World History: True Stories of the 20th Century

Karel Čurda: The Czech Traitor Who Betrayed Hundreds to the Gestapo

17 min · 25 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Karel Čurda: The Czech Traitor Who Betrayed Hundreds to the Gestapo

Descripción

Karel Čurda was a Czech resistance fighter whose betrayal helped the Nazis destroy much of the underground network behind Operation Anthropoid during World War II. Born into a modest South-Bohemian family, Čurda joined the Czechoslovak army and later escaped the Nazi occupation to fight abroad. After training with the British SOE, he returned to his homeland as part of Operation Out Distance. For a time, he moved through the underground network of safe houses, working alongside the very resistance that would later be destroyed because of him. The turning point came after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, the “Butcher of Prague,” on 27 May 1942. As the Nazis unleashed brutal reprisals—mass arrests, executions, and the annihilation of Lidice and Ležáky—Čurda panicked and went into hiding. Terrified by German threats and tempted by the enormous reward, he walked into the Gestapo office on 16 June 1942 and gave a detailed statement identifying key resistance members and safe houses. His testimony led directly to the discovery of the paratroopers’ hiding place and the bloody siege at the Orthodox Church in Prague. Čurda was rewarded with money, a new identity, and German citizenship. He then served the Gestapo by posing as a newly arrived agent, betraying patriots who believed he was one of them. Hundreds of resistance fighters were tortured, executed, or sent to Mauthausen because of him. Entire families perished. After the war, Čurda was arrested, tried for treason, and sentenced to death. On 29 April 1947, at the age of thirty-five, he was hanged in Pankrác Prison—remembered today as one of the most infamous collaborators in Czech history. This episode is part of the series Fascist Collaborators. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de World History: True Stories of the 20th Century!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

142 episodios

episode Alexandre Villaplane: From France's Football Captain to Nazi Collaborator and Killer artwork

Alexandre Villaplane: From France's Football Captain to Nazi Collaborator and Killer

Alexandre Villaplane was the captain of the French national football team who became one of France’s most notorious Nazi collaborators during the Second World War. Alexandre Villaplane’s life is one of the most shocking transformations of the Second World War — a story of fame, greed, betrayal, and brutality. Once celebrated as the captain of the French national football team and a participant in the first FIFA World Cup in 1930, Villaplane rose from humble beginnings in French Algeria to become one of the most recognizable athletes in France. Talented, charismatic, and admired, he represented a symbol of sporting excellence during the interwar years. But behind the image of a national hero, a darker character was already forming. Gambling scandals, financial corruption, and criminal activity gradually overshadowed his football career. When Nazi Germany invaded France in 1940 and the country fell under occupation, Villaplane chose collaboration over resistance. Instead of defending his nation’s honor, he aligned himself with the occupiers. During the German occupation of France, Villaplane became deeply involved with the French Carlingue — often referred to as the French Gestapo — led by Henri Lafont and Pierre Bonny. He extorted Jewish families, participated in black market operations, and later commanded a unit of the Brigade Nord-Africaine, a collaborationist paramilitary force operating under SS authority. Holding the rank of SS-Untersturmführer, he took part in violent anti-resistance operations in southwestern France. Villaplane’s name became associated with torture, hostage extortion, and executions. His unit participated in the Mussidan massacre in June 1944, and survivors described his personal involvement in acts of brutality. After the Liberation of Paris, Villaplane was arrested, tried for treason, collaboration, murder, and acts of barbarity, and sentenced to death. On 27 December 1944, just days after his 40th birthday, Alexandre Villaplane was executed by firing squad. His fall from national sports hero to condemned war criminal remains one of the most disturbing personal transformations of the war. This episode is part of the series Fascist Collaborators. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

19 de jul de 202613 min
episode Max Koegel: Nazi Camp Commandant of Ravensbrück, Majdanek, and Flossenbürg artwork

Max Koegel: Nazi Camp Commandant of Ravensbrück, Majdanek, and Flossenbürg

Max Koegel was one of the most ruthless commandants in the Nazi concentration camp system during the Second World War, serving at Ravensbrück, Majdanek, and Flossenbürg. Born in 1895 in Füssen, Germany, Koegel served in the First World War before joining the Nazi Party and the SS in the early 1930s. His career within the camp system began at Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, where he quickly rose through the ranks under commandant Hans Loritz. Koegel later became commandant of Ravensbrück, the largest concentration camp for women, before being transferred in 1942 to Majdanek in occupied Poland. There, he oversaw the installation and use of gas chambers, including the use of Zyklon B, facilitating the systematic murder of tens of thousands of prisoners. Under his leadership, Majdanek became a site of starvation, forced labor, disease, and industrialized killing. In 1943, Koegel was appointed commandant of Flossenbürg concentration camp. Prisoners were subjected to brutal forced labor in granite quarries and later in armaments production, including parts for Messerschmitt aircraft. Executions, starvation, disease, and death marches defined the final months of his command. In April 1945, as Allied forces advanced, Koegel ordered the evacuation of thousands of prisoners. Thousands perished during these forced marches due to exhaustion, starvation, or execution by SS guards. After Germany’s defeat, Koegel initially evaded capture but was arrested by U.S. forces in June 1946. Before he could stand trial for his crimes, he committed suicide in prison. Max Koegel’s life reflects the systemic brutality of the Nazi camp system and the role of SS commandants in facilitating mass murder during the Holocaust. This episode is part of the series The Nazi Camp Commandants. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

Ayer14 min
episode Hans Frank: The "Butcher of Poland" Who Ruled the Nazi General Government Like a King artwork

Hans Frank: The "Butcher of Poland" Who Ruled the Nazi General Government Like a King

Hans Frank was one of Adolf Hitler’s most powerful civilian officials and the Nazi Governor-General of occupied Poland during World War II. As Governor-General of the General Government, Frank ruled over millions of Poles and Jews, presiding over exploitation, mass executions, forced labor, starvation policies, and the deportation of entire Jewish communities to extermination camps. Born in Karlsruhe in 1900, Frank trained as a lawyer and became an early member of the Nazi Party. Rising quickly through its ranks, he served as Hitler’s personal legal adviser and helped shape Nazi ideology into law. After the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, Hitler appointed him Governor-General, effectively making him the civilian ruler of central Poland. From his headquarters at Wawel Castle in Kraków, Frank oversaw a regime of brutal repression. Public shootings, hostage executions, and economic plunder became routine. Poland was treated as a colonial territory, its population reduced to forced labor while resources and food were siphoned to Germany, causing widespread hunger and disease. Frank openly referred to Poles as expendable and viewed the territory as a dumping ground for those the Reich deemed undesirable. Frank also played a central role in the Holocaust in Poland. Under his administration, Jewish property was confiscated, ghettos were established—including the Warsaw Ghetto, the largest in Nazi-occupied Europe—and mass deportations to extermination camps followed. Millions of Jews and Poles perished under policies he knowingly enforced. After Germany’s defeat, Frank was captured by American forces and put on trial at the Nuremberg Trials. Confronted with overwhelming evidence, he expressed remorse and acknowledged moral guilt—unlike most of his co-defendants. In October 1946, he was convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to death. Hans Frank was executed by hanging on 16 October 1946. His body was cremated, and his ashes were scattered in the River Isar—ending the life of a man remembered as “The Butcher of Poland.” This episode is part of the series High-Ranking Officials of the Third Reich. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

17 de jul de 202627 min
episode Fritz Becher: Murderer of Catholic Priests at Dachau Concentration Camp artwork

Fritz Becher: Murderer of Catholic Priests at Dachau Concentration Camp

Fritz Becher was a brutal Kapo at Dachau concentration camp who was executed for Nazi war crimes after the Second World War. A German prisoner functionary turned Kapo, Becher became infamous at Dachau concentration camp for his extreme cruelty toward fellow inmates, particularly Catholic priests and Soviet prisoners of war. Originally imprisoned as a political detainee himself, Becher quickly aligned with SS authority, using his position to terrorize those under his control. Witnesses testified that he routinely beat prisoners, kicked them unconscious, forced them into exhausting punishment exercises, and deliberately withheld medical care. Several priests died directly as a result of his violence, while many others succumbed to injuries and exhaustion caused by his abuse. At Dachau, Becher oversaw barracks where systematic humiliation and physical torment were daily occurrences. He conducted sadistic “sport exercises” designed to break prisoners physically and mentally, often lasting for hours. In the Russian prisoner blocks, his brutality intensified, reflecting Nazi racial ideology that viewed Slavs as expendable. Survivors recalled beatings with wooden objects, fists, and boots, frequently carried out under the supervision or approval of SS guards. When Dachau was liberated by U.S. forces in April 1945, the scale of the camp’s horrors shocked the world. Becher was arrested and later tried in the Dachau war crimes trials conducted by the United States Army. Despite attempting to downplay his actions, overwhelming testimony exposed his lies. Found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity, Fritz Becher was sentenced to death. He was executed by hanging in 1946 at Landsberg Prison. His case stands as a stark example of how ordinary individuals, empowered by ideology and opportunity, became willing participants in Nazi terror. This episode is part of the series Male Fascist Guards and Camp Auxiliaries. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

16 de jul de 20269 min
episode Anton Mussert: Dutch Fascist Leader and Hitler Collaborator artwork

Anton Mussert: Dutch Fascist Leader and Hitler Collaborator

Anton Mussert was the most prominent Dutch Nazi collaborator during the Second World War and the founder of the National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands (NSB). Born in 1894 in Werkendam, Mussert trained as a civil engineer before turning to politics in the early 1930s. Inspired by Adolf Hitler and the rise of Nazi Germany, he founded the NSB in 1931, creating a Dutch fascist movement modeled on the German Nazi Party. When Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands in May 1940, Mussert positioned himself as the loyal representative of Dutch National Socialism. Although he hoped to become prime minister under German occupation, real power remained in the hands of Reich Commissar Arthur Seyss-Inquart and the SS. Nevertheless, Mussert and the NSB actively collaborated with the occupiers. Under German rule, Dutch Jews faced systematic persecution. Registration, exclusion from public life, forced labor, and deportations followed. Between 1942 and 1944, more than 107,000 Jews were deported from the Netherlands to Auschwitz and Sobibor, where most were murdered. Mussert publicly supported these measures and benefited personally from the confiscation of Jewish property. He also oversaw the formation of Dutch Waffen-SS units that fought on the Eastern Front against the Soviet Union. While many Dutch citizens joined the resistance, Mussert remained loyal to Hitler until the very end of the war. After Germany’s surrender in May 1945, Mussert was arrested, tried for treason and collaboration, and sentenced to death. On 7 May 1946, he was executed by firing squad. His legacy remains one of betrayal, collaboration, and moral failure during one of the darkest chapters in Dutch history. This episode is part of the series High Ranking Fascist Collaborators: Politicians. Watch the full documentary and explore hundreds of historical films at: WorldHistory.tv [https://www.worldhistory.tv/]

15 de jul de 202616 min