Franz Böhme

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Franz Böhme
  • Version 1.0
  • Publication date 5 March 2024

Franz Böhme was born in the Styrian town of Zeltweg, Austria, on 15 April 1885. He was an officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I, and continued his military career in the Austrian Army afterwards. From 1935 to 1938, he held the position of Chief of Military Intelligence [Chef des militärischen Nachrichtendienstes]. After the ‘Anschluss’ in March 1938, he became a high-ranking Wehrmacht officer and participated in the invasion of Poland and France at the head of the 30th and later the 32nd Infantry Division. General Franz Böhme is among the main perpetrators of the crimes committed by the Wehrmacht in the autumn of 1941 in Serbia, including the mass murder of male Jews and Roma.

Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia

After unsuccessful attempts during the summer of 1941 to suppress the partisan uprising in Serbia, General Wilhelm List (1880–1971), the Commander of the German Forces in Southeast Europe [Wehrmachtbefehlshaber Südost], asked the High Command of the Wehrmacht [Oberkommando der Wehrmacht] to send General Böhme with an infantry division to Serbia with orders to pacify the region. Böhme arrived in Serbia on 18 September 1941 as Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia [Bevollmächtigter Kommandierender General in Serbien], and at the same time the 342nd Infantry Division was transferred from France to Serbia. Böhme immediately started to implement severe punitive measures against the civilian population in order to deter the partisans from further attacks, especially in the northwestern territories of Serbia where the partisans were liberating entire towns and villages. On that occasion, he issued an order which included mass reprisals against the civilian population in Western Serbia. Women and children were accused of helping the partisans by collecting information and supplying them, and for this reason they were to be considered as enemies as well. Partisans were to be treated as outlaws, settlements were to be burned, and the entire male population between 15 and 60 was to be arrested and taken to a concentration camp.

Killing of Hostages

Starting from early October 1941, Böhme’s reprisal orders were carried out following the decision taken by the High Command of the Wehrmacht according to which in the territories where a partisan presence was registered 100 hostages were to be shot for every German killed and 50 for every one wounded. On 10 October 1941 Böhme ordered that all communists, all suspicious men, all (male) Jews and a certain number of nationalist or democratic-minded citizens be arrested and held as hostages. In case of an attack on German soldiers or Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans), hostages would be shot.

A few days after this order was issued, in response to a partisan attack near the town of Topola in which 21 German soldiers perished, Böhme ordered the shooting of 2°100 communists, Jews and Roma from the concentration camps Šabac and Topovske šupe. On that occasion, Harald Turner (1891–1947), Chief of the Administrative Staff of the Military Commander of Serbia, decided to hand over Roma instead of communists. Hostages were shot in Zasavica, near Šabac, and Jabuka near Pančevo. A further 2°200 Jews and Roma were murdered at the end of October and early November in response to a partisan attack near Valjevo. In this case, hostages were shot also in Jajinci, near Belgrade. Massacres of Serbian civilians were also committed in Kraljevo, Kragujevac, Draginac and elsewhere.

Böhme stayed in Belgrade until the beginning of December 1941, when he was replaced by General Paul Bader (1883-1971). After serving in Finland (1941 to 1943), Austria (1944) and again in the Balkans (1944), he was transferred to Army High Command Leader Reserve. At the end of the war he was Head of all German military forces in Norway [Wehrmachtbefehlshaber in Norwegen], where he was taken prisoner by the British Army.

‘Hostages Trial’ in Nuremberg

After the war, the Allies sent him to the Nuremberg Tribunal for crimes committed in Southeastern Europe (Case VII), also called the ‘Hostages Trial’. He committed suicide in prison on 29 May 1947, before the arraignment.

Citation

Milovan Pisarri: Franz Böhme, in: Encyclopaedia of the Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma in Europe. Ed. by Karola Fings, Research Centre on Antigypsyism at Heidelberg University, Heidelberg 5 March 2024.-

1941
16 September 1941General Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, Germany, issues the ‘Sühnebefehl’ (atonement order) to the Wehrmacht High Command, instructing the troops to execute 50–100 civilians for every German soldier killed in an ambush.
4 October 1941Als Reaktion auf die Ermordung von 21 Wehrmachtsoldaten in der Nähe von Topola, deutsch besetztes Serbien, wird die Erschießung von 2 100 Juden und Roma als Geiseln beschlossen.
10 October 1941A few days after ordering the shooting of hostages by the Wehrmacht as ‘retaliation’ for the losses at Topola, German-occupied Serbia, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General issues an order that forms the formal basis for the subsequent Wehrmacht massacres of Jews, Roma and Serbs.
20 – 21 October 1941After a partisan attack on Wehrmacht units, German forces together with collaborating Serbian formations arrest 2 300 civilians in and around Kragujevac, mostly male Jews, Roma and local Serbs, among which entire year groups of local secondary school children, and shoot them in retaliation, most of them at the Šumarice killing site.
26 October 1941In German-occupied Serbia, an order is issued to all field and district commands that Jews and Roma are to be taken hostage for reprisals
28 October – 3 November 1941Wehrmacht soldiers together with Serbian police units and agents of the Serbian special police carry out mass arrests of Belgrade Roma. They are taken to one of the Belgrade concentration camps, Topovske Šupe, German-occupied Serbia, where they are held hostage for retaliatory measures.
End of October – early November 1941As ‘retaliation’ for ten German soldiers killed and 24 wounded, near Valjevo, German-occupied Serbia, 2 200 hostages, mostly male Jews and Roma, are shot in Zasavica near Šabac, Jabuka and Jajinci near Belgrade, German occupied Serbia.
1947
29 May 1947Franz Böhme, former Plenipotentiary Commanding General in German-occupied Serbia and one of the main defendants in the ‘Hostages Trial’ (Case VII) before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals, commits suicide in prison before the arraignment.