September 21, 1902 - Paul Otto Radomski
His own SS colleagues considered him brutal, and an SS judge at his Greek trial described him as a drunkard "primitive in all his thoughts and feelings" — a rare candor that underscores just how far outside accepted norms his conduct fell even within a system defined by organized violence. As commandant of two concentration camps, first at Syrets in occupied Ukraine and then at Haidari near Athens, he imposed regimes of deliberate cruelty: punishment for minor infractions, labor designed not for productivity but to destroy morale, and personal acts of lethal violence carried out before assembled prisoners. Eyewitness testimony from Haidari places the number executed during his tenure in the hundreds, with thousands more processed through the camp's systematic brutality. His career ended not through Allied justice but through a drunken altercation with his own adjutant, which led to his demotion and removal — a measure of how thoroughly he had made himself ungovernable even to his superiors.
Read more …September 21, 1902 - Paul Otto Radomski
- Last updated on .