Juana Bormann
Juana Bormann (
1903 –
December 13,
1945) was a prison guard at several
Nazi concentration camps, and was
executed as a
war criminal at
Hameln after a trial in
1945.
At her trial, Bormann said she had joined the
Auxiliary SS in
1938 "to earn more money." She first served at the Lichtenburg concentration camp in Saxony under SS Oberaufseherin
Jane Bernigau with 49 other SS women. In
1939 she was assigned to oversee a work crew at the new
Ravensbrück women's camp near
Berlin. In March
1942, Bormann was one of a handful of women selected for guard duty at
Auschwitz in
Poland. Short in stature, she was known for her cruelty. Victims called her "Wiesel" and "the woman with the dogs." In October,
1942 Bormann went to
Auschwitz Birkenau as an
Aufseherin. Her supervisors included
Maria Mandel,
Margot Drexler (Drechsel, Dreschel) and
Irma Grese.
In 1944, as German losses mounted, Bormann was transferred to the auxiliary camp at Hindenburg (now called
Zabrze,
Poland) in
Silesia. In January,
1945, she returned to Ravensbrück. In March she arrived at her last post,
Bergen-Belsen, near
Celle, where she served under
Josef Kramer,
Irma Grese and
Elisabeth Volkenrath (all of whom had served with her in Birkenau.) On
April 15, 1945 the British army took Bergen-Belsen, finding over 10,000
corpses and 60,000 survivors. The liberators forced all SS personnel to carry the dead.
Bormann was later incarcerated and interrogated by the military, then prosecuted at the
Belsen Trial which lasted from
September 17,
1945 to
November 17,
1945. The court heard testimony relating to murders she had committed at Auschwitz and Belsen, sometimes unleashing her "big bad wolfhound"
German shepherd on helpless prisoners. She was found guilty and
hanged (along with Grese and Volkenrath) on
December 13,
1945.
Her executioner,
Albert Pierrepoint, later wrote, "She limped down the corridor looking old and haggard. She was 42 years old, standing only a little over five feet. She was trembling as she was put on the scale. In German she said: "I have my feelings."