Unit Name: | Arajs Kommando |
Native Name: | German: Sonderkommando Arajs Latvian: Arāja komanda |
Allegiance: | Nazi Germany |
Branch: | Sicherheitsdienst |
Commander1: | Viktors Arājs |
Commander1 Label: | Commander |
Commander2: | Herberts Cukurs |
Commander2 Label: | Deputy commander |
Dates: | 1941—1944 |
Size: | from >100 (July 1941) to 1200 (1943) |
Battles: | The Holocaust in Latvia The Holocaust in Belarus |
Battles Label: | War crimes |
The Arajs Kommando (also: Sonderkommando Arajs;), led by SS commander and Nazi collaborator Viktors Arājs, was a unit of Latvian Auxiliary Police (German: Lettische Hilfspolizei) subordinated to the German Sicherheitsdienst (SD). It was a notorious killing unit during the Holocaust.
After the entry of the Einsatzkommando into the Latvian capital[1] Viktors Arājs made contact with Brigadeführer Walter Stahlecker on 1 July 1941. Stahlecker instructed Arājs to set up a group later named Latvian Auxiliary Security Police or Arajs Kommando.[2] The unit was composed of students and former officers. All Arajs Kommando members were volunteers, and free to leave at any time.[2] The following day, on 2 July, Stahlecker told Arājs that his commando group was to unleash against the Jews a pogrom that looked spontaneous.[3]
The Arajs Kommando unit actively participated in a variety of Nazi atrocities, including the killing of Jews, Roma and mental patients, as well as punitive actions and massacres of civilians along Latvia's border with the Soviet Union.[2] [4] The Kommando is estimated to have killed around 26,000 Latvian Jews.[5] Most notably, the unit took part in the Liepāja massacres. They also participated in the mass slaughter of Jews from the Riga Ghetto and several thousand Jews deported from Germany, as guards at the Rumbula massacre of November 30 and December 8, 1941, although the actual killing was carried out by 12 German German: Schutzpolizei personnel assigned to the operation. Some of the commando's men also served as guards at the Salaspils concentration camp.[6]
As can be seen in contemporary Nazi newsreels, part of a campaign to create the perception that the Holocaust in the Baltics was local, and not Nazi-directed, the Arajs Kommando figured prominently in the burning of Riga's Great (Choral) Synagogue on 4 July 1941. Commemoration of this event has been chosen for marking Holocaust Memorial Day in present-day Latvia.
The unit numbered about 300–500 men during the period that it participated in the killings of Latvian Jews, and up to 1,500 members at its peak at the height of its involvement in anti-partisan operations in 1942. In the final phases of the war, the unit was disbanded, and its personnel transferred to the Latvian Legion.
A total of 356 Arajs Kommando members have been identified. Between 1944 and 1966, 352 of them were prosecuted by the Soviets, albeit one case was later suspended.[7]
Death | 44 (30 executed) | |
25 years imprisonment with hard labor | 156 | |
20 years imprisonment with hard labor | 36 | |
15–18 years imprisonment with hard labor | 43 | |
15 years imprisonment with hard labor | 10 | |
10 years imprisonment with hard labor | 76 |
After successfully hiding in West Germany for several decades after the war under an assumed name, Viktors Arājs was eventually identified by a former colleague, arrested, tried, and imprisoned for his crimes. Arājs died in prison in 1988.
Herberts Cukurs, a deputy commander of the Arajs Kommado, was assassinated by the Israeli Mossad in 1965. While living in Brazil, Cukurs was befriended by a German-speaking Mossad agent, who lured him to Uruguay, where Cukurs was ambushed, restrained, and summarily executed.[9]
More recently, the governments of Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia were involved in attempts to extradite Konrāds Kalējs, a former officer of the Arajs Kommando,[10] to Latvia for trial on charges of genocide. Kalējs died in 2001 in Australia before the extradition could proceed, maintaining his innocence to the end, stating that he was fighting Russia on the Eastern Front or studying at university when the slaughter of Jews took place in 1941. Historian of the Latvian Holocaust Andrew Ezergailis claimed that about a third of the Arājs Kommando, 500 out of a maximum of around 1,500 total members, actively participated in the killings of Jews, and pointed out that one cannot be convicted of crimes against humanity based solely on membership in an organization.[11]