Sneha Girap (Editor)

Otto Kumm

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Allegiance
  
Nazi Germany

Service/branch
  
Name
  
Otto Kumm


Service number
  
NSDAP 421,230

Years of service
  
1934–45

Other work
  
Offenburg

Otto Kumm otto kumm Tumblr

Born
  
1 November 1909Hamburg, German Empire (
1909-11-01
)

Buried at
  
Weingarten cemetery, OffenburgField 10, Space A

Rank
  
SS-Brigadefuhrer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SS

Battles/wars
  
World War IIInvasion of PolandBattles of RzhevOperation Rosselsprung

Died
  
March 23, 2004, Offenburg, Germany

Books
  
Prinz Eugen: The History of the 7. SS-Mountain Division "Prinz Eugen"

Battles and wars
  
Invasion of Poland, Battles of Rzhev, Operation Rosselsprung, World War II

Das kriegsende 1945 otto kumm agentur meier zu hartum


Otto Kumm (1 October 1909 – 23 March 2004) was a German divisional commander in the Waffen-SS during World War II and a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. After the war, he became one of the founders of HIAG, a lobby group and a revisionist organization of former Waffen-SS members.

Contents

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Schlacht um charkow otto kumm agentur meier zu hartum


SS career

Otto Kumm ottokumm3gif

Born in 1909 into a family of a merchant in Hamburg, Kumm trained as a typesetter and worked at a newspaper. On 1 June 1934, Kumm joined the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS Dispositional Troops) and on 1 July received his first training with the SS-Standarte "Germania" in Hamburg.

Otto Kumm Kumm Otto WW2 Gravestone

Kumm commanded the Der Führer Regiment of the SS Division Das Reich from July 1941 to April 1943. This regiment was nearly destroyed in the Soviet offensive of January 1942, when it was reduced to 35 men out of the 2,000 that had started the campaign in June 1941. Kumm was a commander of the SS Division Prinz Eugen from 30 Jan 1944 until 20 Jan 1945 and then was appointed the new division commander of the SS Division Leibstandarte (LSSAH) as of 15 February 1945, after the division's commander Wilhelm Mohnke was wounded.

Otto Kumm SSBrigadenfhrer Otto Kumm Die Freiwilligen

As the division commander, Kumm and the LSSAH took part in Operation Spring Awakening (6 March 1945 – 16 March 1945), the last major German offensive launched during World War II. The Germans launched attacks in Hungary near the Lake Balaton area on the Eastern Front. Soviet intelligence identified large German tank formations in western Hungary and developed a successful counterattack strategy. After the failure of Operation Spring Awakening, Sepp Dietrich's 6th SS Panzer Army and the LSSAH retreated to the Vienna area.

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After Vienna fell to the Red Army in the Vienna Offensive, the bulk of the LSSAH division surrendered to U.S. forces in the Steyr area on 8 May 1945. Kumm was held at the Dachau internment camp administered by the US Army. Kumm avoided extradition to Yugoslavia to stand trial for war crimes by fleeing over the wall of the camp.

Activities within HIAG

Otto Kumm SS General Otto Kumm Signed Photograph

After the war, Otto Kumm was denazified and became a businessman. Kumm was a founder and the first head of the Waffen-SS veterans' organization HIAG, established in 1951 to lobby for the cause of the Waffen-SS historical rehabilitation and restoration of their rights to post-war pensions.

Otto Kumm SS General Otto Kumm Signed Photograph

As the organization's chairman and its first spokesperson, Kumm set the tone for the rhetoric that was reflected in its publications and public discourse. In 1952, Otto Kumm published an editorial in the in-house magazine Wiking-Ruf ("Viking Call") outlining the organization's grievances:

Even during the war, and especially after the war, infamous and lying propagandists have been able to make use of all the unfortunate events connected to the Third Reich and also with the SS to destroy and drag through the mud all of what was and is sacred to us. [...] Let us be clear about it: the [Allied] battle was directed not only the authoritarian regime of the Third Reich, but, above all, against the resurgence of the strength of the German people.

At least through the 1970s, Kumm remained "the ever unreformed Nazi enthusiast" according to researcher Danny S. Parker, who was given access to the previously closed HIAG archives. Perceived by the West German government to be a Nazi organization, HIAG was disbanded in 1992.

Kumm died on 23 March 2004.

Works

  • Vorwärts, Prinz Eugen! Geschichte der 7. SS-Freiwilligen-Division "Prinz Eugen" ("Forward, Prinz Eugen! History of the 7th SS Volunteer Division Prinz Eugen"). (2007) Dresden, Germany: Winkelried Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938392-13-3.
  • 7. SS-Gebirgs-Division "Prinz Eugen" im Bild ("7th SS Mountain Division Prinz Eugen in Action"). (1983) Osnabrück, Germany: Munin Verlag. ISBN 3-921242-54-1
  • Awards

  • Iron Cross (1939) 2nd Class (30 May 1940) & 1st Class (3 June 1940)
  • German Cross in Gold on 29 November 1941 as SS-Obersturmbannführer in the SS-Regiment "Der Führer"
  • Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords
  • Knight's Cross on 16 February 1942 as SS-Obersturmbannführer and commander of SS-Regiment (motorized) "Der Führer".
  • Oak Leaves on 6 April 1943 as SS-Obersturmbannführer and commander SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment "Der Führer"
  • Swords on 17 March 1945 as SS-Brigadeführer and Generalmajor of the Waffen-SS and commander of the 7. SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division "Prinz Eugen"
  • References

    Otto Kumm Wikipedia