Original Articles Written About Le Paradis
Article from the London Times Newspaper - 25th May, 2020
Norfolk Magazine - May 2020
Eastern Daily Press - 2004
Transcript of Eastern Daily Press article of Saturday July 10th, 2004
SS man at Le Paradis
More than 60 years ago, nearly 100 men of the 2nd Norfolks were gunned down in what has been described as one of the worst massacres of the second world war. Although the Nazi SS officer who ordered the killings was hanged for what he did, another man now stands accused of playing a part in the deaths, as ROWAN ENTWISTLE reports.
An 85-year old Nazi SS officer on trial for war crimes was also involved in the slaughter of 97 soldiers of the Royal Norfolk Regiment during the Dunkirk evacuation, a court heard yesterday.
Herman Langer is accused of murdering more than 40 civilians, including monks and a bishop, during a week-long massacre towards the end of the second world war.
But a court in Italy also heard he had been involved in one of the worst wartime massacres, when 97 British soldiers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolks were murdered.
The men had been defending the road to Dunkirk when they were surrounded, disarmed and marched into a field where they were mown down by machine guns and finished off by revolver shots and bayonets.
Only two men survived the slaughter on May 27th 1940 - Bill O’Callaghan and Bert Pooley. It was their harrowing testimony that led nine years later to the death sentence for German officer Fritz Knoechlein who had given the order.
Military prosecutor Colonel Roberto D’Elia told the hearing at La Spezia in Italy yesterday about Langer’s involvement at what became known as the Le Paradis massacre.
Col. D’Elia said “Langer joined the SS when he was very young and quickly became a sergeant in the Totenkopf, or SS Death Head regiment as it was known.
“This unit was responsible for some of the worst massacres in Italy and abroad and Langer was injured on 27th May 1940 while taking part in the massacre of British soldiers from the Royal Norfolk Regiment.
“These men were unarmed and had surrendered.”
Langer, who is now too ill to appear in court, is standing trial for the slaughter of civilians at Certosa di Farneta near Lucca in Tuscany during the first week of September 1944.
Langer, a former lieutenant, is one of several SS soldiers currently on trial in Italy in their absence for war crimes.
The trial has now been adjourned until September.
Both Pte O’Callaghan and Pte Pooley have since died, but last night Dennis O’Callaghan, Bill’s son, said hearing the news brought his father’s ordeal back to him.
Mr O’Callaghan, 58, who lives near King’s Lynn, said “At the end of the day anyone who takes part in an act of atrocity should answer for that and I know my father thought that as well.”
Leslie Eaton, chairman of the Norfolk and Norwich branch of the Dunkirk Veterans 1940, said he would be watching the trial with interest.
“It is a good job they are still finding these people who think they have got away with it.”
Hugh Sebag Montefiore who is writing a book about Dunkirk said he was very interested to learn of the latest developments.
“I have found documents in the German archive discussing how 90 odd bodies were discovered in the area by the side of the building and how the German command wanted to find out what had happened and made inquiring of the Totenkopf regiment but nothing ever came of the inquiry,” he said.
The survivors’ revenge
The last stand of the men of the Royal Norfolks' 2nd Battalion at Le Paradis in May 1940 was one of the many heroic engagements.
Along a stretch of the La Bassee canal, near the village of Petit Cornet Malo and Le Paradis, the 2nd Royal Norfolks were ordered to hold their ground so that other soldiers could escape down an ever narrowing corridor still under Allied control to Dunkirk.
They had contested every field, barn and house, but on May 27th, 100 or more of them were forced to surrender while defending a farm.
What followed was the worst atrocity of the Dunkirk engagement.
A fortunate few who fled from the farmhouse were captured and well treated by decent German troops, but the remainder, 97 men, fell into the hands of a unit of the SS Death’s Head Division.
Herded together, they were stripped of their equipment and roughly treated before being led away to be massacred by two heavy machine guns which were waiting for them as they were marched into a nearby meadow.
German soldiers then went among the victims, finishing them off with pistols and bayonets.
Only two men Ptes Bert Pooley and Bill O’Callaghan survived by feigning death and escaped under cover of darkness. Pte O’Callaghan was hit in the arm and Pte Pooley had four bullet wounds in one leg.
Pooley, about 6ft tall and of big build, was unable to move, so his friend, several inches shorter and a few stones lighter, carried him a half a mile to a farm where they were hidden, fed and helped by Mme Duquenne-Creton.
While they were hiding, they vowed to get the man who had their comrades shot.
When the two men were eventually released from captivity, British officials did not believe their story.
So in 1946 Bert Pooley, by then ill as a result of his wounds and the ordeal he had suffered, travelled from his home in Southall, Middlesex, to Le Paradis, and set in motion the investigation which led to the arrest and trial of the Nazi SS officer Fritz Knoechlein who was hanged in 1949.
The story was recorded in the book. The Vengeance of Private Pooley by the Norfolk author Cyril Jolly and later made into a film.
Bill O’Callaghan, who gave evidence with Bert Pooley at Knoechlein’s trial, died in November 1975 aged 61. Mr Pooley died in 1982, aged 69.
His last wish was that his ashes should be buried at Le Paradis alongside the remains of his fallen comrades.
It was a wish that was honoured later that year.
SS man at Le Paradis
More than 60 years ago, nearly 100 men of the 2nd Norfolks were gunned down in what has been described as one of the worst massacres of the second world war. Although the Nazi SS officer who ordered the killings was hanged for what he did, another man now stands accused of playing a part in the deaths, as ROWAN ENTWISTLE reports.
An 85-year old Nazi SS officer on trial for war crimes was also involved in the slaughter of 97 soldiers of the Royal Norfolk Regiment during the Dunkirk evacuation, a court heard yesterday.
Herman Langer is accused of murdering more than 40 civilians, including monks and a bishop, during a week-long massacre towards the end of the second world war.
But a court in Italy also heard he had been involved in one of the worst wartime massacres, when 97 British soldiers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolks were murdered.
The men had been defending the road to Dunkirk when they were surrounded, disarmed and marched into a field where they were mown down by machine guns and finished off by revolver shots and bayonets.
Only two men survived the slaughter on May 27th 1940 - Bill O’Callaghan and Bert Pooley. It was their harrowing testimony that led nine years later to the death sentence for German officer Fritz Knoechlein who had given the order.
Military prosecutor Colonel Roberto D’Elia told the hearing at La Spezia in Italy yesterday about Langer’s involvement at what became known as the Le Paradis massacre.
Col. D’Elia said “Langer joined the SS when he was very young and quickly became a sergeant in the Totenkopf, or SS Death Head regiment as it was known.
“This unit was responsible for some of the worst massacres in Italy and abroad and Langer was injured on 27th May 1940 while taking part in the massacre of British soldiers from the Royal Norfolk Regiment.
“These men were unarmed and had surrendered.”
Langer, who is now too ill to appear in court, is standing trial for the slaughter of civilians at Certosa di Farneta near Lucca in Tuscany during the first week of September 1944.
Langer, a former lieutenant, is one of several SS soldiers currently on trial in Italy in their absence for war crimes.
The trial has now been adjourned until September.
Both Pte O’Callaghan and Pte Pooley have since died, but last night Dennis O’Callaghan, Bill’s son, said hearing the news brought his father’s ordeal back to him.
Mr O’Callaghan, 58, who lives near King’s Lynn, said “At the end of the day anyone who takes part in an act of atrocity should answer for that and I know my father thought that as well.”
Leslie Eaton, chairman of the Norfolk and Norwich branch of the Dunkirk Veterans 1940, said he would be watching the trial with interest.
“It is a good job they are still finding these people who think they have got away with it.”
Hugh Sebag Montefiore who is writing a book about Dunkirk said he was very interested to learn of the latest developments.
“I have found documents in the German archive discussing how 90 odd bodies were discovered in the area by the side of the building and how the German command wanted to find out what had happened and made inquiring of the Totenkopf regiment but nothing ever came of the inquiry,” he said.
The survivors’ revenge
The last stand of the men of the Royal Norfolks' 2nd Battalion at Le Paradis in May 1940 was one of the many heroic engagements.
Along a stretch of the La Bassee canal, near the village of Petit Cornet Malo and Le Paradis, the 2nd Royal Norfolks were ordered to hold their ground so that other soldiers could escape down an ever narrowing corridor still under Allied control to Dunkirk.
They had contested every field, barn and house, but on May 27th, 100 or more of them were forced to surrender while defending a farm.
What followed was the worst atrocity of the Dunkirk engagement.
A fortunate few who fled from the farmhouse were captured and well treated by decent German troops, but the remainder, 97 men, fell into the hands of a unit of the SS Death’s Head Division.
Herded together, they were stripped of their equipment and roughly treated before being led away to be massacred by two heavy machine guns which were waiting for them as they were marched into a nearby meadow.
German soldiers then went among the victims, finishing them off with pistols and bayonets.
Only two men Ptes Bert Pooley and Bill O’Callaghan survived by feigning death and escaped under cover of darkness. Pte O’Callaghan was hit in the arm and Pte Pooley had four bullet wounds in one leg.
Pooley, about 6ft tall and of big build, was unable to move, so his friend, several inches shorter and a few stones lighter, carried him a half a mile to a farm where they were hidden, fed and helped by Mme Duquenne-Creton.
While they were hiding, they vowed to get the man who had their comrades shot.
When the two men were eventually released from captivity, British officials did not believe their story.
So in 1946 Bert Pooley, by then ill as a result of his wounds and the ordeal he had suffered, travelled from his home in Southall, Middlesex, to Le Paradis, and set in motion the investigation which led to the arrest and trial of the Nazi SS officer Fritz Knoechlein who was hanged in 1949.
The story was recorded in the book. The Vengeance of Private Pooley by the Norfolk author Cyril Jolly and later made into a film.
Bill O’Callaghan, who gave evidence with Bert Pooley at Knoechlein’s trial, died in November 1975 aged 61. Mr Pooley died in 1982, aged 69.
His last wish was that his ashes should be buried at Le Paradis alongside the remains of his fallen comrades.
It was a wish that was honoured later that year.
Controversial Daily Mail Article
Were Two Massacres Linked?
The massacre at Le Paradis took place on 27th May, 1940. That involved the SS Totenkopf as we have seen. The following day further up the rearguard line at Wormhout there was a similar massacre involving the Second Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment, Fourth Battalion Cheshire Regiment, Worcester Yeomanry and Royal Artillery. This was perpetrated by the Liebstandarte - SS Adolf Hitler led by Hauptsturmfuhrer Wilhelm Mohnke.
Over the years there have been suggestions that the two massacres were linked, although this has never been proven. Below are cuttings on this.
Over the years there have been suggestions that the two massacres were linked, although this has never been proven. Below are cuttings on this.