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  1. Juana Bormann (or Johanna Borman; 10 September 1893 – 13 December 1945) was a German prison guard at several Nazi concentration camps from 1938, and was executed as a war criminal at Hamelin, Lower Saxony, Germany, after a court trial in 1945.

  2. The Weasel of Auschwitz. Unlike many other female guards notorious for their cruelty during the Holocaust, Bormann was older and had lived a life before the Nazis came into power. She served as an overseer at Ravensbrück before being transferred to Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland in mid-May 1943.

  3. Juana Bormann was a murderous SS woman, who served in the deathcamp Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. She was known as The woman with the dogs, who took sadistic pleasure in setting her wolfhounds on prisoners to tear them to pieces.

  4. Juanna Borman “The woman with dogs”. Johanna Borman (or Juanna Bormann, the spelling shown on her death warrant) () was born at Birkenfelde in East Prussia on September the 10th 1893. She was apparently deeply religious and had given up missionary work to join the SS.

  5. The third woman to die-at 10:38 a.m.-was Juana Bormann, the cringing little "dog woman" who frequently set a huge dog at the throats of prisoners in the Oswiecim camp.

  6. www.bergenbelsen.co.uk › trialdefencecase › Trial_031_Bormann1st Belsen Trial - Bergen-Belsen

    JUANA BORMANN, sworn, examined by Major MUNRO - I am a German, single, born on 10th September, 1893, in Birkenfelde, East Prussia. I joined the S.S. as a civilian employee on 1st March, 1938, because I could earn more money, and I worked in the kitchen at first.

  7. Juana Bormann (or Johanna Borman; 10 September 1893 – 13 December 1945) was a German prison guard at several Nazi concentration camps from 1938, and was executed as a war criminal at Hamelin, Lower Saxony, Germany, after a court trial in 1945.

  8. Juana Bormann was a murderous SS woman, who served in the deathcamp Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. She was known as The woman with the dogs , who took sadistic pleasure in setting her wolfhounds on prisoners to tear them to pieces.

  9. Juana Bormann was born in Birkenfelde, Kingdom of Prussia in central Germany. Starting in 1938, she was a guard at facilities run by the SS organization of the Nazi Party, and through the end of the war she had served in Lichtenburg (1938), Ravensbrück (1939-1942, Jan-Mar 1945), Auschwitz (Oct 1942-1944), and Bergen-Belsen (Mar-Apr 1945) camps.

  10. Biography of Juana Bormann, who used her dogs as weapons in the Nazi concentration camps. Taken from Notorious Nazi Women by Stewart Andel.