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- Newsgroups: alt.revisionism,soc.history
- Subject: Holocaust Almanac - Grafeneck: The Gassings Begin
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.090003.17193@oneb.almanac.bc.ca>
- From: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca (Ken Mcvay)
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 93 09:00:03 GMT
- Reply-To: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca
- Followup-To: alt.revisionism
- Organization: The Old Frog's Almanac, Vancouver Island, CANADA
- Keywords: Grafeneck,Hadamar,Hallervorden,Tiessler,Wirth,Wurm
- File: /u/pd0/text.holocaust/grafeneck.01
- Lines: 143
-
- "Around Grafeneck signs were posted: `Danger -- Epidemic,' and all access
- was barred. The exterminations rose to an average of more than thirty a day.
- Since it was awkward, time-consuming, and too expensive to kill so many with
- drugs, Criminal Police Commissioner Wirth devised a method for mass
- extinction. The people, upon arrival, were undressed, given a one-minute
- physical examination, then herded into a shed whose walls had been mortered
- and sealed. Since many of these patients, removed from their accustomed
- surroundings, were in a state of great agitation, Wirth tried to calm them
- by leading them to believe that they would be given showers. The shed, in
- fact, was equipped with dummy shower heads. Once all were inside the doors
- were locked, and coal gas or carbon monoxide was pumped in.
-
- To dispose of the bodies, a crematorium was erected. Dr. Hallervorden,
- however, thought it a shame that so much `scientific' material should go up
- in smoke. In a despostion for the trial [Nuremberg] he related: `I went up
- to them and told them, `Look here now, boys, if you are going to kill all
- these people, at lease take the brains out so that the material could be
- utilized.' They asked me, `How many can you examine?' And so I told them an
- unlimited number -- the more the better!'
-
- Since Grafeneck was situated on a ridge adjacent to a Wehrmacht training
- area and the town of Munsinger was but three miles away, it had not taken
- long for people to make the connection between the transports on which
- thousands arrived and no one ever departed and the nauseous smoke that
- continually wafted over the countryside from the high chimney. By July 1940,
- Grafeneck created such a tempest in Wu"rttembery that Bishop Wurm, the head
- of the Lutherin Church in the province, addressed a letter to Frick:
-
- `For some months past, insane, feeble-minded, and epileptic patients have
- been transferred on the orders of the Reich Defense Council. Their relatives
- are informed a few weeks later that the patient concerned has died of an
- illness, and that, owing to the danger of infection, the body has had to be
- cremated. Several hundred patrients from institutions in Wu"rttemberg alone
- must have met their death in this way, among them war-wounded of the Great
- War.
-
- `The manner of action, particularly of deceptions that occur, is already
- sharply criticized. Everybody is convinced that the causes of deaths which
- are officially published are selected at random. When, to crown everything,
- regret is expressed in the obituary notice that all endeavors to preserve
- the patient's life were in vain, this is felt to be a mockery. The air of
- mystery gives rise to the thought that something is happening that is
- contrary to justice and cannot therefore be fefended by the government. It
- also appears very little care was taken in the selection of the patients
- destined for annihilation. The selections were not limited to insane
- persons, but included also persons capable of work, especially epileptics.
-
- `What conclusions will the younger generation draw when it realizes that
- human life is no longer sacred to the state? Cannot every outrage be excused
- on the grounds that the elimination of another was of advantage to the
- person concerned? There can be no stopping once one starts down this
- decline. God does not permit people to mock Him. Either the National
- Socialist state must recognize the limits which God has laid down, or it
- will favor a moral decline and carry the state down with it.'
-
- No response to the letter was forthcoming. Frequently, if a critic did not
- take on the system publicly and the issue was likely to be embarrassing, the
- Nazis preferred to let the matter disappear in the caverns of the
- bureaucracy. There, with exquisite, polite casuistry, officials communicated
- with each other in such terms as: `I have the honor to inform you that the
- female patients referred from your institution on November 8, 1940, to the
- institutions of Grafeneck, Bernburg, Sonnenstein, and Hartheim all died in
- November of last year.'
-
- In truth, the euthanasia exterminations were just getting in full gear. On
- September 5, 1940, Bishop Wurm wrote Frick again, deploring that, since his
- last letter, `this practice has reached tremendous proportions. Recently,
- the inmates of old-age homes have also been included. The basis for this
- practice seems to be the opinion that in an efficient nation there is no
- room for weak and frail people. If the leadership of the state is convinced
- that it is an inevitable war measure, why does it not issue a decree with
- legal force, which would at least have the good point that official quarters
- would not have to seek refuge in lies? Is it necessary that the German
- nation should be the first civilized nation to return to the habits of
- primitive races?'
-
- Soon all pretense of eliminating only `incurables' ceased. Small
- institutions were shut down, and larger ones left operating as fronts with a
- minute fraction of their former patients. A young, hardworking farmer by the
- name of Koch was ordered to report for sterilization because he was an
- epileptic. He wrote his mother he was feeling fine and asked her to send him
- some tobacco. The next his mother heard was that he had died of an incurable
- disease. His neighbors had no doubt that he had met a violent death and
- expressed great indignation.
-
- As 1941 progressed, attention shifted to the small town of Hadamar in a
- famous cheese-making region near the Dutch bornder. There, with the Nazi
- knack for conspicuousness, an extermination installation was set up in a
- former monastery situated on a hill overlooking the community. Children,
- with their instinct for cruel truth, taunted each other: `You're crazy!
- You'll be sent to bake in Hadamar.' The bishop of Limburg adressed Justice
- Minister Gu"rtner: `The population cannot grasp that systematic actions are
- carried out which, in accordance with Paragraph 211 of the German criminal
- code, are punishable by death.'
-
- But it was not until late July of 1941 when Count von Galen, the bishop of
- Mu"nster, spoke up, that anyone dared to bring the matter of the killings
- into the open. Von Galen's family had been renowned in Germany for hundreds
- of years, and his name was so famous it provided him with a certain
- immunity. `Citizens of Mu"nster,' the bishop addressed his parishoners,
- `wounded soldiers are being killed recklessly6 since they are of no more
- productive use to the state. Mother, your boy will be killed too if he comes
- back home from the front crippled.' The recent British air attacks on
- Mu"nster, the bishop warned, should be interpreted as God's vengeance on the
- German nation.
-
- Walter Tiessler, Goebble's deputy for propaganda and public enlightenment,
- responded by suggesting `that we adopt the only measure that can be taken as
- good propaganda as well as legal punishment -- namely: to hang the bishop of
- Mu"nster. A general public notice of the execution of the death penalty as
- well as a detailed justification of the measure should be made.'
-
- By this time, the preponderance of `useless eaters' and `lives unworthy of
- living' had been exterminated. Brandt and Bouhler were ordered to
- deemphasize but not discontinue the euthanasia program. `Directors of
- asylums,' one official reported, `were instructed that `useless eaters' who
- could not work very much should be killed by slow starvation. This method
- was considered very good, because the victims would appear to have died a
- `natural death.'"
-
- Excerpted from --------------------------------------------------------
- Conot, Robert E. JUSTICE AT NUREMBERG. New York: Harper & Row, 1983. pp
- 207-210.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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