Concentration camp survivors who witnessed the bombing of the Cap Arcona share their stories

Remembering the Cap Arcona: Nazi ship sunk with concentration camp prisoners on board

During the Holocaust, Manfred Goldberg survived confinement in the Riga, Latvia ghetto and four concentration camps before he witnessed a bombing in Germany that took the lives of thousands of prisoners. 

On May 3, 1945, just days before the end of World War II in Europe, British Royal Air Force planes mistakenly attacked the Cap Arcona ocean liner in Lübeck Bay in the Baltic Sea. The ship was crammed with thousands of concentration camp prisoners.  

As the planes struck, Goldberg was at a nearby German naval base, lined up under SS guard with other prisoners. 

"And it is while we stood there that we witnessed bombers and fighter planes coming along," Goldberg said.  

He remembers seeing the planes drop ordnance and hearing detonations.  

"There were some pretty powerful explosions, and there were quite a few," Goldberg said.

Before the war

Before World War II, the Cap Arcona was a German cruise ship for the well-to-do. For more than a decade after its 1927 launch, the ocean liner transported well-heeled passengers from Europe to South America in just two weeks. The ship had many luxuries, including a tennis court, a heated swimming pool and a restaurant with an ocean view, historian Bill Niven said. 

The cruise ship traversed the Atlantic dozens of times. On one of its last trips before the war, the ocean liner carried some German Jewish passengers who had bought tickets to safety in South America. 

In 1939, as German troops invaded Poland, the Nazis commandeered the Cap Arcona. It was repurposed into a floating barracks in the Baltic. 

Who were the prisoners sent to the Cap Arcona 

In 1945, as Allied forces closed in, the rusted and battered Cap Arcona was repositioned to the Nazi holdout at Lübeck Bay. At the same time, SS Chief Heinrich Himmler ordered the evacuation of concentration camps. 

"I think the main concern was to get rid of evidence because prisoners are evidence," Niven said. "They can talk. They can tell. They can speak to those atrocities that were committed by the Nazis. So getting rid of the evidence meant getting rid of human beings."

Thousands of prisoners — Jews, Americans, Greeks and Italians among them — were sent to Lübeck Bay. The Cap Arcona arrived on April 14, 1945, two weeks before Nazi leader Adolf Hitler killed himself and three weeks before the end of the war in Europe. It was anchored about 2 miles offshore. With its engines barely running and little in the way of food and water, the once playground for the rich and famous was about to become a prisoner ship.

With nowhere to hold the amassed prisoners, SS guards jammed more than 4,000 of them onto the Cap Arcona.

"And one must remember this is a ship that's meant for 1,500 people," Niven said. "It's not meant for 4 to 5,000 prisoners."

Willi Neurath, a political prisoner, was among those forced on to the Cap Arcona. Neurath was not Jewish but he actively opposed the Nazi regime and was arrested for distributing anti-fascist fliers. He spent time in Buchenwald, and then the Neuengamme camp near Hamburg, before his Nazi captors sent him to Lübeck Bay. 

Manfred Goldberg 60 Minutes

Jewish concentration camp prisoners George Schwab, Manfred Goldberg, and his mother Rosa were sent to Lübeck Bay from the Stutthof Camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. 

Goldberg, now 94, was just 11 when the Nazis forcibly removed him and other Jews from his hometown of Kassel, in central Germany. 

Schwab, now 92, was only 9 when German soldiers invaded his hometown of Liepāja, Latvia. The Nazis killed his father, a prominent physician, after he tried to protect other Jews in town. 

The perilous journey to the Cap Arcona

From the Stutthof camp, Schwab and the Golbergs were put on barges. Packed with a thousand prisoners each, the barges were towed by tugboat for days until they reached Lübeck Bay.

Schwab remembers his time on the barge as "hell on Earth." There were no bathrooms and hardly any food.

"You could hardly sit, you can certainly not sleep," he said

George Schwab 60 Minutes

Many on the barges did not survive the journey to Lübeck Bay. Once there, the SS guards uncoupled the tugboats, leaving the prisoners adrift. 

George Schwab and Manfred Goldberg said that on the barges were prisoners of war, who were better fed and better treated than the concentration camp survivors, and seized the opportunity. 

Goldberg said they pried floorboards loose and turned them into makeshift oars. Norwegian prisoners aboard Schwab's barge used blankets to make sails, taking advantage of the wind.

Once the barges reached shore, Schwab and the Goldbergs found the strength to climb out, only to be intercepted by the SS and German troops, who shot and killed many prisoners on the spot.

"And we felt practically certain that we would be shot next," Goldberg said. "But instead they lined us up into a column."

The Goldbergs and Schwab were taken to the nearby naval base, where they witnessed bombers fly overhead. 

Why the Royal Air Force bombed the ship

The Cap Arcona was hit at approximately 3 p.m. In a hard-to-believe turn of events, the attackers were British Typhoons, part of the Allied forces moving in to finish off the Nazis. They'd come to liberate prisoners and ended up mistakenly killing thousands of them. 

"You can imagine the panic and the horror that broke out when the bombs hit the ship," Niven said, "especially for those concentration camp prisoners who were on the very lower decks of the ship. And they were unable to get up-- to the top because of the flames."

Sebastian Cox is chief historian for the Royal Air Force. He says the attack is "quite probably" the worst case of friendly fire in RAF history. He blames the incident on the fog of war.

"[The Allies believed] there was going to be an attempt to flee by certain Nazi elements across the Baltic to Norway," Cox said, "and essentially continue the war."

Cox said the pilots had no idea that concentration camp survivors were on the Cap Arcona. But other members of the British military did know, said Daniel Long, who wrote his Ph.D. history thesis on the Cap Arcona attack.

Long showed 60 Minutes what he said is the only official investigation into the tragic bombing. The report was completed in 1945 and is now held at the British National Archives in London. Shortly after Germany surrendered, a British war crimes investigator interviewed the intelligence officer for the squadrons that attacked the Cap Arcona and other ships in the bay. 

Daniel Long and Bill Whitaker 60 Minutes

Long said that according to the report, the intelligence officer admitted a message was received on May 2, 1945 that the ships had been loaded with concentration camp prisoners.

That information, which came in the day before the Cap Arcona was attacked, never made it to the pilots, Long said. The report does not say why the intelligence officer failed to inform the pilots but it blamed Royal Air Force personnel for the error and called for further inquiry.

Cox said he is not aware of any follow-up investigation ever taking place, but he said it would "in many respects, be a little pointless."

"We know what happened. The RAF made a mistake. An individual made a very tragic mistake," Cox said. "And we know the consequences."

The Cap Arcona's survivors 

About 7,000 prisoners perished when the Cap Arcona and a smaller cargo ship were bombed in Lübeck Bay. Of the more than 4,000 prisoners on the Cap Arcona, only about 400 survived, including Neurath. He couldn't swim, so he didn't jump into the water to escape the burning ship, his son Neurath-Wilson said, adding:  "Prisoners who jumped into the water were shot by the SS."

When the British realized their mistake, they dispatched rescuers who plucked Neurath and others from the listing deck of the Cap Arcona and took them to shore. Neurath-Wilson's mother Eva was working at the nearby naval base. When she saw the bombing, she was drawn to the beach. 

Neurath-Wilson said, "She had only one hope: To know, 'Where is my husband? Is he still living? And maybe my husband is on the ship.'"

Bruno Neurath-Wilson 60 Minutes

On the beach, Neurath-Wilson said Eva didn't recognize her husband, until he called out "Muppel," his nickname for her. The pair reunited and Neurath-Wilson now shares his parents' story.

Schwab pulled inspiration from the horror. A native of Latvia, he moved to New York, earned a Ph.D. in political science, and had an illustrious career as an academic and peace broker. He was awarded Latvia's highest state decoration for his work helping the country join NATO.

Goldberg and his mother settled in London. She passed away in 1961. Goldberg married and started a business and a family. In 2017, he returned to the Stutthof camp with the then-Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, William and Catherine. He has made it his life's mission to share his story. 

"I consider that part of my revenge on the Nazis. They wanted to exterminate us. And here we are, not only having survived," Goldberg said. "We are now great-grandparents."

The Cap Arcona lay half-sunken in Lübeck Bay for four years before being dismantled. But the story has lain beneath the surface, little known beyond the Baltic Coast. It's now tradition on the third of May for families of victims and survivors to sail to the site where the ship was bombed. They want the world to remember. 

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