Erich Mußfeldt | |
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Erich Mußfeldt at the Auschwitz Trial of 1947 in Kraków
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Born |
Neubrück, Hennigsdorf, Brandenburg, German Reich |
February 18, 1913
Died | January 28, 1948 Kraków, Poland |
(aged 34)
Nationality | German |
Occupation | services in extermination camps as SS-Oberscharführer |
Years active | 1940–1945 |
Known for | heading the crematoria of the Majdanek and Auschwitz concentration camps |
Erich Mühsfeldt, also Mussfeld, and Erich Mußfeldt, (18 February 1913 – 28 January 1948) was a low-ranking SS commander who served in two extermination camps during World War II in occupied Poland, including at Auschwitz as well as at the Majdanek concentration camp. He was arrested and charged by the Allies originally in 1946, then transferred to Poland where the full extent of his war crimes was revealed thanks to new evidence. He was retried by the Supreme National Tribunal at the Auschwitz Trial in Kraków, and found guilty of crimes against humanity. Muhsfeldt was sentenced to death by hanging in December 1947, and executed on 28 January 1948.
Erich Muhsfeldt was born on 18 February 1913. At the time of his service in the SS-Totenkopfverbände he was reportedly married with one son. The fate of his wife is unclear. According to Miklós Nyiszli, his wife was killed in an air raid, and his son sent to the Russian front.
Originally Muhsfeldt served with the German SS-Sonderkommando at Auschwitz I in 1940. He was transferred to the work/extermination camp at Majdanek on 15 November 1941. He was involved in the final mass shooting of the camp's remaining Jewish inmates known as the Operation Harvest Festival or "Erntefest". It was the largest single-day, single-camp massacre of the Holocaust, totalling 43,000 in three nearby locations. When the Majdanek camp was liquidated, he transferred back to Auschwitz, where he then served as supervising SS officer of the Jewish Sonderkommando in Crematorium II and III in Auschwitz II (Birkenau).