He stood among cheering crowds during Hitler’s triumphal entry into Austria in 1938. But behind the smile was a man who would become one of the most sadistic killers of the Holocaust. As commandant of the Plaszow concentration camp, Amon Göth brought death with him wherever he walked. He shot prisoners from his balcony for sport, unleashed dogs to tear people apart, and oversaw mass executions and deportations with chilling indifference. Feared by prisoners and despised even by his fellow SS officers, Göth left a trail of terror, violence, and murder. This is the rise and fall of one of history’s most ruthless war criminals.
Up Next in Season 1
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Terror at Buchenwald: The Rise of Her...
On 8 April 1945, starving prisoners at Buchenwald risked execution to send a secret SOS to the advancing U.S. Army: “They want to evacuate us. The SS want to destroy us.” Three days later, American troops liberated the camp—and uncovered horrors beyond imagination: mass graves, torture chambers, ...
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Dachau’s Darkest Hour: Martin Gottfri...
On 29 April 1945, U.S. troops entered Dachau—the first Nazi concentration camp—and were met with a nightmare beyond imagination: piles of skeletal corpses, railway cars filled with rotting bodies, and 30,000 starved survivors on the brink of death. At the center of this horror stood Martin Gottfr...
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White Death of Sobibor and Treblinka:...
Franz Stangl was no sadistic brute screaming in rage or beating victims with his fists. He was worse. A cold, disciplined administrator who treated mass murder as an exercise in efficiency. After joining the SS, he became a key figure in the Nazi T4 euthanasia program before being appointed the f...