Oskar Angelus

Oskar Angelus (May 7, 1892 – November 3, 1979) was an Estonian politician and collaborator with Nazi Germany.

Biography

Angelus was born in Harjumaa, Governorate of Estonia, Russian Empire, the son of Karl Angelus and Sophie Auguste Johanna Angelus (née Eichhorn).

In 1911, Angelus graduated from the University of Dorpat. He participated in the Estonian War of Independence and was awarded the Cross of Liberty, Grade III. Until 1940, he worked at the Estonian Department of Internal Affairs. In 1941, after the German occupation of Estonia and the establishment of the Estonian Self-Administration (which was subordinated to Reichskomissariat Ostland), Angelus was made Director for Home Affairs. In this position, he established the Estonian Security Police and SD, which arrested, prosecuted, and handed over to the German authorities Soviet collaborators, as well as the remaining Estonian Jews and Roma.[1]

When the German forces retreated from Estonia in 1944, Angelus fled to Germany. He stayed there until 1950, when he relocated to Sweden. Angelus lived in the Scanian city of Lund until his death in 1979, and was never prosecuted for his role in the Holocaust.[2]

gollark: Well, the NSA and other TLAs don't really affect people's lives much, regardless of how much abstract badness surrounds them.
gollark: The NSA and whatnot probably mostly focus on h4xxing the endpoints and stuff more than actually breaking encryption on in-transit communications, given that the encryption used is pretty good generally.
gollark: UK government being insane as usual and claiming that end-to-end encryption threatens "lives and the safety of our children". Of all things...<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-49919464>
gollark: We should just upgrade this server a bit with bots to handle moderation whatnot and then market it as the New StackOverflow™.
gollark: I can't boycott it or I'll be unable to program.

References

  1. Phase II: The German Occupation of Estonia in 1941-1944 (PDF). Tartu: Estonian International Commission for Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  2. Zuroff, Efraim. "Sweden's Refusal to Prosecute Nazi War Criminals: 1986-2002". Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.