From the DW:
“The
forgotten children of Hamburg's forced labor camps”
Hundreds of
women and children were sent to forced labor camps in Hamburg during the Nazi
era. A psychologist has launched a campaign to remember their lives with
"stumbling stones." The names featured on the new stumbling stones
unveiled in Hamburg belong to persons whose lives were cut too short Recently
49 new Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) were laid into the concrete sidewalk in
the Hamburg suburb of Langenhorn. They carry the names of 49 children who died
there during World War II. The names on
the little memorial stones are mostly Eastern European-sounding, names of small
children whose mothers had been sent to forced labor camps for the Nazi regime.
Chance
encounter unearths hundreds of stories It was only about 10 years ago that
Hamburg-based psychologist Margot Löhr discovered these children's fates —
entirely by chance. Taking a close look at Hamburg death registers, she found
numerous files containing the names of children and infants. Their official
place of residence was listed as a former forced labor camp in Hamburg. "I wanted to follow up on the fate of
these children," said Löhr. She compiled 418 names of children,
most between the ages of 10 and 14, but many of them babies. They and their
mothers had been forced by the Nazis to work in various factories. They
included, for example, a young woman named Nadeshda who had entered the
Hohenzollernring camp in Hamburg as a 4-year-old. In her later memoirs, she
recalled that her parents and 14-year-old brother had to work hard in the
factory and that her brother had been beaten by guards — for accidentally
dropping a barrel that had been too heavy for him to carry.
Murdered
newborns Margot Löhr was especially jarred by the fate of two young Jewish
women at the Hamburg concentration camp, Rozena and Alice. Having already
witnessed the genocide against Jews first-hand at Auschwitz, both had to hide
their pregnancies for fear of their lives. “Pregnancies were not allowed,”
Margot Löhr explained. Rozena went into labor in December 1944 and gave
birth to a healthy boy. A short time later, a female security guard showed her
the dead child. A supervisor had placed the baby in a cardboard box, and the
camp commander, Walter Kümmel, had drowned it. Having survived the war,
the two women testified as witnesses before the Hamburg Regional Court — but
not until in the early 1970s. The verdict for Kümmel was only "accessory
to murder." In the court's opinion, "no base motives" that could
be held against him.
Remembering
the forgotten Many women had been forced abort their pregnancies, but in
postwar Germany those brutal Nazi-era practices were met with silence. Even
back in their home countries, the mothers of the dead children who had been
sent to forced labor camps in Germany hardly ever dared to speak about that
dark chapter of their lives. The children the forced laborers had given
birth to were usually written off as "children of traitors." In
the past decade, Löhr has researched more than 400 such cases in Hamburg and
has written a book about their fates. Thanks to her initiative, much light has
been cast on the history of female forced laborers in Hamburg during World War
II. During the war, 246 of these
women's babies were buried at Hamburg's Ohlsdorf cemetery. But in 1959, most of
the graves were leveled, leaving nothing to remember them by, making it all the
more important today to remember their fates another way. Additional stumbling blocks are scheduled
to be laid in memory of these forgotten children of Hamburg Iater this year.
^ This was a
very interesting story and I’m glad to have learned about it and to see that
the victims are finally being remembered. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/the-forgotten-children-of-hamburgs-forced-labor-camps/a-55071627
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