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July 26th, 2005 | #1 | |
Ἀντίοχος Ἐπιφανὴς
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Karl Rove's gramps: gauleiter of Oldenberg!
check this out, whodathunkit--
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July 26th, 2005 | #2 |
Ausrotter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Walhalla
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If only it were true!
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July 26th, 2005 | #3 |
Ἀντίοχος Ἐπιφανὴς
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I think plenty of Nazi party functionaries sold out to the American puppet state after 45, and that their grandkids for all their genetic quality often serve the Anglo-Jew hegemon we call "zog."
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July 26th, 2005 | #4 | |
Banned
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July 26th, 2005 | #5 |
Ausrotter
Join Date: May 2004
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Unfortunately, that is true. And the grandchildren are usually even worse than the children. There are exceptions. Interesting (though "anti-nazi") article about Gudrum Himmler (OK, she isn't a grandchild):
Gudrun Himmler Heinrich Himmler's daughter Gudrun was his only legitimate child. She is now married and her last name is Burwitz. She still remembers her father fondly and refuses to reproach him, "Whatever is said about my Papi, whatever is written or shall be written in the future about him - he was my father, the best father I could have and I loved him and still love him."1 In 1998, the Sunday Times ran a story about Gudrun: THE TIMES: FOREIGN NEWS SATURDAY, 18 APRIL 1998 Deborah Collcutt reports from Frankfurt on the woman who is a living link with Nazi history A CHARITY partly run by Heinrich Himmler's daughter to help ex-SS veterans is rallying support for a former concentration camp guard who faces prosecution for war crimes. The group Stille Hilfe (Quiet Aid) supports former high-ranking Nazis, and in the past it has helped some of the Third Reich's most prominent officers, including Klaus Barbie and Erich Priebke. Gudrun Burwitz, 69, daughter of Adolf Hitler's leading henchman, does not deny that she is currently involved with Stille Hilfe, describing herself simply as one of 23 members in a dying organisation: "It's true I help where I can, but I refuse to discuss my work." One member the organisation helped to start a new life in southern Germany is Anton Malloth, a former SS guard at the Theresienstadt concentration camp in the Czech Republic. Herr Malloth, 87, is now being investigated in connection with the deaths of up to 700 Jews at the camp and is wanted by the Czech authorities to stand trial there. Stille Hilfe will send a letter to members appealing for help. Frau Burwitz is feted by the veteran elite just as she was by her own father, and has attended an SS veterans' rally in Austria. Like the children of Martin Bormann and Hermann Goering, she knows the fame attached to having such men as fathers. Unlike them, she keeps alive the memory of her father - the architect of the Final Solution. She is Himmler's only legitimate child, whom he nicknamed "Puppi" (little doll). Stille Hilfe was originally set up in 1951 to help SS and senior Nazi veterans and their families financially and, if necessary, to give them a new identity in a faraway land. More than 50 years after her father bit into a cyanide phial rather than face execution at the hands of the British who discovered him in northern Germany in the closing days of the war, Frau Burwitz commands respect. "They were terrified of her," Andrea Ropke, a respected authority on neo-Nazism who attended the rally in Ulrichsberg, northern Austria with Frau Burwitz, said. "All these high-ranking former officers lined up and she asked, 'Where did you serve?' showing off her vast knowledge of military logistics." Physically, Frau Burwitz is unexceptional, with her greying blonde hair scraped into a tight bun and her neat clothes. She lives in a detached house in the quiet Munich suburb of Furstenried which she shares with her husband and student daughter. She carried her family surname until she married in her late 30s. She was born in 1929, just over a year after her father married her mother, Marga, the blonde-haired, blue-eyed daughter of a wealthy East Prussian. Gudrun remained the apple of her father's eye even after the marriage began to deteriorate and Himmler spent ever more time with his lover in Berlin. Unable to bear him any more children, Marga, eight years older than her husband, adopted a boy but Himmler showed him little interest, preferring instead to lavish "Puppi" with expensive gifts. His visits to the family home near Munich became so few that Gudrun was often flown to Berlin just so her father, by then Germany's second most powerful man, could spend a few hours with her. He was already involved in a passionate affair with his secretary, Hedwig Potthast, who bore him a much-wanted natural son, Helge. But Gudrun remained his favourite as she demonstrates in an entry in her wartime diary written when at the age of 12 when her father "spoiled" her with a day trip to one of the death camps: "Today we went to the SS concentration camp at Dachau. We saw everything we could. We saw the gardening work. We saw the pear trees. We saw all the pictures painted by the prisoners. Marvellous. And afterwards we had a lot to eat ... it was very nice." When her father committed suicide in the Allied interrogation centre near Luneburg, on May 23, 1945, she was distraught when told the news. She was held with her mother in the British-occupied zone and detained in prison for four years. Gudrun would later tell friends that they were worst years of her life and she had been made to suffer because of her father. Penniless after a life of privilege and social standing, mother and daughter turned to Stille Hilfe when they were released from jail and were offered refuge in Bielefeld, where she taught herself bookbinding and dressmaking. Later, she moved to Munich, where she met and later married Wulf-Dieter Burwitz, a writer who supported her as Marga fought in vain against cancer. The couple have two children in their early 20s: a son, now a qualified lawyer, and a daughter, who is a student. They are comfortably off and now Frau Burwitz no longer works, she devotes all her time when she is not sewing or cooking for her children, to her father's extended family. Andrea Ropke, who advises the German Government on the neo-Nazi scene, claims that Stille Hilfe is closely linked to a number of outlawed movements. The opposition Social Democratic party has called for an investigation into its charitable status, but Bonn has refused to act against it. Copyright 1998 Times Newspapers Ltd. http://www.sunday-times.co.uk
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