On 13 September 1946, former commander of the Krakow - Plaszow concentration camp, war criminal Amon Göth, was executed in the Montelupich prison near Plaszów.

Amon Göth tried to conform to the model of the perfect Nazi. From 1925 he was a member of the Austrian Nazi Party, and had held extreme right-wing views since he was 16. He was called Alter Kämpfer (“Old Fighter”), although by the beginning of the war he was only 30 years old. Leaving his first wife, he married a friend he met at a motorcycle race, forcing her to take all the tests of racial and physical fitness.

From 1941 he was engaged in the extermination of Polish Jews, and was an active participant in Operation Reinhardt, during which the Belzec, Sobibor and Treblinka concentration camps were created. Göth was responsible for the arrest and transportation of prisoners, as well as raids against the Jews. The Supreme Court of Poland in Kraków found him guilty of the imprisonment, torture and extermination of individuals and groups of prisoners, and of personally torturing and killing an unknown number of people.

He was hanged and cremated. The ashes were thrown in the Vistula. During the execution, the executioner twice mistakenly took a rope of the wrong length, and only executed Göth on the third attempt.

Göth’s wife killed herself after she had learned what her husband had been involved in. His daughter went on to write a book: “I do have to love my father, don't I?”. His granddaughter, Jennifer Teege, the child his daughter and a Nigerian student, after learning about who her grandfather was, also wrote a book in 2013: “My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me”.

Ralph Fiennes, the actor who played Göth in Schindler's List, was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Supporting Actor category and received a BAFTA Award.

Source: Kessler, Matthias. Ich muß doch meinen Vater lieben, oder? Eichborn, 2002.