ERICH ZODDEL
Erich Zoddel(August 9, 1913-November 30, 1945) was a
prisoner functionary and a criminal at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. In 1941, Zoddel was sentenced to a year in prison for
theft before being transferred to Sachsenhausen concentration camp in 1942. He worked as a forced laborer in the Heinkel factory in Oranienburg until October 1943. In November 1943,
after a brief stay at Buchenwald concentration camp, he was taken to Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp. On March 27, 1944, Zoddel and 1,000 other prisoners
from Mittelbau-Dora arrived at Bergen-Belsen. By January 1945, Zoddel
had risen in the ranks to a camp division. Two days after the liberation of
Bergen-Belsen by the British army on April 15, 1945, Zoddel killed a female
detainee, a crime for which he was sentenced to death by a British military
court in Celle on August 31, 1945. On
November 17, 1945, Zoddel was sentenced to life imprisonment in a second trial
for his actions at Bergen-Belsen. His execution was carried out later that
month in Wolfenbüttel.
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