From the DW:
“Nazi war criminals ran
children's homes in post-war Germany: new research”
Millions of West German children
were sent to brutal "spa" homes between the 1950s and 1980s that left
them traumatized, a new report alleges. Many of the homes were run by former
Nazis. Nazi war criminals were allowed to run children's holiday homes in
postwar Germany where draconian corporal punishment and bullying were normal,
new research by public broadcaster ARD has shown. ARD's investigative TV show
Report Mainz has discovered that former SS officer Werner Scheu, convicted for
his part in the murder of 220 Lithuanian Jews in 1941, ran a children's home
named "Möwennest" (Seagull's Nest) on the German North Sea island of
Borkum after serving his sentence. One woman described being made to stand
barefoot on a cold floor for hours overnight and on one occasion was locked in
a sauna. Another children's home director was Albert Viethen, a doctor and
member of several Nazi organizations who was accused of euthanizing around 20
children under the Nazi regime. According to ARD, he was charged with accessory
to murder in 1963 but the case against him was dropped for lack of evidence.
Viethen ran a children's spa home named "Schönsicht" in Berchtesgaden,
Bavaria, where several survivors described routine abuse.
New light shed on dark
practice The revelations add a
new dimension to the experiences of so-called "Verschickungskinder"
("sent-away children") and the special educational homes that existed
in West Germany from the 1950s to the 1980s. A newly-founded survivors'
initiative and self-help group has estimated that as many as 8-12 million
children were sent to such homes in that period, often on the recommendation of
doctors, schools, and youth welfare authorities, as "spa treatment"
for young children paid for by public health insurers. The stories of abuse
have only just started to emerge in the media in the past few years, partly
because local authorities have often denied the stories, on the grounds, for
instance, that "these are memories, not evidence," as journalist Lena
Gilhaus was told in 2017, when she wrote about her father's experience for
broadcaster Deutschlandfunk. Much of the evidence for the new investigation was
based on the research of Anja Röhl, herself a survivor of a home in Hamburg,
who collected 250 firsthand accounts over the past 10 years after she published
an article in 2009 about her own experience. Her Verschickungskinder
organization, which was founded two years ago, now has over 3,000 members. "I
was five years old when they sent me," she told DW. "On the first day
all the children were tied to their beds, and I got such shock. We were
punished just for talking." Röhl says the stories she collected were
backed up by documents she found — particularly complaints filed by parents and
youth welfare authorities. "The children came back sicker than when they
left, they were malnourished, had to be hospitalized," said Röhl.
"Sometimes they were so disturbed they didn't recognize their
parents." Anja Röhl has founded the 'Verschickungskinder' organization for
victims — and it got 3,000 members within two years These letters were often
simply ignored by home directors, who were apparently protected by political
interests, Röhl suspects. But most of the children, she says, were too ashamed
or traumatized to talk about their experiences themselves. In one particularly
horrifying case described in by Report Mainz, one survivor reported eating the
sleeve of his pajamas at the home and being too ashamed to tell his mother what
had happened. In other cases, parents simply didn't believe their children's
accounts.
Nazi connection Röhl believes the connection between these
homes to the old Nazi regime was strong, partly because the system of child
holiday homes was originally founded in the 1930s. "We believe that female
personnel from concentration camps used the children's homes as places to flee
to, where they could find work," she said. "But we don't know that
for sure." "The Nazi concept of human beings played a big role here
we think," added Röhl, partly because the staff at the homes had largely
been brought up under the Nazi regime. The hundreds of memories she collected
shared many common features: Children were subjected to a regime of extreme
discipline, frequent corporal punishment, were separated from siblings, being
left in solitary confinement, or made to sleep in the same room as older
children who bullied them. Terrible food was also a constant theme — survivors
described being force-fed by having their hair tied to a table and tipped back,
or being forced to eat their own vomit. Röhl described how young children often
returned from these homes traumatized; she heard stories of suicide attempts,
of children who experienced depression, became aggressive, or did not speak for
a year after returning home. "We came back different to how we went
in," Röhl said. "We came back injured and wounded, in our souls and
physically." Röhl has now founded an initiative, which is calling for
state governments to establish archives of documents related to the homes,
along with survivors' centers manned by survivor volunteers who can answer
phone lines for people to report their own stories.
^ I knew of these kinds of
children’s homes existed in West Germany (there are a few movies about it), but
I didn’t know the extent of Nazi involvement in them (note: I don’t like to say
former Nazis. Once a Nazi always a Nazi.) The Nazi involvement doesn’t really
shock me. Nazis were welcomed with open arms at every single level of West
German society. Nazis were Politicians, Teachers, Doctors, Judges, Lawyers,
Businessmen/women, Soldiers, Janitors, Social Workers, Nurses, etc. Most didn’t
even try to hide their identity or their past. It was different in East Germany
– only because their Soviet Masters forced the East Germans to punish known
Nazis. The Nazi influence did not end in 1945. It carried on well into the 1990s
with Nazis helping create West German laws, teach West German children, treat
West German patients, etc. The only thing that finally stopped their influence
was the Nazis either dying of old age or retiring – but not before they helped
mode another generation of Germans into their beliefs – even if more hidden
then during the Third Reich. ^
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