The featured film clip shows imprisoned priests and other prisoners at Dachau observing Catholic mass in the days after the camp was liberated by US forces. Three divisions of the US Army liberated Dachau on April 29, 1945.1 This footage was created between May 3–9, 1945 by members of the US Army Signal Corps.
Nazi policies toward Christian churches became more severe over the years of Nazi rule (1933–1945). During the years of World War II (1939–1945), German police arrested thousands of Christian leaders.2 The Nazis began to view some branches of the Catholic Church as hotbeds of anti-Nazi resistance during the war, and they imprisoned many priests from countries throughout Europe.3 German authorities often arrested and imprisoned Catholic leaders without explaining what crimes they may have been suspected of committing.4
In late 1940—after intense negotiations between representatives of the Nazi government and the Pope—Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler ordered the transfer of all priests imprisoned by the Nazis to Dachau. More than 1,000 priests were imprisoned at there by the end of 1940—over 2,500 were imprisoned there between 1940 and 1945.5 The priests were housed together in barracks apart from the other prisoners. Living conditions improved for them temporarily between February 1941 and September 1941 through the intervention of the Pope, but they still faced severe hunger and abuse. Conditions grew worse for them in fall 1941. Nazi doctors performed inhumane and unscientific medical experiments on some Polish priests, and older priests deemed incapable of work were removed from the camp and killed in the so-called “euthanasia” program code-named “14f13.”6
Despite these abuses, Nazi authorities had agreed to recognize the right of the imprisoned priests to practice their religion and establish a chapel. The first service at the simple chapel created at Dachau took place in late January 1941.7 The priests added furniture and ornamentation to the chapel over time. By the end of the war it was fully decorated. In November 1944, Archbishop Michael von Faulhaber8—the highest-ranking Catholic leader in the nearby city of Munich—granted the congregation of prisoners at Dachau the official status of a deanery9 within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church.10
The featured film footage shows several close-up shots of priests and other recently liberated prisoners observing Catholic mass in early May 1945. Why might the members of the US Army Signal Corps have chosen to record this event at a concentration camp in the days after its liberation? What details about the priests’ clothing show that they had been prisoners? What else about their appearance might give clues about their experiences as prisoners of Dachau?