Himmler
offered to free 3,500 Jews to save himself, other leading
Nazis
By Douglas Davis
LONDON,
Sept. 21 (JTA) --
The chief of the SS sought to win
asylum for himself and 200 leading Nazis in the final
days of World War II by offering cash and the freedom of
3,500 Jews, according to British intelligence documents
released last Friday.
According to the documents, details of which have been
held in the secret files of Britain's MI5 intelligence
agency, the concentration camp inmates were to be sent to
Switzerland in two trainloads. The offer was made by
Heinrich Himmler and orchestrated by his intelligence
chief, Walter Schellenberg.
But the arrangement was aborted after the first
trainload of 1,700 left Germany and Nazi security chief
Ernst Kaltenbrunner reported the plan to Hitler, who
ordered it halted immediately.
The MI5 file describes secret talks between Himmler
and Switzerland during which the SS chief reportedly
insisted that Jewish organizations deposit the 5 million
Swiss francs in a numbered Swiss bank account.
He said the money would be handed over to the
International Red Cross "so that it could be used later
as a fund for the relief of the suffering of the German
civilian population."
Schellenberg then contacted Gestapo chief Heinrich
Mueller and the head of the Theresienstadt ghetto, "and,
despite countless objections, succeeded in getting the
final special train of 17 express coaches with a total of
1,700 Jews from Theresienstadt."
The
MI5 report notes that there was widespread panic as the
camp inmates were herded on to the train "as they could
not believe it was not one of the notorious death trains
to Auschwitz."
"Even when it was on its way," added the report,
"there was still a large number of mainly older people
who could not really believe that they were indeed
traveling to freedom."
But the second trainload of 1,800 Jews from
Bergen-Belsen failed to leave Germany before the plan was
halted.
"Some time after the arrival of the original
transport," noted the report, "messages had appeared in a
Swiss newspaper that the release of the Jews had gained
200 leading Nazis rights of asylum in Switzerland.
"These reports were passed to Kaltenbrunner who, by
exercising his prerogative of personal interviews with
the feuhrer, presented them in such a way that he
succeeded in stopping the whole transaction.''
The file does not indicate whether any top Nazis
actually gained asylum or whether any of the ransom was
paid in exchange for the lives of the 1,700 Jews.
The deal did not save Himmler, who was captured by
British forces in May 1945 and committed suicide by
biting into a vial of potassium cyanide before he could
be interrogated.