Thank you for this , Christian
Hardy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Christian Herrmann" <cyberorange_at_gmx.de>
To: "HARDY BREIER" <HARDY3_at_bezeqint.net>
Cc: "CZERNOWITZ-L" <Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu>
Sent: Saturday, March 16, 2013 3:35 PM
Subject: Aw: [Cz-L] By gun and by knife.
Dear Hardy,
the books you are asking for, exist. They are rare exceptions, but they have
been writen. To remain silent was the standard in post-war Germany. "Opa war
kein Nazi" (Grandpa was not a Nazi) was the title of a scientific study on
family memories a few years ago. The title is very self speaking.
Concerning the books, I would recommend this:
Schweigen die Täter reden die Enkel (If the perpetrators remain silent, the
grandsons speak) by Claudia Brunner and Uwe von Seltmann
Die Brüder Himmler: Eine deutsche Familiengeschichte (The Himmler Brothers,
a German Family History) by Katrin Himmler
Der Schatten meines Vaters (The Shadow of my Father) by Richard von Schirach
Schweigen tut weh: Eine deutsche Familiengeschichte (Silence Hurts, a German
Family History) by Alexandra Senfft
Am Beispiel meines Bruders (Using the example of my brother) by Uwe Timm
Concerning Serah's point, if there was justice: No, there was none. Only a
very small number of perpetrators were imprisoned or ended at the gallows of
the Allies. The most had a normal life, a pension or even did built a career
on their past.
I remember my biology teacher in school, who praised - without any need -
the "achievements" of nazi experiments on prisoners in concentration camps.
He was a young man, born after the war. Why did he? Because his professor at
the university was able to build a career after the war on the base of the
data of his own experiments. When critical questions about the origin of the
data came up, some students felt solidarity with the professor.
I remember a school mate who studied medicine later. Once she took me to the
exhibition of medical preparations in the university of Cologne. I saw a
longitudinal section throug a pregnat woman. I asked her where this exhibits
came from. She said they were from political prisoners who were executed
during the nazi dictatorship in the city jail. Years later I read in the
newspaper that this human remains were buried. A very late justice.
Christian
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Received on 2013-03-16 09:26:13
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