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Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre

The Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre (German: NS-Tötungsanstalt Grafeneck) housed in Grafeneck Castle was one of Nazi Germany's killing centres as part of their forced euthanasia programme. Today, it is a memorial site dedicated to the victims of the state-authorised programme also referred to since as Action T4. At least 10,500 mentally and physically disabled people, predominantly from Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, were systematically killed during 1940. It was one of the first places in Nazi Germany where people were killed in large numbers in a gas chamber using carbon monoxide. This was the beginning of the Euthanasia Programme. Grafeneck was also the central office of the "Charitable Ambulance Transport GmbH" (Gekrat),[1] which was headed by Reinhold Vorberg [Wikidata] and responsible for the transport of T4.

Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre
NS-Tötungsanstalt Grafeneck
Near Grafeneck in Germany
Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre
Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre
Coordinates48°23′33″N 9°25′45″E / 48.39250°N 9.42917°E / 48.39250; 9.42917
Site information
Open to
the public
Yes
Websitegedenkstaette-grafeneck.de
Site history
Built1560 (1560)
Garrison information
OccupantsSamaritan Foundation
Karl Brandt, Hitler's personal physician and organiser of Action T4
Philipp Bouhler, head of the T4 programme

Location Edit

Grafeneck is a castle-like property in Grafeneck, a part of the municipality of Gomadingen in Baden-Württemberg.

History Edit

Built around 1560, the Grafeneck Castle served as a hunting lodge for the Dukes of Württemberg. In the 19th century, it was used by the Forest Service. The Samaritan Foundation charity acquired it in 1928, and established an asylum for disabled people in the following year. On 13 October 1939 Richard Alber, Landrat of administrative district Münsingen from 1938 to 1944, ordered that Schloss Grafeneck had to be cleared the next day. Four buses evacuated around 100 disabled men and a few women from Grafeneck, as well as 12 employees, to the St. Elizabeth Monastery in Reute. All of these evacuated patients survived Aktion T4.

Modification of the building Edit

From October 1939 to January 1940 the former Samaritan Hospital was rebuilt into a killing area. Living and administration rooms were installed in the castle, as well as a registry office and a police office. In the castle grounds were built a wooden hut with about 100 beds, a parking space for the grey buses, a crematorium oven and a shed with facilities for gassing people. Moreover, staff were recruited from Stuttgart and Berlin: doctors, police officers, clerks, maintenance and transport personnel, economic and domestic staff, guards and funeral staff. Between October and December 1939, only 10 to 20 people were in the castle, but by 1940 there were about 100 staff.

Systematic murder under Action T4 started on 18 January 1940 in Grafeneck in a gas chamber camouflaged as a shower room, which was in a garage. The prison doctor operated a manometer valve to allow carbon monoxide to enter the gas chamber. The steel cylinders required were supplied by Mannesmann; the gas was made by IG Farben in Ludwigshafen (BASF).[2] The first murdered patients were from the mental hospital Eglfing-Haar in Bavaria. The victims came from 48 institutions for the handicapped and mentally ill: 40 from almost all districts of Baden-Württemberg, six from Bavaria and one each from Hesse and North Rhine-Westphalia.[3][4]

Killings with gas were performed between January and December 1940. On 13 December 1940 the last victims were burned in the crematory. Afterwards, Grafeneck was used to house children and mothers with babies who had fled from Allied bombing. 10,654 disabled and sick people were killed in Grafeneck Castle through lethal injections and gas. The French occupying forces returned the site in 1946/47 to the Samaritan Foundation or Samariterstiftung [de], who re-established it as a centre for disabled and mentally ill people, which still operates. In the 1950s, the development of the cemetery began as a memorial. In 2005, the documentation centre Grafeneck Memorial was built.

 

Documentation Centre Grafeneck The Grafeneck process presented in the summer of 1949, a total of 10,654 victims laid.

Offenders Edit

Some Grafeneck staff later held important positions in the Nazi concentration camps.[4]

Administration Edit

  • Ludwig Sprauer, (1884-1962), highest medical officer of Baden, responsible for implementation of "Euthanasie-Programm" in Baden.
  • Otto Mauthe, (1892-1974), highest medical officer of Württemberg, responsible for "Euthanasie"-administration in Württemberg.
  • Eugen Stähle, (1890-1948), medical officer in the Württemberg ministry of the interior.

Doctors Edit

The T4-organisators Viktor Brack and Karl Brandt arranged that the killing of ill people was to be made only by medical staff, according to a letter from Adolf Hitler (1. September). Operating the gas tap was the task of the doctors. However, the gas tap was operated by non-medical staff when the doctors were not present or for other reasons.[vague] Grafeneck doctors were referred to in correspondence using code names, shown here in quotation marks.

  • Head, "medical director": Horst Schumann (1906-1983), ("Dr Klein"), from January 1940 to the end of May/beginning of June 1940. Afterward worked at Sonnenstein Euthanasia Centre and as a camp doctor in Auschwitz-Birkenau.
  • Deputy: Ernst Tree Hard (1911-1943) ("Dr Hunter"): from January 1940 to April 1940. From December 1940 to June 1941 held the same position in the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre.
  • Deputy: Günther Hennecke (1912-1943) ("Dr Fleck"), from 25 April 1940 to December 1940. Afterward held the same position in the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre.

Management and other personnel Edit

  • "Office manager": Christian Wirth, the most important non-medical director of the killing center, responsible for security; the Special Registry Office Grafeneck; forging the official death certificates; the staff; and supervising murder operations.
  • Deputy "office manager": Gerhard Kurt Simon ("Dr. Ott", "wedge"); Drawing as a "registrar" ("anger") .[clarification needed]
  • First director of the Special Registry Office Grafeneck: Jakob Wöger ("Haase"), from December 1939 to June 1940.
  • Deputy Head of the Special Registry Office: Hermann Holzschuh, according to Wögers leaving his successor ("Lemm")[clarification needed][5]
  • "Burner": Josef Oberhauser, responsible for burning bodies in the specially installed cremators.
  • "Transport manager": Hermann Schwenninger, headed the transport squadron of "Gekrat", which brought the victims to Grafeneck.

Literature Edit

  • Susanne C. Knittel, The Historical Uncanny: Disability, Ethnicity, and the Politics of Holocaust Memory, (New York: Fordham University Press, 2015). ISBN 978-0823262786
  • Ernst Klee: "Euthanasie" im NS-Staat. Die "Vernichtung lebensunwerten Lebens". S. Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1983, ISBN 3-10-039303-1. – Standardwerk bis heute mit vielen Informationen über Grafeneck.
  • Karl Morlok: Wo bringt ihr uns hin? Geheime Reichssache Grafeneck, Stuttgart 1985. – Erste kleine Monographie.
  • Dokumente zur "Euthanasie" (in German), vol. Dokument 87, Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 1985, pp. 232f., ISBN 3596243270
  • Klaus-Peter Drechsel: Beurteilt Vermessen Ermordet. Praxis der Euthanasie bis zum Ende des deutschen Faschismus. Duisburg 1993, ISBN 3-927388-37-8.
  • Roland Müller u. a.: Krankenmord im Nationalsozialismus – Grafeneck und die "Euthanasie" in Südwestdeutschland. Stuttgart: Archiv der Stadt Stuttgart, Hohenheim Verlag. 2001. 150 Seiten, ISBN 3-89850-971-0.
  • Henry Friedlander: The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995.
  • Thomas Stöckle: Grafeneck 1940. Die Euthanasie-Verbrechen in Südwestdeutschland, 3. Auflage Tübingen 2012, Silberburg-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-87407-507-7
  • Jörg Kinzig, Thomas Stöckle (Hrsg.): 60 Jahre Tübinger Grafeneck-Prozess: Betrachtungen aus historischer, juristischer, medizinethischer und publizistischer Perspektive. Verlag Psychiatrie und Geschichte, Zwiefalten 2011; ISBN 978-3-931200-17-6
  • Henning Tümmers: Justitia und die Krankenmorde: Der "Grafeneck-Prozess" in Tübingen. In: Stefanie Westermann, Richard Kühl, Tim Ohnhäuser (Ed.): NS-"Euthanasie" und Erinnerung: Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung – Gedenkformen – Betroffenenperspektiven. Medizin und Nationalsozialismus 3, LIT Verlag, Münster 2011, S. 95–122; ISBN 978-3-643-10608-7
  • Werner Blesch, Konrad Kaiser u. a.: Uns wollen sie auf die Seite schaffen. Deportation und Ermordung von 262 behinderten Menschen der Johannesanstalten Mosbach und Schwarzach in den Jahren 1940 und 1944 In: Mosbach im Dritten Reich. Heft 2, Mosbach 1993.
  • Hans-Werner Scheuing: "…als Menschenleben gegen Sachwerte gewogen wurden." Die Anstalt Mosbach im Dritten Reich und die Euthanasie-Diskussion heute. 2. Auflage. Universitätsverlag Winter, Heidelberg 2004, ISBN 3-8253-1607-6.
  • Franka Rößner: Opfer staatlicher Gewalt – Gedenkstättenarbeit am Beispiel Grafeneck. In: Siegfried Frech/Frank Meier (Hrsg): Unterrichtsthema Staat und Gewalt. Kategoriale Zugänge und historische Beispiele. Wochenschau-Verlag, Schwalbach am Taunus 2012, ISBN 978-3-89974-820-8, S. 117–137.
  • Müller, Thomas; Kanis-Seyfried, Uta; Reichelt, Bernd; Schepker, Renate (Ed.): Psychiatrie in Oberschwaben. Die Weissenau zwischen Versorgungsfunktion und universitärer Forschung. Zwiefalten 2017.
  • Müller, Thomas; Schmidt-Michel, Paul-Otto; Schwarzbauer, Franz (Hg.): Vergangen? Spurensuche und Erinnerungsarbeit – Das Denkmal der grauen Busse. Zwiefalten 2017.
  • Mueller, Thomas and Reichelt, Bernd: The ‘Poitrot Report’, 1945. The first public document on Nazi Euthanasia. History of Psychiatry, London, 2019, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0957154X19842017.
  • Mueller, Thomas: "Remembering psychiatric patients in Germany murdered by the Nazi regime." The Lancet – Psychiatry. Vol. 5, Issue 10, Oct. 2018, pp. 789–790 (plus web appendix).
  • Schmidt-Michel, Paul-Otto; Müller, Thomas: "Der Umgang mit Angehörigen der Opfer der "Aktion T 4" durch die NS-Behörden und die Anstalten in Württemberg." Psychiatrische Praxis 45 (2018) S. 126-132.

References Edit

  1. ^ Henry Friedlander: Der Weg zum NS-Genozid. Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-8270-0265-6, S. 314.
  2. ^ grafeneck.finalnet.de: Endstation Grafeneck. Euthanasie auf der Schwäbischen Alb zur NS-Zeit 2010-02-11 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 September 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  4. ^ a b badische-zeitung.de: Beginn des organisierten Massenmords Badische Zeitung, 17. Januar 2015
  5. ^ Die Täter von Grafeneck - Seite des Landesarchivs BW, Mannheim

External links Edit

  • (in German)
  • Thomas Stöckle; Eberhard Zacher; Alfred Hagemann; Stefanie Esders (2000). "Grafeneck im Jahr 1940" (PDF) (in German). Landeszentrale für politische Bildung Baden-Württemberg. Retrieved 31 May 2016. mit Zeittafel, Fotos und weiterführenden Literaturhinweisen
  • "Die Wege zur ‚Euthanasie‘ im NS-Staat und ihre Verwirklichung in der Tötungsanstalt Grafeneck"[permanent dead link], Anna Ketterer, PH Reutlingen, Seminararbeit, WS 2004/2005, pdf-Datei, 42 S.
  • "Tötung in einer Minute." Quellen zur Euthanasie im Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, virtual exhibition
  • Files of the so-called Grafeneck-Process to "Euthanasia" before the court of Tübingen 1949 as digital reproduction Online-offer Staatsarchiv Sigmaringen
  • 2009 – 70 years after euthanasia murders in Grafeneck: "trace of rememerance" A colour track between the place of the victims and the offenders in the ministry of the interior in Stuttgart.
  • Übersicht der deutschen Gedenkstätten, ns-gedenkstaetten.de
  • Projekt: Gedenken an Anna, Plan, Fotoserie von heute u. a.
  • [permanent dead link] The grey busses a journey to the uncertain[dead link]

grafeneck, euthanasia, centre, german, tötungsanstalt, grafeneck, housed, grafeneck, castle, nazi, germany, killing, centres, part, their, forced, euthanasia, programme, today, memorial, site, dedicated, victims, state, authorised, programme, also, referred, s. The Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre German NS Totungsanstalt Grafeneck housed in Grafeneck Castle was one of Nazi Germany s killing centres as part of their forced euthanasia programme Today it is a memorial site dedicated to the victims of the state authorised programme also referred to since as Action T4 At least 10 500 mentally and physically disabled people predominantly from Bavaria and Baden Wurttemberg were systematically killed during 1940 It was one of the first places in Nazi Germany where people were killed in large numbers in a gas chamber using carbon monoxide This was the beginning of the Euthanasia Programme Grafeneck was also the central office of the Charitable Ambulance Transport GmbH Gekrat 1 which was headed by Reinhold Vorberg Wikidata and responsible for the transport of T4 Grafeneck Euthanasia CentreNS Totungsanstalt GrafeneckNear Grafeneck in GermanyGrafeneck CastleGrafeneck Euthanasia CentreShow map of Baden WurttembergGrafeneck Euthanasia CentreShow map of GermanyCoordinates48 23 33 N 9 25 45 E 48 39250 N 9 42917 E 48 39250 9 42917Site informationOpen tothe publicYesWebsitegedenkstaette grafeneck deSite historyBuilt1560 1560 Garrison informationOccupantsSamaritan FoundationKarl Brandt Hitler s personal physician and organiser of Action T4Philipp Bouhler head of the T4 programme Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Modification of the building 4 Offenders 5 Administration 6 Doctors 7 Management and other personnel 8 Literature 9 References 10 External linksLocation EditGrafeneck is a castle like property in Grafeneck a part of the municipality of Gomadingen in Baden Wurttemberg History EditBuilt around 1560 the Grafeneck Castle served as a hunting lodge for the Dukes of Wurttemberg In the 19th century it was used by the Forest Service The Samaritan Foundation charity acquired it in 1928 and established an asylum for disabled people in the following year On 13 October 1939 Richard Alber Landrat of administrative district Munsingen from 1938 to 1944 ordered that Schloss Grafeneck had to be cleared the next day Four buses evacuated around 100 disabled men and a few women from Grafeneck as well as 12 employees to the St Elizabeth Monastery in Reute All of these evacuated patients survived Aktion T4 Modification of the building EditFrom October 1939 to January 1940 the former Samaritan Hospital was rebuilt into a killing area Living and administration rooms were installed in the castle as well as a registry office and a police office In the castle grounds were built a wooden hut with about 100 beds a parking space for the grey buses a crematorium oven and a shed with facilities for gassing people Moreover staff were recruited from Stuttgart and Berlin doctors police officers clerks maintenance and transport personnel economic and domestic staff guards and funeral staff Between October and December 1939 only 10 to 20 people were in the castle but by 1940 there were about 100 staff Systematic murder under Action T4 started on 18 January 1940 in Grafeneck in a gas chamber camouflaged as a shower room which was in a garage The prison doctor operated a manometer valve to allow carbon monoxide to enter the gas chamber The steel cylinders required were supplied by Mannesmann the gas was made by IG Farben in Ludwigshafen BASF 2 The first murdered patients were from the mental hospital Eglfing Haar in Bavaria The victims came from 48 institutions for the handicapped and mentally ill 40 from almost all districts of Baden Wurttemberg six from Bavaria and one each from Hesse and North Rhine Westphalia 3 4 Killings with gas were performed between January and December 1940 On 13 December 1940 the last victims were burned in the crematory Afterwards Grafeneck was used to house children and mothers with babies who had fled from Allied bombing 10 654 disabled and sick people were killed in Grafeneck Castle through lethal injections and gas The French occupying forces returned the site in 1946 47 to the Samaritan Foundation or Samariterstiftung de who re established it as a centre for disabled and mentally ill people which still operates In the 1950s the development of the cemetery began as a memorial In 2005 the documentation centre Grafeneck Memorial was built nbsp Documentation Centre Grafeneck The Grafeneck process presented in the summer of 1949 a total of 10 654 victims laid Offenders EditSome Grafeneck staff later held important positions in the Nazi concentration camps 4 Administration EditLudwig Sprauer 1884 1962 highest medical officer of Baden responsible for implementation of Euthanasie Programm in Baden Otto Mauthe 1892 1974 highest medical officer of Wurttemberg responsible for Euthanasie administration in Wurttemberg Eugen Stahle 1890 1948 medical officer in the Wurttemberg ministry of the interior Doctors EditThe T4 organisators Viktor Brack and Karl Brandt arranged that the killing of ill people was to be made only by medical staff according to a letter from Adolf Hitler 1 September Operating the gas tap was the task of the doctors However the gas tap was operated by non medical staff when the doctors were not present or for other reasons vague Grafeneck doctors were referred to in correspondence using code names shown here in quotation marks Head medical director Horst Schumann 1906 1983 Dr Klein from January 1940 to the end of May beginning of June 1940 Afterward worked at Sonnenstein Euthanasia Centre and as a camp doctor in Auschwitz Birkenau Deputy Ernst Tree Hard 1911 1943 Dr Hunter from January 1940 to April 1940 From December 1940 to June 1941 held the same position in the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre Deputy Gunther Hennecke 1912 1943 Dr Fleck from 25 April 1940 to December 1940 Afterward held the same position in the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre Management and other personnel Edit Office manager Christian Wirth the most important non medical director of the killing center responsible for security the Special Registry Office Grafeneck forging the official death certificates the staff and supervising murder operations Deputy office manager Gerhard Kurt Simon Dr Ott wedge Drawing as a registrar anger clarification needed First director of the Special Registry Office Grafeneck Jakob Woger Haase from December 1939 to June 1940 Deputy Head of the Special Registry Office Hermann Holzschuh according to Wogers leaving his successor Lemm clarification needed 5 Burner Josef Oberhauser responsible for burning bodies in the specially installed cremators Transport manager Hermann Schwenninger headed the transport squadron of Gekrat which brought the victims to Grafeneck Literature EditSusanne C Knittel The Historical Uncanny Disability Ethnicity and the Politics of Holocaust Memory New York Fordham University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0823262786 Ernst Klee Euthanasie im NS Staat Die Vernichtung lebensunwerten Lebens S Fischer Verlag Frankfurt am Main 1983 ISBN 3 10 039303 1 Standardwerk bis heute mit vielen Informationen uber Grafeneck Karl Morlok Wo bringt ihr uns hin Geheime Reichssache Grafeneck Stuttgart 1985 Erste kleine Monographie Dokumente zur Euthanasie in German vol Dokument 87 Frankfurt am Main Fischer 1985 pp 232f ISBN 3596243270 Klaus Peter Drechsel Beurteilt Vermessen Ermordet Praxis der Euthanasie bis zum Ende des deutschen Faschismus Duisburg 1993 ISBN 3 927388 37 8 Roland Muller u a Krankenmord im Nationalsozialismus Grafeneck und die Euthanasie in Sudwestdeutschland Stuttgart Archiv der Stadt Stuttgart Hohenheim Verlag 2001 150 Seiten ISBN 3 89850 971 0 Henry Friedlander The Origins of Nazi Genocide From Euthanasia to the Final Solution Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1995 Thomas Stockle Grafeneck 1940 Die Euthanasie Verbrechen in Sudwestdeutschland 3 Auflage Tubingen 2012 Silberburg Verlag ISBN 978 3 87407 507 7 Jorg Kinzig Thomas Stockle Hrsg 60 Jahre Tubinger Grafeneck Prozess Betrachtungen aus historischer juristischer medizinethischer und publizistischer Perspektive Verlag Psychiatrie und Geschichte Zwiefalten 2011 ISBN 978 3 931200 17 6 Henning Tummers Justitia und die Krankenmorde Der Grafeneck Prozess in Tubingen In Stefanie Westermann Richard Kuhl Tim Ohnhauser Ed NS Euthanasie und Erinnerung Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung Gedenkformen Betroffenenperspektiven Medizin und Nationalsozialismus 3 LIT Verlag Munster 2011 S 95 122 ISBN 978 3 643 10608 7 Werner Blesch Konrad Kaiser u a Uns wollen sie auf die Seite schaffen Deportation und Ermordung von 262 behinderten Menschen der Johannesanstalten Mosbach und Schwarzach in den Jahren 1940 und 1944 In Mosbach im Dritten Reich Heft 2 Mosbach 1993 Hans Werner Scheuing als Menschenleben gegen Sachwerte gewogen wurden Die Anstalt Mosbach im Dritten Reich und die Euthanasie Diskussion heute 2 Auflage Universitatsverlag Winter Heidelberg 2004 ISBN 3 8253 1607 6 Franka Rossner Opfer staatlicher Gewalt Gedenkstattenarbeit am Beispiel Grafeneck In Siegfried Frech Frank Meier Hrsg Unterrichtsthema Staat und Gewalt Kategoriale Zugange und historische Beispiele Wochenschau Verlag Schwalbach am Taunus 2012 ISBN 978 3 89974 820 8 S 117 137 Muller Thomas Kanis Seyfried Uta Reichelt Bernd Schepker Renate Ed Psychiatrie in Oberschwaben Die Weissenau zwischen Versorgungsfunktion und universitarer Forschung Zwiefalten 2017 Muller Thomas Schmidt Michel Paul Otto Schwarzbauer Franz Hg Vergangen Spurensuche und Erinnerungsarbeit Das Denkmal der grauen Busse Zwiefalten 2017 Mueller Thomas and Reichelt Bernd The Poitrot Report 1945 The first public document on Nazi Euthanasia History of Psychiatry London 2019 DOI https doi org 10 1177 0957154X19842017 Mueller Thomas Remembering psychiatric patients in Germany murdered by the Nazi regime The Lancet Psychiatry Vol 5 Issue 10 Oct 2018 pp 789 790 plus web appendix Schmidt Michel Paul Otto Muller Thomas Der Umgang mit Angehorigen der Opfer der Aktion T 4 durch die NS Behorden und die Anstalten in Wurttemberg Psychiatrische Praxis 45 2018 S 126 132 References Edit Henry Friedlander Der Weg zum NS Genozid Berlin 1997 ISBN 3 8270 0265 6 S 314 grafeneck finalnet de Endstation Grafeneck Euthanasie auf der Schwabischen Alb zur NS Zeit Archived 2010 02 11 at the Wayback Machine Hintergrundinformationen Archived from the original on 3 September 2010 Retrieved 11 July 2016 a b badische zeitung de Beginn des organisierten Massenmords Badische Zeitung 17 Januar 2015 Die Tater von Grafeneck Seite des Landesarchivs BW MannheimExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Action T4 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Schloss Grafeneck grafeneck finalnet de in German Thomas Stockle Eberhard Zacher Alfred Hagemann Stefanie Esders 2000 Grafeneck im Jahr 1940 PDF in German Landeszentrale fur politische Bildung Baden Wurttemberg Retrieved 31 May 2016 mit Zeittafel Fotos und weiterfuhrenden Literaturhinweisen Die Wege zur Euthanasie im NS Staat und ihre Verwirklichung in der Totungsanstalt Grafeneck permanent dead link Anna Ketterer PH Reutlingen Seminararbeit WS 2004 2005 pdf Datei 42 S Totung in einer Minute Quellen zur Euthanasie im Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg virtual exhibition Files of the so called Grafeneck Process to Euthanasia before the court of Tubingen 1949 as digital reproduction Online offer Staatsarchiv Sigmaringen Final station Grafeneck Euthanasia at Grafeneck castle 1940 2009 70 years after euthanasia murders in Grafeneck trace of rememerance A colour track between the place of the victims and the offenders in the ministry of the interior in Stuttgart Ubersicht der deutschen Gedenkstatten ns gedenkstaetten de Projekt Gedenken an Anna Plan Fotoserie von heute u a permanent dead link The grey busses a journey to the uncertain dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre amp oldid 1159275602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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