아직도 나찌 히믈러를 독일의 영웅으로 생각하고 있는 그의 '딸' The daughter who STILL hero worships Heinrich Himmler(VIDEO)

The daughter who STILL hero worships Heinrich Himmler: How SS chief's adoring child remains a committed Nazi who supports war criminals on the 70th anniversary of his suicide 


Gudrun Burwitz was a teenager when her beloved father took his own life

She claims the evil man portrayed after his death was 'Allied lies' 

In response, she dedicated her life to helping Nazis escape prosecution

It is said, now in her 80s, she is a 'godmother' to far right women's groups



 위의 우측 사진은 나찌시대 실내 경기장에서 같이 있는 하인리히 히믈러와 그의 딸 구드룬 부르위쯔다.


유태인 학살과 집중 캠프에서 ( jødeudryddelser og KZ-lejre )나찌들중에 가장 악랄한 역할을 담당했던, 하인리히 히믈러의 딸은 아직 살아서 81세의 고령에도 불구하고 활동적으로 나찌 시대에 대해 옹호하고, 그  전범들을 돕는 일들을 하고 있다.


기소당한 나찌 전범들을 돕고 옹호하기위해1951년대 나찌 교도대 (SS folk) 출신의 사람이 만든 stille hilfe라는 단체에서 , 태평양 지역 이사로서  네오 나찌 서클의 롤모델로 활동하고 있다.


나찌 과학자인 안드레아 휩께(Andrea Roepke)의 말을 인용한 영국 데일리 메일에 따르면, 그녀는 늙은  나찌 전범들을 돕기위해 애쓰고 있을뿐만 아니라 네오 나찌 그룹을 위한 기금 모금을 위해서도 적극적인 활동을 하고 있다. 


독일 뮌헨에 살고 있는 그녀는 최근, 네델란드에서 SS 요원으로 재직당시 유태인을  잔인하게 살인한 죄로 기소당한, 89살의 카렐 파버가 독일에서 추방 당하지  않도록 하는데 힘을 쏟고 있으며, 또한 나찌시절 덴마크에서 편집자 칼 헨릭 클레멘슨을 살해하고, 덴마크 거주 유태인들을 기소하는데 적극적인 역할을 한 혐으로,덴마크 정부가 지속적으로 독일정부에 추방해줄것을 요구했으나, 아직까지 분명한 이유없이 독일에서 추방되지 않고 있는 , 90세의 쇠렌 캄(Søren Kam)을 돕고 있는것으로  알려졌다. 


쇠렌 캄은 영국 텔레비젼에서 공개적으로 그의 죄를 인정했기때문에, 독일 정부가 그를 덴마크로 추방하지 않는 처사는 더 이해 안되는 부분이다. 


데일리 메일이 아주 조심스런 구드룬 브루위쯔와 한  인터뷰에서 그녀는 " 나는 내가 무엇을 하는지는 절대 말할수 없다, 나는 단지 내가 할수 있는 일을 할 뿐이다 " 라고 말했다

출처 http://adoramo.egloos.com/707176


[VIDEO]

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3093947/The-daughter-hero-worships-Heinrich-Himmler-SS-chief-s-adoring-child-remains-committed-Nazi-supports-war-criminals-70th-anniversary-suicide.html#v-3989098701001


By ALLAN HALL IN BERLIN FOR MAILONLINE

Seventy years ago today, one of the most evil men who ever lived bit into a poison capsule and ended his life. 

Heinrich Himmler -  the architect of the 'Final Solution' which led to the murders of six million Jews - is a man few wish to remember.


But there is one person who will be mourning the anniversary today: his daughter Gudrun Burwitz, the so-called Princess of Nazism, still believes he was a good man.


And more than seven decades after she wrote of the 'marvelous' time she had visiting her father at notorious death camp Daschau, she is still a supporter of the Nazi ideology. 


Indeed, the intervening years have done little to quell her passion for the convictions held by her father - and that passion has led her to be worshipped as 'almost a deity' in neo-Nazi cells.


She has dedicated her life to 'helping' surviving Nazis evade justice, and even now, in her 80s, is considered the 'godmother' of far-right women's groups, intent on infiltrating nurseries and schools to help them spread their vile ideology amongst the young. 

Gudrun has been described as a 'true believer' by those in the know, and from the outside it certainly seems she has never got over her father's death.   


Vile family history: Gudrun Burwitz is the daughter of Heinrich Himmler, the architect of the 'Final Solution' which killed six million Jews

Vile family history: Gudrun Burwitz is the daughter of Heinrich Himmler, the architect of the 'Final Solution' which killed six million Jews



She was 14 when he died and, far from disowning her father as the children of Hitler's top officers have done, she remained as fiercely devoted to him as he was to Hitler, keeping a scrapbook of every newspaper picture she could find of him. 


She still holds on to her cherished memories of the years the Nazis were in power - years which, for the rest of the world, were among the most horrendous of the 20th century.


'On December 24 each year I used to drive with my father to see Hitler at the Brown House in Munich and wish him Merry Christmas,' she has said. 'When I was little he used to give me dolls. Later he always gave me a box of chocolates.' 


In her house in a leafy Munich street lies a manuscript to his memory. It 'demolishes the lies' the Allies told about her father after the war. Not surprisingly, it has never been published.


Scroll down for video  

Close: But Gudrun - pictured here with her father - has remained loyal to his memory, claiming the portrayal of Himmler as an evil man is just Allied lies, and even believing he was murdered by enemy forces

Close: But Gudrun - pictured here with her father - has remained loyal to his memory, claiming the portrayal of Himmler as an evil man is just Allied lies, and even believing he was murdered by enemy forces

Disgusting: Himmler, seen here inspecting Russian prisoners, was known to bring his daughter to the concentration camps where he was killing millions of innocent men, women and children

Disgusting: Himmler, seen here inspecting Russian prisoners, was known to bring his daughter to the concentration camps where he was killing millions of innocent men, women and children


One of the biggest 'lies', Gudrun claims, is how he died: she clings to the belief her father was murdered by the Allies, who had captured Himmler after he went on the run dressed as a soldier - completing his disguise by shaving of his moustache and wearing an eye patch. 


'I don't believe he swallowed that poison capsule,' she said. 'My mother and I never had official notification of his death. To me, the photo of him dead is a retouched photo of when he was alive.' 


As the leading figure in the shadowy and sinister support group Stille Hilfe – Silent Help – she brings succor and financial help to the monsters still at large.


In 2010, Gudrun's organisation paid for the defence of Samuel Kunz, an SS man charged with complicity in the murders of 437,000 Jews in Belzec extermination camp in occupied Poland.


Two years before he died in his bed, she came to the defence of Klaas Carel Faber, 90 – a Dutchman who served with the SS in Holland where he murdered Jews – to prevent his being extradited to his homeland from Germany, where he lived in peace and quiet.


During Gudrun's time with Stille Hilfe the group has eased the way into society for many Nazi war criminals, including Klaus Barbie, the Gestapo Butcher of Lyon, and Erich Priebke, SS murderer of Italian partisans.


It also helped Anton Malloth, a brutal guard in a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia, who was sentenced to death in his absence before finding refuge in Germany.


Malloth was put up in an OAP home with Stille Hilfe funds. Every week Gudrun visited him with fruit and ­chocolates in a residence built on land once owned by Hitler's deputy Rudolf Hess.


'You need building up,' she would tell him, stroking his hands.


Evil: Himmler (far left) was very close to Hitler, and Gudrun would visit him every Christmas

Evil: Himmler (far left) was very close to Hitler, and Gudrun would visit him every Christmas

Hierarchy:  Himmler, second right, was part of the most evil groups of men of the 20th century, pictured here with Hitler, Herman Goring, who is holding hat, and Josef Goebbels, fourth from left

Hierarchy:  Himmler, second right, was part of the most evil groups of men of the 20th century, pictured here with Hitler, Herman Goring, who is holding hat, and Josef Goebbels, fourth from left


Although legal, the organisation she runs operates in a moral grey zone.


It has just 40 members but gets money from rich industrialists sympathetic to the Nazi cause and an estimated 1,000 others from Europe's far right.


Tracked down to the Munich suburb of Furstenried, where she lives in a maisonette with her husband Wolf-Dieter, Gudrun Burwitz is as reticent now as she has been ever since becoming the 'Princess of Nazism', as a leading historian has called her.


'I never talk about my work,' she said outside her home in Berlin. 'I just do what I can when I can.'

Her husband - himself said to be a Neo-Nazi - was more forthright. 'Go away – you are not welcome,' he said.

She is a true believer and, like all zealots, that makes her dangerous. 
German government official

Their home is just 15 miles from the first concentration camp at Dachau where 36,000 people were murdered during the 12 years of the Third Reich. 


Gudrun, now 85, knows it well, for she used to visit it as a child with her father, who called her 'Puppi', meaning Doll.

In one diary entry, she wrote: '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. Marvelous. 

'And afterwards we had a lot to eat. It was very nice.' 


There are also pictures of Gudrun with her murderous father, taken just yards from where thousands were dying.

But their jubilant expressions - one has her laughing and joking as he looks on adoringly - suggest nothing was amiss.

Himmler was like that – he regularly took his child on the plane with him on his murderous travels around Germany and its conquered lands. 


Family protrait: Heinrich Himmler in Valepp, Bavaria with his wife Marga, back right, his daughter Gudrun, front centre, his adopted son Gerhard, front right, and a friend of Gudrun's, front left, in 1935

Family protrait: Heinrich Himmler in Valepp, Bavaria with his wife Marga, back right, his daughter Gudrun, front centre, his adopted son Gerhard, front right, and a friend of Gudrun's, front left, in 1935

Hidden: Himmler's grave is unmarked to ensure it does not become a shrine for Neo-Nazis. Gudrun claims she was never sent a medical report, which she sees as proof her father was murdered

Hidden: Himmler's grave is unmarked to ensure it does not become a shrine for Neo-Nazis. Gudrun claims she was never sent a medical report, which she sees as proof her father was murdered


Puppi's cossetted world collapsed when her father committed suicide in the Allied interrogation centre near Luneburg, on May 23, 1945. 


Her belief that he was murdered led to her pledging her life to helping his comrades whenever she could.

German journalists who write about Stille Hilfe remark on the power she now wields in the organisation. Often quoted is a rally of neo-Nazis she attended in Ulrichsberg, Austria, several years ago, where she was idolised by SS veterans. 


'They were terrified of her,' said Andrea Ropke, an authority on neo-Nazism who was there. 'All these high-ranking former officers lined up and she asked, 'Where did you serve?' showing off a vast knowledge of military logistics.'

She and her group are monitored by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Germany's domestic intelligence service.


One official said: 'She is over 80 but pin sharp. She likes it if you think of her as some Mrs Doubtfire figure but that is not the case. 


'She has a genuine love for these men and women who served the worst parts of the Nazi regime from 1933 until 1945. 


'She is a true believer and, like all zealots, that makes her dangerous.'


Hero worship: A source says Gudrun 'has a genuine love for these men and women who served the worst parts of the Nazi regime from 1933 until 1945'

Hero worship: A source says Gudrun 'has a genuine love for these men and women who served the worst parts of the Nazi regime from 1933 until 1945'


She has become the godmother to far-right women's groups. They are infiltrating kindergartens, schools and other organisations. In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern state, there is a screening programme to try to stop them working in nurseries.


But for all her work in the present, the past is the place where she chooses to dwell with her beloved father.  

Gudrun spoke in the 1950s of her intention to travel to America 'where the documents are' that would clear her father. 

It is ­understood she has never been, perhaps even doubtful that the Americans would grant an entry visa to the daughter of the man who gave the world Auschwitz. 


DAILYMAIL


"from past to future"

데일리건설뉴스 construction news

콘페이퍼 conpaper




.

댓글()