Bernhard Siebken | |||||
Birth Date: | 4 April 1910 | ||||
Birth Place: | Pinneberg, Province of Schleswig-Holstein, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire | ||||
Death Place: | Hamelin Prison, Hamelin, Allied-occupied Germany
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Branch: | Schutzstaffel Waffen-SS | ||||
Serviceyears: | 1931–1945 | ||||
Rank: | SS-Obersturmbannführer | ||||
Servicenumber: | NSDAP #558,752 SS #44,894 | ||||
Unit: | SS Division Leibstandarte SS Division Hitlerjugend | ||||
Commands: | SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 2 "LSSAH" | ||||
Battles: | World War II | ||||
Awards: | Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross |
Bernhard Siebken (4 April 1910 – 20 January 1949) was a German SS commander during World War II and a convicted war criminal. He was sentenced to death for the killing of Canadian prisoners of war and was executed in 1949.
Siebken, a driving and riding instructor, joined the SS and the NSDAP in 1931 and was one of the original members of the SS-Stabswache (March 1933) and its successor the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH). He took part in the invasion of Poland in 1939 and went on to serve on the Eastern Front.
In 1944, Seibken commanded the 2nd Battalion, 26th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment and later the 25th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment; both with the SS Division Hitlerjugend. Siebken was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 April 1945.
After the end of the war, he stood trial for war crimes related to his activities while in command of the 2nd Battalion, 26th Panzer Grenadier Regiment of the LSSAH.
He was found guilty in the shootings of Canadian prisoners of war from the Queen's Own Rifles during the Battle of Le Mesnil-Patry and hanged on 20 January 1949. The death sentence and its execution were very controversial at the time: the British war correspondent Basil Liddell Hart, among others, spoke out against the unjust sentence.[1]
Following the reburial of executed war criminals in Hamelin in 1954, the cemetery became the focal point for veterans' reunions, with distinct Nazi overtones. In 1959, for example, the convention of the lobby group and revisionist organisation of former Waffen-SS members, HIAG, concluded with "comrades gathering around [Siebken's] tomb" and laying a wreath.