the Holocaust before joining
the partisans, in his case a Jewish
military unit, according to John Sack,
the American author of An Eye for An
Eye: The Untold Story of Jewish Revenge
Against Germans in 1945. In 1995, 50 years after her
imprisonment at Swietochlowice, Mrs
Boriczek saw Mr Morel in the Katowice
prosecutor's office. She said she felt
more pity than hatred. "I hated him all my life and then when
I saw him I saw an old, fat man. I could
see he was ill. I would even have given
him my hand. I asked him why he did these
crimes. He told me I was lying and
everybody loved him." Mr Morel refused to speak to The
Independent. A man in Tel Aviv who
identified himself as Mr Morel's son said
his father did not talk to journalists.
© 1998 The
Independent |