Eleonore Hodys

Eleonore Hodys (10 August 1903 – 1964) was a communist political prisoner in Auschwitz who became the mistress of Nazi commandant Rudolf Höss, was impregnated twice by him, and eventually escaped. She would give testimony of her experience and her story has been persevered as a controversial tale from the Holocaust.

Biography
Hodys was born in Vienna, Austria-Hungary on August 10, 1903 to a Catholic family and would become a physician. In 1939, she would be tried by the Nazi government and convicted of fraud and being an 'illegal member' of the NSDAP between 1928 to 1938 and placed in Lübeck-Lauerhof prison.

During the course of World War II, Hodys would be sent to Ravensbrück before being taken to Auschwitz on one of the first transports in 1942. As a political prisoner of Aryan descent, she was put to work within the villa of the SS Commandant, Rudolf Höss. She reported that he quickly took an interest in her, granting additional privileges, until his first attempt at beginning an affair in May of 1942. Eventually she was impregnated by him and, in order to avoid the scandal, he sent her to be starved in a standing prison cell, with orders to gas her if necessary to avoid discovery. She would eventually be forced to have an abortion in the camp hospital instead of being executed. This event would be recalled against him during the Nuremberg Trials in part to disprove his claims of being a normal and moral family man.

In the summer of 1944, Höss would give the orders to kill Hodys but a judicial investigation would halt this order and launch into a full investigation. Due to the affair, claims of corruption, and his handling of the camp; Höss was put under investigation by SS judge Georg Konrad Morgen. Despite Heinrich Himmler attempting to halt the investigations, Hodys was brought forth, investigated, and called in to testify against Höss in the autumn of 1944.

Following the war, these events would resurface in testimony, as Hodys and Morgen, and several others, were called to testify against Höss and others. Hodys' testimony would prove key not only in the conviction of Höss, but would also prove decisive in the Grabner case.

Hodys died in Vienna in 1964.

Legacy
Rainer Höss, the grandson of Rudolf Höss, has become an active voice in Holocaust education and preaching tolerance, openly sharing the story of his grandfather's mistress. This includes sharing the discovery in Vienna of Hodys's estate. It comprised a box that had gloves and uniforms with Rudolf Höss's initials on them, as well as a 153 g gold ring with the same initials that was made of the gold taken from teeth of Jewish prisoners in Auschwitz.

Although several books have mentioned her experience in Auschwitz and the court investigation, there have been books specifically devoted to researching and relating Hodys's story.