Czech and Slovak groups are marking the 70th anniversary of the
assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, one of Hitler's top officers, by
constructing a replica of a Nazi concentration camp in Prague.
In a leafy square in the center of Prague, workmen are putting the
finishing touches to a replica of a Nazi concentration camp. Grey huts
are lined up under the oak trees. A watchtower looms ominously overhead.
Some see the assassination of Heydrich as a turning point
It's been put here to remember those who helped shelter a group of
paratroopers who assassinated SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich,
the acting Reichsprotektor of Bohemia and Moravia, in 1942, an act that
prompted terrible reprisals from Hitler.
"Many people were killed here, and we want to give a voice to them as
well […] to tell their stories - something personal - and to make the
visitors here realize that these people, who have been forgotten, are
worth remembering," Magdalena Benesova, who's in charge of the project
with the Post Bellum historical society, said in an interview with DW.
'Operation Anthropoid'
The exhibition will be formally opened on Sunday, May 27th, 70 years to
the day that three Czechoslovak paratroopers - Jozef Gabcik, Jan Kubis
and Josef Valcik, all trained by Britain's Special Operations Executive -
mortally wounded Heydrich as he was leaving Prague en route to Berlin
for a meeting with Hitler.
As Heydrich's open-top Mercedes limousine slowed to round a hairpin
bend in the Prague suburb of Liben, Gabcik, armed with a Sten
sub-machine gun, leapt in front of the car and pulled the trigger. The
gun jammed.
Heydrich ordered his driver to halt and drew his pistol. Kubis threw a
bomb, believed to be a converted anti-tank mine, at the car and fled.
Heydrich, wounded and in shock, pursued Kubis for several meters before
returning to the car and collapsing. He died in a Prague hospital eight
days later, on June 4, 1942, reportedly from septicemia from the
shrapnel or possibly fragments of upholstery.
The reaction from Berlin was swift and terrible.
The men and women in Lidice were killed or sent to camps; children were sent to Germany for 'Germanization'
The men's families were immediately rounded up and shot. The Czech
villages of Lidice and Lezaky - based on flawed intelligence reports
linking them to the paratroopers - were razed and their inhabitants shot
or sent to the camps. Another 15,000 people met the same fate.
But the assassination of Heydrich, despite the enormous loss of life
that resulted, also carried a deeply positive significance, according to
Mikulas Kroupa, Post Bellum's director.
“In 1942, the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia was beginning to seem
like it would last forever. Most Czechoslovaks were paralyzed by a
feeling of defeat and humiliation. The killing of Heydrich roused the
people into standing up to the Nazis. It showed we were not a nation of
slaves.”
Enemy underestimated
Outside the camp, curious passers-by routinely stop and gaze at the
grey wooden fence posts; this is certainly one of the more unusual
sights in the center of Prague - and potentially upsetting for those who
lived through the war.
One woman here, Jana Sisova, was two years old when Heydrich was killed.
“I was with my parents in the garden of our house in Liben at the time,
and it's one of my first memories. I remember all the soldiers and
police running around, and public transportation was down. We had to
walk everywhere; that's what I remember.”
Heydrich (right), pictured here with SS-head Heinrich Himmler, was seen as a possible successor to Adolf Hitler
The paratroopers hid for three weeks but were eventually betrayed. On
June 18th, 1942 they were surrounded in the crypt of a church. For
several hours they held off an assault by over 700 Waffen SS and Gestapo
troops, who ordered the Prague Fire Brigade to flood the crypt. Finally
they took their own lives. Bishop Gorazd, the orthodox priest who'd
sheltered them, was arrested, tortured and executed.
Heydrich, ultimately responsible for all of Nazi Germany's security
apparatus including the Gestapo, was a great loss to Hitler, who
organized two massive funerals in Prague and Berlin. In private,
however, he raged at Heydrich's ‘stupidity,' calling his refusal to
travel with a bodyguard or allow armor-plating on his car ‘idiotic.'
For once, the man whom Hitler hailed for his ‘iron heart' had underestimated his enemy.
Author: Rob Cameron, Prague
Editor: Gabriel Borrud