Mülsen St. Micheln


The external concentration camp

During World War II, demand for arms and workers increased. For this reason, production of non-war-related items was halted and replaced by production of arms. This was also the case for the former textile factory "Richard Poenisch Nachf." in Mülsen St. Micheln. On January 27, 1944, the first transport of prisoners arrived from the Flossenbürg main camp and the ERLA Maschinenwerke Leipzig. A barbed wire fence and four watchtowers were built around the site.

The prisoners were housed in the basement while the assembly line for the Messerschmitt Bf 109, one of the most important fighter aircraft of the time, operated on the floors above.

After being suspected of sabotage and subsequently detained, the Soviet prisoners set fire to their straw mattresses on the night of May 19, 1944. In May 1944, they set fire to their straw mattresses. The SS prevented the evacuation of the inmates and shot fugitive prisoners. As a result, 198 concentration camp inmates died in Mülsen St. Micheln and at least 60 suffered severe burns. Two barracks were then built on the site.

(Titzmann 2024)

Inhalte von Google Maps werden aufgrund deiner aktuellen Cookie-Einstellungen nicht angezeigt. Klicke auf die Cookie-Richtlinie (Funktionell), um den Cookie-Richtlinien von Google Maps zuzustimmen und den Inhalt anzusehen. Mehr dazu erfährst du in der Google Maps Datenschutzerklärung.

More information about the external camp

Grave of prisoners in Voigts Schlucht
Grave of prisoners in Voigts Schlucht

Everyday life was characterized by violence and hunger. Nearly one-third of the prisoners died in Mülsen. Fifty-one of them were buried in a ravine near the factory, where a memorial stone can be found today.

 

The Mülsen St. Michael Association for Local History and Customs maintains the grave. The grave's location is marked on the map below.

Inhalte von Google Maps werden aufgrund deiner aktuellen Cookie-Einstellungen nicht angezeigt. Klicke auf die Cookie-Richtlinie (Funktionell), um den Cookie-Richtlinien von Google Maps zuzustimmen und den Inhalt anzusehen. Mehr dazu erfährst du in der Google Maps Datenschutzerklärung.

Tadeusz Sobolewicz was a prisoner in the Mülsen subcamp. In his poignant memoir, From Hell Back, he recounts his experiences as a political prisoner in seven Nazi concentration camps and subcamps, including Mülsen St. Micheln. A young resistance fighter, Sobolewicz was arrested in 1941. He survived the fire in the Mülsen subcamp on May 1, 1944, among other things. Sobolewicz vividly describes the daily struggle for survival, the cruelty of everyday life in the camp, and the unbroken hope for freedom. It is an important testimony against forgetting and one of the most detailed accounts of the Mülsen subcamp. The english title is "But I survived". 

(c) Mit freundlicher Genehmigung der S. Fischer Verlag GmbH.