On July 4, 1946, a German female soldier was about to be hanged in a pickup truck in Poland, and several Polish women boarded the car to go with her to the execution ground. They were eager to see the female soldier punished.
The German soldier was a former guard at the Stuttf concentration camp, and during her time in the camp she often treated Polish prisoners, especially Polish female prisoners. In 1945, with the liberation of Poland, the concentration camps were closed, and those who had worked there received the punishment they deserved, and 11 of them were sentenced to death. After learning of the sentence of the female guard, the Polish women who had been ** by her said that they were very eager to take revenge on the female soldier and to witness her punishment even if they could not do justice with their own hands.
According to statistics, during the Second World War, Poland suffered huge losses, including a large number of prisoners and innocent people. The scenes described in this report highlight the enormous impact of war on individual fate and psychology, as well as the strong feelings of prisoners for justice for those who were once oppressors after the war ended.