The SA Commander Behind Berlin’s Terror: Karl Ernst
LGBTQ+ Lives: WWII and the Nazi Era
•
13m
In the turbulent years leading to Hitler’s dictatorship, Karl Ernst commanded the Nazi Sturmabteilung in Berlin—the paramilitary force that beat opponents, raided homes, and terrorized Jews in the streets. A former nightclub bouncer turned fanatic, Ernst embodied the ruthless energy of the Brownshirts. Under his command, violence became a tool of politics, and fear a weapon of control. His name was whispered in connection with the burning of the Reichstag and the brutal street purges that silenced dissent.
But when Hitler turned against the SA during the Night of the Long Knives in 1934, Ernst’s loyalty could not save him. Shot by the SS, he became one more casualty of the regime’s hunger for total control—a man who helped build the Nazi machine of terror, only to be destroyed by it.
Up Next in LGBTQ+ Lives: WWII and the Nazi Era
-
Nazi War on Homosexuals: Persecution ...
During the Nazi era, thousands of gay men were arrested, tortured, and murdered simply for who they loved. Marked with the pink triangle, they endured inhuman experiments, brutal labor, and sexual abuse in concentration camps. This documentary uncovers their untold stories of their persecution an...
-
The Rise and Fall of Chinese Princess...
Born a Qing dynasty princess, Yoshiko Kawashima was adopted by a Japanese spy and transformed into the infamous “Mata Hari of the Far East.” She seduced Chinese officials, manipulated the last emperor, and helped Japan conquer Manchuria. From glamour and power to betrayal and execution, witness t...
-
Butcher of Breslau: Sadistic SA Comma...
Edmund Heines was one of the most violent and feared figures in the Nazi Party’s early years. A decorated war veteran turned fanatic, he joined Hitler’s paramilitary wing, the SA, and quickly built a reputation for brutality. As police chief of Breslau, he oversaw arrests, torture, and murders of...