- Moll,
Josef Kramer and
various Aufseherinnen. For the SS
guards and SS
Helferinnen — the
female volunteer typists and
clerks of the
extermination camp —...
-
civilian employees of the SS, the SS-
Helferinnen who
completed training at the
Reichsschule für SS-
Helferinnen in
Oberehnheim (Alsace) were
members of...
- SS, the SS-
Helferinnen who
completed training at the Reich-school in
Obernai (Oberehnheim) were
members of the Waffen-SS. The SS-
Helferinnen were trained...
-
Female air
warning service auxiliaries On 26
February 1941, the Flugmelde-
Helferinnen were
incorporated into the
Luftnachrichtenhelferinnen (Luftwaffe female...
- Poles, and others. In 1942,
Himmler set up the
Reichsschule für SS
Helferinnen (Reich
school for SS helpers) in
Oberehnheim to
train women in communications...
- SS women. Consequently, at some
tribunals it was
disputed whether SS-
Helferinnen emplo**** at the
camps were
official members of the SS, thus
leading to...
-
trained at the SS
school in Obernai, who were
known generally as SS
Helferinnen, the
German word for (female) "helpers". Both of the camp's most well-known...
- in the
actual fighting or
operation of weaponry,
although some Flak
Helferinnen operated anti-aircraft guns. Many
older girls, with
Hitler Youth were...
-
Second World War, the ****
authorities set up the
Reichsschule für SS
Helferinnen Oberenheim, a Waffen-SS women's
training centre,
which opened in May...
-
women for
other work. The
Third Reich had many
roles for women. The SS-
Helferinnen were
regarded as part of the SS if they had
undergone training at a Reichsschule...