Dresden (34 page)

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Authors: Frederick Taylor

BOOK: Dresden
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Such courage! To remain fearlessly in the safest place in the center of Dresden, and from there to rush to an even safer location outside the city—the network of bunkers housing the party leadership's bombproof HQ at Lockwitz, on Dresden's far southern outskirts.

 

WHILE THE HEART
of the city burned, parts had still been scarcely touched by the bombing, the outer suburbs especially. Other districts had been hit patchily, including the area south and southwest of the Altstadt, and the area to the east. Here there was some high-explosive damage, and fires had started, but the situation was comparable to that in an “average” bombed town.

The Johannstadt hospital complex was, after the Friedrichstadt hospital, the largest in Dresden. The Women's Clinic had grown out of a school for midwives toward the end of the eighteenth century, and now found itself in a large building between the Grosser Garten and the Elbe. It became a byword for excellence. The nearby Pediatric Clinic—the first in the world—was founded in the 1890s by a Jewish physician, Dr. Schlossmann, one of a group of doctors who had formed an association for children's health. After existing in temporary locations around Johannstadt for thirty years, in 1930, with government help, a purpose-built clinic came into being.

The clinic was thus only fifteen years old, built in a light, airy Bauhaus style and one of the most modern units of its kind in Europe. The final-stage alarm had led the medical authorities to start evacuating the patients, sick children (many with illnesses such as scarlet fever), and expectant or recently delivered mothers and their babies,
but owing to the unusually short interval between alarm and attack, few were brought to safety at this point.

The first wave of British bombers passed over. There was some damage from stray bombs, but the hospital buildings were not destroyed. Even when the attack seemed over, the doctors and nurses continued to evacuate all the mothers and children they could from the hospital. The babies were evacuated, it seems, mostly because of existing damage and the unhealthy environment created, and not because the authorities were frightened of another air attack.

The senior medical officer at the Rudolf Hess Clinic (a naturopathic establishment in the same complex) had offered his villa in the suburb of Blasewitz as a temporary refuge for endangered infants. As in the case of the Royal Warwickshire Hospital in Coventry, some of the mothers could not be moved. Where possible, they were transported down to the shelters beneath the hospital. The important thing was to save the babies, and that was done. Nurses did their best to wrap them warmly and protect them from drifting smoke, then loaded them onto trucks and set off on the journey.

Elsewhere in Dresden, especially in the only partly affected areas, those who emerged from the shelters did so mainly to check on their homes and belongings rather than to flee. Anita Kurz describes the scene in her family's apartment block:

The curtains were burning. And the windows had shattered. My father wanted to go across the street to find my grandmother, but the fire was spreading. Cars were on fire where just they had been parked out on the street. The fire was spreading. Incendiaries had hit our building. The men had tried to throw them out, but failed…My father asked me what I wanted to save from the flat and I said my dolls' pram and my school bag. These were saved. People tried…they thought if they could get things into the basement, they would be saved.

Just a block away, Nora Lang and her family emerged to find things worse than at her friend's place.

My parents decided to leave the building. We were in the back section of the building, so we had to make our way through into the
front. We were sort of hemmed in, but we decided to get through onto the square, the Dürerplatz, and we did. With our luggage. And all around the square everything was on fire…there were lots of fires, all at various stages, but I remember this one. And all the people were around the square, milling about in the dark. I don't think a single one thought there would be more bombs.

Also in the same crowd on the Dürerplatz, after the first raid, was young Christoph Adam. His family's apartment was actually on the square. He was lucky too that his father, far from panicking, showed a capacity for improvisation.

I think it can be said that this first attack set around 95 percent of the area on fire. The attack was on such a scale that my father—there were a few older men there—said we should get out of the building. We would suffocate. It was already starting to smell…We were fortunate enough to have a large water container for fire-fighting, and my father got hold of some quilts, soaked them, and gave one to each of us. He said we have to get out of here—either in the direction of the Elbe or the Grosser Garten. Then we left, trying to make it through the streets, several of which were impassable. Explosive bombs had fallen and quite a lot of house fronts had collapsed across the street. The rubble was on fire. Some houses, I still remember, were burning in wide swathes—the result of phosphor canisters, as was later explained to me. Of course, at the time I didn't know what everything was…

What Christoph Adam saw were almost certainly houses set ablaze by canisters, filled not with phosphor—feared because it was rumored to stick to flesh and be impossible to extinguish—but with gasoline-based stick incendiaries. No phosphor-based bombs were loaded for the Dresden raids, as Allied records prove. Nevertheless, the sight of such sudden and uncontrollable burning unnerved them further. They became if anything more determined to leave their area and seek out a place of greater safety.

In this they followed the instructions of the air raid authorities. The Grosser Garten in the south and the Elbe water meadows to the north were the two places that had been officially designated as assembly areas, in case of people having to abandon their homes.

Rather than head north toward the Elbe, the Adam family decided to make their way south to the Grosser Garten. First, though, they decided to make a slight detour along the broad Dürerstrasse. Wider streets were less likely to be blocked by collapsed buildings. Walking due east, they came to another main street, the Fürstenstrasse (later Fetscherstrasse), which cut sharply south in the direction of the Grosser Garten. They tramped three hundred yards between burning buildings, until they reached the Fürstenplatz, about halfway to the Grosser Garten.

It was here, Christoph remembers, when they met the main Striesener Strasse, the major direct route east from the Altstadt, that “suddenly we were caught up in a whirlwind, a storm.” The firestorm was spreading out from its breeding place in the narrow streets and alleyways of the city center, reaching into the inner suburbs. The family, clinging together, struggled on.

How could they predict that things would get even worse?

 

HAVING SURVIVED
with his friend Siegfried in the air raid shelter on the Schumannstrasse, Günther Kannegiesser emerged to see that his own family's building seemed intact. On the other hand, there was smoke billowing from fires further up the Schumannstrasse, where Siegfried lived. Günther accompanied his friend there.

They ran upstairs to the family apartment on the fourth floor. An incendiary bomb had come through the ceiling and was burning inside a cupboard. Using water from the bathtub, which had been left filled in accordance with air raid instructions, the two boys had all but mastered the fire in the empty building when they noticed that smoke was creeping up the stairs. Just in time, they managed to find their way back down to street level. Another apartment in the building was on fire, and the blaze was spreading. The boys separated, Siegfried to look for his mother and Günther to check on his own family.

A few minutes later, Günther reached his home. The block was intact except for the blast-shattered windowpanes. His little sister and brother were still in the basement, but his mother was up in the apartment on the third floor, busily clearing a mess of broken glass. He noticed that it was now exactly twelve midnight. He began excitedly to tell his mother of his adventures, and how much of the city had already been destroyed.

Then the local air raid warden appeared. An officious type, he warned Günther about such loose talk and told him that, instead of spreading rumors, he should be off helping to put out fires. Günther said a half-reluctant, half-eager farewell to his mother and dashed off to the headquarters of Police District Four. There he was told simply to help wherever he could.

On the Striesener Strasse, there were fire-fighting operations under way wherever houses were burning. A balcony had fallen onto the overhead tramlines. I had come back to look for my friend, but then I saw a group of women with baby carriages taking shelter in the lobby of a building. They wanted to get to the Johannstadt hospital…I offered to help. We went by way of the Dürerplatz. All around there were many buildings on fire, some already burned out to the second story. There was a fire engine on the Dürerstrasse, which was pumping water out of a reservoir that prisoners of war had constructed a short while before. I followed the hoses and found the firefighters so that I could ask the best way through. They were dealing with a fire in a house on the Reissiger Strasse. One of them told me they had just arrived from Bad Schandau and had driven into the city via Fürstenstrasse and Dürerstrasse. The truck lay totally wrecked on the Dürerplatz for a long time afterward.

The boy guided his column of women and children east along the Dürerstrasse to the junction with Fürstenstrasse. But instead of turning south, as young Christoph Adam and his family had done an hour or so earlier, Günther led the way north toward the Elbe. The Johannstadt hospital complex lay between here and the river.

 

BY 11 O'CLOCK
the Altstadt was burning so extensively that the blaze was too much for the city force of a thousand firefighters. Auxiliaries and suburban units had quickly reinforced them, and fire trucks were starting to come in from other towns—eventually even from Berlin, almost a hundred miles to the north. It made no difference. As midnight approached, the firestorm had the heart of Dresden in its fierce, pitiless grip, and there was very little that anyone could do about it.

Gerhard Kühnemund, a fifteen-year-old from Leipzig, was staying with an aunt in the Serrestrasse, close to the densely built center of
Dresden, on the night of February 13. Typically for a Dresdener, his aunt did not treat the alarm too seriously. They were just in the process of leaving her apartment when the first bombs struck, rocking the building and blowing out many of the windows. They joined the rest of the neighborhood in a suddenly panic-stricken rush to the shelter. Once down there, the teenager realized that apart from one elderly man, the only other male adult present was a much-decorated young Luftwaffe sergeant. They had not been there long when neighbors pushed their way through from the cellar of the next building, screaming that everyone should leave. The entire Serrestrasse was on fire.

The Luftwaffe sergeant turned to Gerhard, indicated the Hitler Youth uniform he was wearing, and asked him if he was “a man.” To which the boy answered, “Of course.” They stormed up to the attic, where they tried to put out two incendiary bombs with water and sand. Suddenly one of the bombs blew up—it had been booby-trapped with an explosive charge in its weighted nose. The sergeant clutched his stomach. A splinter had torn out part of his stomach wall. The boy suffered a cut to his shin, which sent blood pouring down into his shoe. The sergeant recovered quickly, however. He shouted to his companion: “Let this rubbish burn.” Stumbling toward the stairs, the boy glanced out of the attic window and was appalled.

The whole of Dresden was an inferno!

On the street people were wandering about helplessly. I saw my aunt. She had wrapped herself in a damp blanket, and seeing me, called out: “Come to the Elbe terrace!” The sound of the rising firestorm strangled her last words. A house wall collapsed with a roar, burying several people in the debris. A thick cloud of dust arose and, mingling with the smoke, made it impossible to see. Then a fist grabbed me by the neck and pulled me away across the rubble. It was the young pilot, who with his calm composure probably saved my life in this chaos. Time and again we stumbled over corpses…

Seventeenth-century laws forbidding the construction of half-timbered (
Fachwerk
) houses in Dresden meant that it was a city of sandstone and brick. But whatever impression their Baroque facades might have given, the frames around which the blocks that crowded the
streets and alleys of the city's heart had been built were of centuries-old, dry wood. So were the floors, the panelled walls of their rooms and much of the heavy traditional furniture that filled them.

Once the incendiaries tumbled through into the lofts and garrets of the Dresden Altstadt, and—just as importantly—were allowed to burn unchecked while the inhabitants cowered in their basements and shelters, the scene was set for a conflagration of the same ferocity unleashed in the relatively modern tenements of Hamburg-Billwärder on July 28, 1943, and in the genuinely medieval hearts of Darmstadt and Kassel the previous year.

In the suburbs, it was different. The villa of Hannelore Kuhn's family in the Südvorstadt, for instance, was in one of the more lightly bombed areas, and their preparations had been thorough.

Someone said, there's a fire on the third story of the house. And it was burning…they had dropped incendiary bombs, but onto our loft, and the loft was impregnated. It was huge, but we had cleared it, that was one of the safety measures. And large containers full of water were ready there. And the floor had been treated with some kind of fireproof stuff. But it was smoldering…in the basement we took shovels and tossed the incendiaries out of the window. In the loft it was harder; all the windows were broken and there were red-hot fragments flying from other buildings. Anyway…somehow we did it. We put out all the fires.

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