Past, Present and Future as part of the investigation of the special operation, the crown 🤴 19-21.
The Devil's Daughter: Gudrun Burwitz (née Himmler).
"Today we went to the SS concentration camp in Dachau.
We were shown everything. We saw pear trees, pictures,
which are drawn by prisoners. Everything was amazing"
Gudrun Himmler
Gudrun Burwitz from Munich looks like, according to the general idea, and should look like a decent pensioner from Bavaria. She is neat, modest, smiling, adores her husband, goes to Mass on Sundays. Nevertheless, neighbors try to stay away from her. "She's not someone to be proud of," says one neighbor who often sees her at the local supermarket, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by her daughter and granddaughters. But she is constantly besieged by journalists, whom she tries to simply ignore. The quiet pensioner from Munich is also a living symbol of the neo-Nazi movement and an important figure in the organization "Silent Aid", which still helps the surviving veterans of the Nazi Party, the Gestapo and the SS to avoid punishment, and, according to many, finances illegal neo-Nazi organizations in Germany and other European countries. It can be said that it, in fact, turned Silent Help into what this organization is now. Mrs. Burwitz's maiden name is Himmler. She is the beloved and only legitimate daughter of Heinrich Himmler, a child admired by Adolf Hitler.
Gudrun Himmler was born in 1929 in Munich. Her father did not want a soul in her, and the girl quickly became a real symbol of Nazi childhood. Her father, who called her Puppy, that is, Doll, from early childhood took her with him to all sorts of party and state events. It was she who most often gave flowers to the Führer, and it was she who more often than other children rattled on the cheek. According to the stories of those who know her, the first years of the war were the happiest for her.
The marriage of her parents, Heinrich Himmler and his wife Margie, cracked, Henry completely ceased to be in his native home in Munich. However, this did not affect Gudrun in any way. He sent a military plane for her just to be with her for a few hours in Berlin, littered with expensive and even precious gifts. One of them she still wears is an old silver brooch, which depicts four horse heads, together constituting a swastika.
One of the most memorable and joyful events in Gudrun's life was a visit to the concentration camp in Dachau together with his father and Adolf Hitler. An entry in her diary: "Today we went to the SS concentration camp in Dachau. We were shown everything. We saw pear trees, pictures that prisoners draw. Everything was delightful." There is not a word about crematoria and gas chambers in the diary, but of course, she could not not see them. According to eyewitnesses, she was not one step behind the Pope that day, and Heinrich Himmler came to Dachau on an inspection trip, and not just on an excursion.
A wonderful life was destroyed in 1945. Her father was captured and committed suicide by swallowing potassium cyanide. Gudrun refused to believe this, believing that Heinrich Himmler had been murdered in cold blood by the British. She still hates the British. After her father's death, she was insolable and, according to those who knew her at the time, became estranged from her mother, whom she blamed for the breakdown of the family and for seeing her father less often than she could have seen. For more than two years, Gudrun and Marga were imprisoned in a British prison.
Soon after her release, Gudrun Himmler began to take part in the activities of various organizations of former Nazis. And in 1951, when more or less overt activity in defense of the Nazis became impossible, she joined the organization with the innocent name Stille Hilfe ("Silent Help").
Many experts still believe that Gudrun Himmler was one of the founders of Stille Hilfe in 1951. It's not that. The organization was created much earlier, in 1949, by two clergymen: catholic bishop Johannes Neuhweisler and Lutheran pastor Theophilos Vorm.
Priests were driven by the most noble aspirations. As Bishop Neuhüisler, himself a former prisoner of the Dachau concentration camp, later said in an interview, the organization's tasks were to help prisoners of war and try to reconcile German society, to help the victims forgive even their own tormentors, to "repay good for evil."
At first, it was. "Christian Help to Prisoners," as Stille Hilfe was then called, did pass parcels to prisoners of war from relatives, helped to find lawyers for those who, in the opinion of the organization, were convicted unfairly. However, quite quickly, not the most innocent characters began to show interest in Stille Hilfe. One of them was Gudrun Himmler.
Coming to the organization in 1951, it turned it into an effective structure that completely ceased to be interested in ordinary soldiers of the Wehrmacht and threw all its forces to the aid of much more prominent figures of the Third Reich. According to one of the leading experts on the history of Nazism, the British Gaius Walters, stille Hilfe, together with Gudrun Himmler, included persons who were directly related to the activities of the Organization of Former SS Employees (ODESSA) and assisted such prominent Nazis as the Holocaust ideologist Adolf Eichmann, Standartenführer Walter Rauff, one of the leaders of the SD, who was directly involved in the development of gas vans, and Dr. Josef Mengele, who conducted experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz.
Gudrun Himmler became the de facto head of Stille Hilfe and a guarantee that donations accepted from sympathizers will be used for their intended purpose. Finally, Gudrun Himmler had another important role that she still plays today: she attracts young neo-Nazis and sympathizers to the organization.
In addition to Gudrun Himmler, the organization included another famous woman, Princess Helena Elisabeth von Isenburg. She, together with Bishop Neuhweusler and Pastor Vorm, ensured maximum decency for the organization and at the same time helped to collect donations through connections in the high society.
Formally, Stille Hilfe continued to work on helping prisoners of war and prisoners. In fact, the lion's share of all efforts went to hide Nazi criminals from the authorities, provide them with livelihoods and provide housing and medical care. For example, according to some experts, it was Stille Hilfe who helped the former head of the Hitler Youth, Arthur Axmann, who, after three years in prison, had problems with employment, find a job.
Gudrun Himmler, who married Dr. Wolf Dieter Burwitz in the early '60s, never really talked about her work at Stille Hilfe. "I help here and there in any way I can, but I will not talk about my work," she said in one of the rare interviews.
Over time, Stille Hilfe had new worries. The organization was no longer engaged in the transfer of Nazi criminals abroad: there was no longer a need for this. But there was a need to provide aging Nazis with good medical care, pay for their stay in nursing homes and boarding houses and, most importantly, pay lawyers' bills: Nazis began to be arrested across Europe, whom the authorities would like to extradite to Germany for trial or on the spot for war crimes.
Among the most notorious criminals assisted by Gudrun Himmler-Bourwitz and her organization were the head of the Lyon Gestapo, Klaus Barbier, one of the bloodthirsty guards of the Theresienstadt concentration camp in the Czech Republic, Anton Malllot, and the "fury of Majdanek" Erna Wallisch. With Mallot, Gudrun developed a particularly warm relationship. Not only did she pay for his lawyers and stay in a nursing home, but she also visited him frequently. She is also said to have paid the cost of Malloth's decent funeral.
Over time, the activities of Stille Hilfe spread to other countries. This organization is known in Holland, Denmark, France.
"There is no doubt that Gudrun Burwitz is attracting young neo-Nazis and their means to Stille Hilfe by his mere existence," says one German neo-Nazi expert, who asked not to be named.
In 1952, Gudrun Burwitz created another organization, Wiking-Jugend, already openly neo-Nazi, arranged in the image and likeness of the Hitler Youth. The organization existed until 1994, when it was recognized as unconstitutional.
Gudrun Burwitz's participation in neo-Nazi activities is also confirmed by the children of other prominent Nazis who, unlike Gudrun, are not ready to unconditionally defend their parents. Martin Bormann Jr., the son of the head of the party chancellery and Hitler's closest associate, said that Gudrun repeatedly appealed to him with requests for support either of her organizations or of the leading neo-Nazi party, the National Democratic Party of Germany. And her appearance at various Nazi events in Germany and Austria, for example, at a meeting of SS veterans and youth organizations in Ulrichsburg, Austria, caused real delight among the participants.
Hitler Youth chief Arthur Axmann received three years in prison for the propaganda of Nazism among young people.
After serving his sentence, he found stille hilfe work and for the rest of his life did not need anything.
"They were just trembling in her presence. She walked through the hall, kindly asking one or the other where he served, how he lived. She accepted their answers with the greatness of the monarch, and they, by all accounts, perceived her as their queen, "said later one of those present at the meeting. - Young people looked at her as a goddess. "
The German authorities assure that Gudrun Burwitz and her organization are under constant control, but admit that neither she nor Stille Hilfe give them the slightest reason to close the organization or ban it as unconstitutional. All their activities are within the law, which does not prohibit helping the old and the poor, regardless of what their past was or what views they hold. The only thing that the fighters against Nazism were able to achieve was the deprivation of Stille Hilfe of the status of a charitable organization whose activities are not taxed. However, as many experts say, Gudrun Burwitz and Quiet Aid have enough sources of funding so that paying taxes does not become an unbearable burden for them.
Dachau is one of the most terrible concentration camps in which medical experiments were conducted on prisoners. In the Dachau concentration camp, 41,500 people died. And for a 12-year-old girl, it was just a very good day.
https://telegra.ph/Toxic--company-07-08
https://telegra.ph/GENOCIDE-IN-THE-CROWN--21-09-16
https://telegra.ph/HEALTH-PASSPORT-OF-THE-CHIEF-ORDERLY-OF-THE-NAZI-21-09-19
https://telegra.ph/Joe-Biden-and-the-Oval-Office-MILITARY-STATE-BIOLOGICAL-TERRORISTS-NUMBER-1-09-06
01.06.1945, the shooting of a former student of the Adolf Hitler School (AHS), sixteen-year-old Heinz Petrie, convicted by an American military court for espionage. The teenager was shot near Braunschweich.
At the end of the war, 16-year-old Heinz Petri from Oyskirchen was part of the "last contingent" of the Nazi regime and was smuggled behind the Western Front line as a "Werewolf" – that is, a National Socialist partisan who was supposed to commit sabotage in the final stages of the war.
American soldiers caught him just a day later.
In fact, there were three boys, two of them AHS students. One of them, arrested by the Americans, managed to escape. Two others, Heinz Petri and Josef Schener, were convicted and executed on 1 June 1945.
In fact, there were three boys, two of them AHS students. One of them, arrested by the Americans, managed to escape. Two others, Heinz Petri and Josef Schener, were convicted and executed on 1 June 1945.
In a fairly wartime opinion, the president of the U.S. military court delivered a speech at the end of the trial and said: "The responsibility for the fate of the two boys lies with the Nazi leaders, and it was they who sent them (the boys) to their deaths. German military and political leaders are forcing us to fight fire with fire and blood and blood. We will not allow the guilty to hide behind women and children!"
A shot for being too revealing a swimsuit on the beach. Italy, 1957.
''Present and Future''.
Postcard from Odessa, the beginning of the XX century.