Abstract
On April 19, 1943, Jürgen Stroop (1895-1951) – SS
Brigadeführer, major general of the
police, and head of the SS and police in Warsaw – took command of the
so-called large-scale operation
[Großaktion] in the Warsaw ghetto.
The aim of the operation was to clear the ghetto of all remaining Jews
and to put down the armed uprising of Jewish resistance fighters. After
the operation ended on May 16, 1943, Stroop compiled the report that
would eventually bear his name. The Stoop Report consists of three
sections: a written account of events; Stroop’s communiqués on the
course of the operation to Friedrich Wilhelm Krüger (1894-1945), leader
of the SS and police in the General Government; and photographic
documentation. The Stroop Report was used as evidence by the prosecution
at the
Nuremberg
Trial of the Major War Criminals. On March 21, 1947, a U.S.
military tribunal found Stroop guilty of participating in the murder of
American prisoners of war and sentenced him to death. He was later
extradited to Poland, where he was tried in Warsaw from July 18 to July
23, 1951. Polish authorities were given one of the rare original copies
of the Stroop Report to aid in his prosecution. He was sentenced to
death by hanging and executed on September 21, 1951, in Warsaw.
The photograph, taken from the Stroop Report, shows a German assault
detachment in the Warsaw ghetto and residential buildings in flames. The
original caption reads: “Fumigation of Jews & bandits.”