"In any country in the world, men are more cruel than women; only in Germany, on the contrary, women are more ferocious than men." This is the evaluation of German women by European countries in the Middle Ages, and I think you will be surprised, in the impression of most people, women are weaker, more sensual than men, so it will be easier to pity, the idiom "benevolence of women" has been passed down for thousands of years.

According to statistics, more than 2.3 million German women joined fascist groups during World War II, and Ils Koch, who was born in a factory family in 1906, was a polite and well-behaved girl at a young age, entered an accounting school at the age of 15, and later became a bookkeeper.
At that time, the German economy was in a slump, many Germans could not solve the problem of food and clothing, Ils thought that his job could not support himself, so the 26-year-old Ils decided to join the Nazi Party, into the Nazi Party for a period of time, Ils still had good intentions, it is unimaginable that in the end she became the most vicious woman in World War II, her special collection, her own son collapsed after seeing it, and committed suicide to apologize.
This has to start in 1934, the year Ils got married, and her husband, Karl Koch, was the first commander of the Buchenwald concentration camp. It was one of the three central concentration camps of Nazi Germany, where around 250,000 people were imprisoned and 56,000 were killed between 1937 and 1945.
Ills followed her husband to work in the concentration camp, and soon she became cold-blooded and ruthless, and the people imprisoned in the concentration camp had to carry stones every day, build railways, etc., and could not "prisoners" so they died here, and Ils liked to ride horses in the concentration camp, and when he saw which war criminal was not pleasing, he would not hesitate to whip and beat him.
Ils's husband, Karl Koch, was also an extremely fanatical Nazi party member, often persecuting "prisoners" in concentration camps, and was later arrested by the SS for counterfeiting, theft and corruption, and Karl Koch was executed in 1945, and Ils did not behave any less than her husband, known as the "Beast of Buchenwald", but Ils was at peace.
By 1947, Iller was court-martial again, and her evidence of incriminating crimes, unlike other war criminals, was not weapons and poison, but purses, lampshades, gloves, etc., all of which were made of "human skin" by Ils, and were her special collections, which was really shocking.
But the military court sentenced Ills to life imprisonment for murder and other crimes, and in 1949, multiple witnesses identified Ils as having selected tattooed prisoners and then executed them as "human skin products", Ils's crimes were fully exposed, she tried to appeal but was rejected, and she also protested her sentence to the International Commission on Human Rights, but it was not adopted.
At this time, Ils's son could no longer bear his mother's behavior and public condemnation, so he chose to commit suicide, and Ils chose to commit suicide in her single cell on September 2, 1967, without even a person to take care of her affairs, and her story was later adapted into a movie, which was the prototype of Mrs. Haylinger in the movie "The Lampshade of the Thorny Flower".