Thursday, December 12, 2013

Chapter 23
            Arriving at precisely 10:25, Frank thought he would be early for the 11 AM meeting. He was wrong. Colonel Taylor had preceded him, along with the Provost Marshal (Army head of the MPs), Mayor Schwarz (Mayor of Mannheim), and Colonel Nelson (Garrison Commander).  At 10:50, General Sheldon (USAREUR Commander) arrived with minimal fanfare, and at 10:55, Ambassador Cranston walked in with his entourage. At the same time, two German policemen escorted in an elderly man that Mayor Schwarz introduced as Herr Marius Fuchs. The Americans were puzzled by his attendance, but in deference to the mayor, welcomed him to the meeting.
            Colonel Nelson introduced the attendees and their functions and after the formalities were completed, he asked Frank to explain what they were all doing there. Frank began:
            “Just two weeks ago, my children discovered a trap door in our quarters that opened into a vertical shaft with a ladder bolted to the side wall.  Without my knowledge, they began to explore the shaft and came upon a network of tunnels that exists beneath this area. They were discovered at the outlet of one of the tunnels next to the runway on Coleman Barracks.”
            “After I found out about their explorations, I had them show me what they had found.  As an engineer, I was impressed by the scope of the tunnel system. The various tunnels lead to all the US Army kasernes north of the Rhine River, as well as to the BASF plan and to the Abandoned Ammunition Arsenal located in the Kafertal Wald to the north which was destroyed in World War II.”
            “The origin of the tunnels is in question, but it appears that some were in use during World War I, and were apparently used for underground ammunition storage. The ammunition was manufactured by BASF during World War I and in the same factory by IG Farben during World War II. “
            “We are here today because of what remains in the tunnels. Three large storage chambers were locked. My son, who fancies himself to be a locksmith, was able to open all three doors. The first contained ammunition from the World War I era. The second contained hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars’ worth of art works and gold bullion. Our assumption is that it was looted by the Nazis during the war and stored there for safekeeping.”
            “When the art and gold were discovered, I forbade my children from returning to the tunnels until the proper authorities were notified, and I spent all of yesterday making notification. I realized that there may be some political implications which is why you are all here.”
            “What I didn’t discover until last evening was the contents of the third chamber. My headstrong son returned yesterday to the doors without permission and opened the third door.  He entered to find hundreds of corpses that were apparently murdered in that chamber. While he was inside, the door was closed and locked on him and he was overcome with cyanide poisoning.”
            “My older son, John, discovering that his brother, Jarom, had not shown up for school yesterday.  He assumed, correctly as it turned out, that Jarom had gone back to the unopened door and he followed to bring his brother back.  As it turned out, John discovered the locked door and communicated with Jarom from the outside by tapping on the door. As the taps disappeared because Jarom had been overcome, John knew something was wrong and, using a hand grenade from the ammunition storage room, he blew the lock off and rescued his brother.”
            “By that time I was home and the boys had been missed so I went down the tunnel to see if they were there and discovered Jarom unconscious in the tunnel. I carried him out and he was taken to Heidelberg hospital where he is recovering.”
            “The revelation of the underground chamber where the bodies were found complicates the discovery, I assume.”
            Mayor Schwarz spoke up, saying, “I believe that Herr Fuchs may be able to answer more of your questions, if you will allow it.”
            Everyone turned to Marius. Although he had been included during the introductions, no one knew his connection to their meeting. His English was rudimentary, and the mayor had provided an interpreter who was brought into the meeting. Through the interpreter, Marius began to relate the history of the tunnel complex. 
            “When I was a young man, maybe 16 or 17, Mannheim was a graveyard. My family had been killed in the war and I was the only survivor.  The bombers had come for weeks and they had destroyed all the buildings. Then when they got close enough, the artillery started shelling us.  The only hope we had for survival was to leave or to hide.  I grew up right here and I knew the woods and the streams.  Before the war, I knew of a deep cave system far below the surface.  The entrance was in the middle of the fields over there,” he said pointing to the southeast.  There were rocks and a crack in the earth that my friends and I would play in, but it was very dark so we could not go very far inside. We made a torch one time and followed the crack in the earth down 25 or 30 meters and the cave seemed to level out and go sideways, but the darkness was absolute and one of my friends got stuck down in the cave.  It was terrifying.  We left him and returned with a shovel and a pick and were able to free him, but it put such a scare in us that we didn’t go back, and he was never quite the same after that.  Imagine being trapped far underground in the pitch black, alone.“        
“After the Americans had arrived, times were desperate. Food was scarce as it had been during the end of the war, and there was lots of rebuilding to do, but no money. I was almost 19 and strong.  I had been too young to fight during the war, but in the year or so after, I had grown up to be almost a man. I worked for the Americans on a construction crew. The German Kasernes were being rebuilt for the use of the American troops, and after a few years, they began to bring their families.  Housing had to be built for them. The bombs and artillery shells had left craters everywhere and the trees were all dead, but soon the rocks were gone and the ground was flat.  They built Ben Franklin Village in the area they had cleared.
“The foreman on my crew was an old man named Klaus. We had worked together for some time and he trusted me. He would give me a job and he knew that when he came to check on my progress, that I would be working hard. I learned to anticipate his instructions and became better and better at my trade. Klaus had also grown up here and had lived here even before the first War. When we were working on one particular house, he was very fussy. He insisted on forming and pouring the concrete walls himself. It seemed he was working early in the morning and late in the evening to get it completed. Finally one day, he called for a sledge hammer to break in a concrete divider we had poured. I brought the hammer and he took it from me and told me I could leave for the day. I pretended to leave, but I watched as he made an opening in to a dark space, and then he disappeared into it.  I waited a few minutes and then followed him into the hole he had made. I was surprised to find a vertical passage descending into the earth from our construction. As I followed him down, I began to recognize the vertical section of the cave I had explored as a child, but it had been straightened, the rocks had been removed, and a steel ladder had been bolted into the side. I could see the light from what I supposed was his flashlight ahead of me. When he reached the end of the vertical section, for a moment he could go no further, but he pulled out a rope ladder that I suppose he had hidden somewhere and, after fastening it to the steel, he climbed down to the floor of a large room.  It was very dark because I had no light, and I was now committed. If I didn’t continue to follow him, I would be lost in the dark.”
“I continued to follow him as he walked down a long tunnel. Eventually he came to another crack in the earth that rose upward from the tunnel we were following.  I followed his light, very scared now that it would go out and I would be lost forever. We had to climb over boulders and smaller rocks, and finally came to a door which he passed through and closed leaving me in the dark. I had little choice. I fumbled my way to the door and it was locked.  I knocked on it softly, and finally pounded on it and screamed. Suddenly the door opened and Klaus was standing there, a smile on his creased face.”
“I could tell then that he knew I had been following him. We were in a garden shed built into the side of a small hill. He invited me into the house, but did not answer the questions that he knew I must have. It was a small miracle that his home had been spared in the bombing, but it was on the edge of the woods and perhaps the area had never been a target. He introduced me to his wife, Anneliese, and his daughter, Alexandra and her two children. They shared their meager meal with me, and as humble as it was, it was delicious. It had been a long time since I had a meal with a family in a real home. Klaus explained that his daughter was a widow and she and her two babies lived with him. We talked into the night of Germany and the sorrows of the past and hopes for the future.”
“Klaus invited me to stay the night, and the next morning we walked back to the construction site overland, arriving before anyone else. The opening in the concrete that we had made the day before was still there, and we set about making a temporary wood cover for the shaft. It was an unspoken agreement that this opening and the tunnel we had walked through was a secret, and that I had been trusted with keeping it. Klaus explained that he had other responsibilities and that he wouldn’t be returning to the construction project, but asked if I would continue working. He asked me to return to his home for dinner that night. I was happy to accept his invitation. He then opened the wooden cover we had made and he disappeared below. I closed the cover, and when the rest of the work crew arrived and everyone was waiting for instructions, I began passing out the various jobs just as Klaus would have done.  When the American boss came around asking about Klaus, I told him that he had not come back.  He could see that the work was progressing on our building and he asked who was in charge in Klaus’ absence. I told him that I had been supervising, and he put me in charge on the spot. I was young, but because I was large and appeared to know what I was doing, the other men listened to me and I became the foreman that day.”
“Klaus never returned to the construction site.  As we began framing the doors and windows, I took personal responsibility for that part of the house. I built the floor of the closet and installed the hinges and locks in the evenings, working by myself. When the building was finished, no one else knew about the secret opening.”
“I returned to Klaus’ home that evening; the day I had become the foreman. The food was excellent and welcome.  After the meal, Klaus and I walked out into the forest and began to talk, and what follows is what he explained to me then and what he later shared with me from the book he wrote about his life.“
“Klaus was born in 1883.  Mannheim had been built and burnt twice before, but the 1800s were a century of relative peace and growth. Unfortunately, in the early 1900s, the unrest in Europe became extreme and in 1914, war broke out. Mannheim’s industrial plants, where explosives and gasoline needed for the war were produced, made it an early target and in 1915 BASF was bombed. Klaus had been trained as an engineer and his skills were in demand, not only on the battlefield but also for production of the critical armaments and fuel needed to fight the war. The aerial bombing was a surprise and the high command wanted to be able to protect the ammunition and armaments produced here. Klaus knew of the natural caves that he had played in as a child. He was a more determined explorer than I was and had used long-burning torches to explore them. There were two natural openings that he knew of, the one in Kafertal on the property he acquired to build his house, and the other where the house we had built for the American Army would someday be. He had even been to the underground river beneath the forest.
It was Klaus’ idea that an underground complex could be built to store the munitions as an extension of the natural cave system. He presented his idea to his superiors and they immediately seized on it. They were already building an Ammunition Storage Arsenal a short distance away from the BASF factory.  Klaus would be in charge of constructing an underground tunnel that would connect the BASF factory with the Ammunition Storage Arsenal using the cave system, as well as constructing underground storage chambers for protected storage of munitions.”
“The tunnel system was a major project.  Building large tunnels on the battlefield in France near the Siegfried Line was ongoing, so it was reasonable to do the same here, but an excavation like this was not without its challenges. Digging and reinforcing tunnels of the size needed 30 meters below the surface of the earth required earth removal, reinforcement of the tunnels with steel rebar where necessary, and concrete. At the site of the Ammunition Storage Arsenal, a large shaft was dug straight down about 30 meters and a crane was erected over the hole. Mining equipment was lowered to the bottom of the large shaft and a tunnel was dug back toward the BASF plant. Blasting was often required to penetrate the rock and miners worked around the clock to finish the project. The tunnel intersected with the naturally occurring cave system that had been there, and the water from the underground river became an unexpected resource for mixing concrete.  Daimler-Benz, on the north side of the Rhine and across the river from BASF was contracted to build a small motorized tractor that could haul trailer cars along the tunnel and large storage chambers were cut into the rock to store the munitions and armaments. In a short time, thousands of tons of munitions were produced at the factory and carried under the Rhine River to be stockpiled for use as the war progressed.  When the factory was bombed, the flow of munitions to the battlefield was uninterrupted because of the stockpile far beneath the ground.”
“When it appeared that the war would be lost in 1918, the high command ordered us to close down the tunnel system. The entrance from the arsenal was hidden and the badly damaged building was abandoned. The entrance at the BASF factory was hidden in the building’s foundation, and as far any but a few knew, it had never existed. Of course, the old men who had worked on it knew about it, but war is destructive, not only for the country and the land, but also the people. The workers went home to where they had come from and got old and died. There was no evidence of the tunnel system anywhere. “
“My memory of what he told me is not as precise as what he had written down himself.  Please allow me to read to you from his book.”

From the Memoirs of Klaus Baer:
“I had bought the property that included the cave entrance on the northwest side of the forest, and built my home there. My wife and I raised our daughter there, and I watched over the tunnels, occasionally climbing down through my cave and then walking down the tunnels we had worked so hard to build. The storage bunkers had been built along the tunnel from BASF to the above ground Ammunition Storage Arsenal. A series of 16 chambers were located along the tunnel from the factory to within 2 miles of the Arsenal. They had been fitted with huge iron doors and were closed and locked securely. At the end of the war, only one of them had any ordinance left, and that is how they remained.”
“Adolf Hitler came to power in 1934 and the military aggression of the 3rd Reich almost guaranteed another war. We who had already seen our friends and families die and the cities destroyed were not eager for war, but when your nation goes to war, you must also. The German Army built a number of Kasernes around north Mannheim. Perhaps the location of IG Farben (BASF had merged with Bayer, Hoechst and three other companies in 1925 to form IG Farben) and other industrial companies as well as proximity to the Rhine River was the reason.  It was desirable to protect the factories as well as the transportation routes to and from them.” 
“The tunnel complex was on the military maps, of course, and while it was building the kasernes, the Wehrmacht leadership decided to upgrade the tunnels to include their expansion allowing underground access from the kasernes. Rather than bring in military or civilian construction units to do the work, the 3rd Reich used the Jews slated for extermination to accomplish it. Construction began in 1939. Over 2000 Jews were imprisoned in the fenced forest around the Ammunition Storage Arsenal.  This became their living quarters during the construction when they were above ground. They were led underground with armed guards in almost no light, breaking stone with sledge hammers and carting it away in hand carts. Explosives were used when the stone was too difficult to break with a sledge hammer, and many of the Jews perished when poorly timed explosions occurred.  But the supply of Jews seemed endless. The underground river was successfully used to dispose of much of the waste as the flow was sufficient to carry the debris away without clogging the river. The other debris was carried to the Ammunition Storage Arsenal, loaded on the backs of the slaves where it was carried up the concrete stairs and dumped into trucks that hauled it off.”
“By 1941, the munitions in all but one of the bunkers had been used by the Army and had not been replaced. One of the bunkers became quarters for the Jews who were working underground. They would spend weeks at a time underground with little food. Hygiene was non-existent and the waste was carted off daily and dumped in the river. Life underground was literally hell on earth. Vermin would attempt to infest the tunnels, but were caught and eaten almost immediately. “
“I was not a Nazi party member, but had served in the Army. In 1943, I served in the disastrous attack on Russia, and barely survived as the Army was pushed further and further west by the Soviets. I had been wounded and become part of the walking dead trying to stay ahead of the battle, and was finally sent home to recuperate. My wife helped me to partially recover, but I never again returned to the battle. As my health improved, I once again attempted to explore the cave.  As I climbed down from the surface, I noticed the terrible odor of death and dying, but I still was not aware of what had gone on here.  I made my way through the tunnels I had been so familiar with. When I saw the great changes that had occurred in the tunnel system and I saw the pitiful creatures that had done the work, I was truly shocked.  I became, in effect, a spy.  I had my own entrance to the tunnel system and I watched silently as the work was completed.”
“By 1943, it was becoming obvious that the 3rd Reich would fall, and many in the leadership were beginning to worry about how they would hold on to their stolen fortunes and how they would hide from the world the terrible things they had done. The tunnel system proved to be their windfall. Senior officers had plundered the homes and businesses of the Jews as they had been sent away as slaves or to the Extermination Camps. They had taken the gold, jewelry and art that they had found. Even as early as 1938, laws had been passed allowing seizure from German museums and private collections. Anything considered ‘degenerate’ by the Fuhrer, which he defined as art depicting prostitutes, pimps, idiots and Jews, and most abstract art. The Louvre Museum and many others in France, Belgium, Austria and Italy as well as the other conquered territories were looted and the invaluable objects of art were secreted away. The storage bunkers in the tunnel system became an ideal place to hide some of the stolen treasures. The tunnel system had been completed with its miles of underground connections to allow the troops in the kasernes to respond to a threat against the stored ammunition or the production plants themselves. Now they became a last defense of the stolen gold and artworks of Europe. As their last act, the slaves were required to clean every inch of every tunnel so that it would be impossible to tell how the tunnels had been made, and to haul the treasures into the storage bunker where it would be closed off until better times. IG Farben had been complicit in using slave labor at its factories. It was a simple matter to use the IG Farben access to the tunnel system to secretly bring in the treasures. Once the storage bunker was full, the slaves were herded into their underground prison, a quantity of Zyklon B was thrown in and the door was shut and sealed. It was never opened again.”
“The war was lost and the senior officers that had been responsible for secreting the treasures of Europe in the tunnel system beneath Mannheim went out of their way to eliminate any who knew of it. When the War Crimes Commission indicted those senior officers and they were hanged, the number of those who knew about the hidden treasure was few; perhaps one.”
“I became the guardian of the tomb of the Jewish slaves, and the depository of the hidden treasures of Europe. I have continued my vigil, but I will not be able to do so forever. I would bring my secret knowledge to the proper authorities, but who are the proper authorities? Germany has suffered so much for its poisonous leadership that I cannot bear to cause further shame by unveiling these horrors to the world. There is a young man, an orphan, who works on the construction project for the Americans with me.  He is kind and intelligent and hard working. If God wills it, I will invite him to become my successor.”

“Klaus was like a father to me. It wasn’t long before he invited me to live in their home, and it wasn’t much later that beautiful Alexandra and I fell in love and were married. It is true that she is 5 years older than I, but the war had aged me beyond my years and my only desire was to give and receive love. We have now been married for 53 years. The children are grown and have families of their own.  The years of being the guardian of the tunnels have given me time to think. Those who had a hand in stealing the treasures are all gone and won’t be enriched by allowing their release to the world. Wiser men than I will have to decide who should receive them, but certainly those that stole them won’t have a share and I believe that the treasures should belong to all the people of the world. As for the tomb of the Jews, I think it is time that the crime committed against them should be acknowledged and their descendants notified of the existence of their remains, if possible. Germany will suffer with embarrassment, but perhaps in these turbulent times this is necessary to remind us of the humanity we must seek in all mankind.”
“I am embarrassed to admit that when the boy went into the chamber yesterday, I did not know what to do. I had been charged with protecting the secrets, and all I could think of at the time was to lock the door. I left for a time and realized the terrible thing I had done, and I was returning to free him when I discovered he was already gone. I followed his brother and sister to one of the kasernes and the military police brought me out. Mayor Schwarz arranged that I should be here today to tell my story. I beg your forgiveness for what I did to your son, Major, and I am grateful he is recovering. I hope you will allow me to apologize to him 

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