mercredi 27 avril 2016

MURDER AT MEDICINE HAT

Note : J'ai un ancien collègue de la CBC, Richard Inwood, qui est maintenant retiré et vit à Ottawa. Parmi ses nombreux intérêts, Richard étudie en permanence la seconde guerre mondiale et surtout la façon dont elle a eu un impact ici, au Canada. Au fil des mois, il m'a fait parvenir certains de ses textes qui sont fort intéressants pour quiconque s'intéresse à l'histoire de notre pays. Il a accepté que je les reproduise ici, sur mon blogue, pour leur assurer une plus grande diffusion Voici le premier de ces textes.

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Murder at Medicine Hat
Officers and gentlemen? Officers…maybe.  But, Gentlemen?…anything but. Four World War II German prisoners-of-war at Camp 132 - Medicine Hat, Alberta murdered two of their countrymen.

Victim No.1 was August Plaszec.  Before the war, he had a farm near Nordlunen-Germany.  A Roman Catholic, he stood only 5’5” and weighed just 150 pounds, but he sought some adventure and joined the French Foreign Legion. In the 1930’s, Legionnaires, who returned to Germany were ‘re-educated’ in Nazi ideology and inducted into the army. Because of his experience with the Legion in Africa, he was assigned to Erwin Rommel’s “Afrika Korps”. In 1943, at Tobruk, Rommel’s corps was almost wiped out and Plaszec was captured by the British. He and several other ex-Legionnaires were eventually sent to Camp 132, at Medicine Hat in Alberta. 

Camp 132, Medicine Hat, Alberta
Camp 132 was a very, very rough place. It was huge… built to accommodate more than 12,000 prisoners. It was so huge that the Canadian military only patrolled outside the wire. The prisoners themselves controlled the inside. Inevitably, cliques were formed. There were hard core Nazis. There were Communists. There were pacifists. You name it; they were all there. And, they didn’t get along.
The ex-Legionnaires would meet near a soccer field in the camp compound to reminisce about the past and speculate about their future. That made them suspect in the eyes of leading Nazi elements. On July 22nd 1943, an angry mob grabbed Plaszec and dragged him outside, where he was kicked and beaten with a rock, then, taken to an exercise hall, where he was hanged.

Victim No.2 was Karl Lehmann. He was a stout, middle aged man. Before the war, he had been a professor of languages at the University of Erlangen. His ‘crime’?  He spoke out against the Nazi regime and he predicted that Germany would lose the war. On September 10th, 1943, he was beaten by four men…one of them, a boxing instructor. After the beating, Lehmann was hanged by the neck from a ceiling pipe.
It took a months to identify the killers in both of these incidents. The investigations were stymied by a strict code of silence, enforced by the highest-ranking officers in the camp. as the police investigations dragged on, it was decided that some undercover work was required.

Among those brought in for the job, was Georges Hamel. As a young lieutenant in World War I, he was captured and spent two years as a prisoner in a Stalag. To pass the time in captivity, he learned to speak German. Hamel learned well enough to eventually pass for a German. He was considered too old to serve in World War II. Instead, the long-time railway telegrapher was recruited by authorities to serve at the Camp X spy school, near Whitby-Ontario, where he performed varied duties, including dressing up in a Wehrmacht uniform and mingling with incoming German P.O.W. officers to gather intelligence.
This is what he did at Medicine Hat. Hamel was interned at Camp 132. There, he and other investigators finally identified the killers.

Heinrich Busch, a pilot shot down over England…Willi Mueller, a pilot who suffered a similar fate north of Glasgow…Bruno Perzonowsky, a navigator who was captured in North Wales….and Walter Wolf, a sergeant captured in Africa were tried and convicted. Under the terms of article 45 of the Geneva Convention, they were subject to Canadian law. All four were hanged on December 18th 1946. 
To end on a more pleasant note….Some of the Camp 132 P.O.W.s were trusted to leave the compound and work in small businesses or as farm labourers. Often they established a close bond with local families. Many returned after the war….some to visit….others even to stay.

Richard Inwood - April 2016
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Image : Internet

 

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