On this day 1940, may 15: About German crimes against Polish children, which was blocked last Saturday. In the banned post, we wrote about German plans to Germanize children, referring to authentic documents.
Following many appeals, today our profile became visible and active again.
Dated 15 May 1940, "Einige Gedanken über die Behandlung der Fremdenvölker im Osten ("A Few Thoughts about the Treatment of Racial Aliens in the East") by Heinrich Himmler is a blood-chilling document – especially where it comes to children.
It’s basically a kidnapper’s manual, inspired by the theories of Walther Darré, the Reich's Minister of Food and Agriculture, whose "Blut und Boden" ["Blood and Soil"] racial ideology laid foundations for the denationalization program.
In the years 1940-1945, the Third Reich removed hundreds of thousands of children from the lands it had conquered, treating them like product, and applying rigorous quality control procedures.
The Nazis were looking for germanization material, and the youth deemed to qualify for it due to their "good blood" were taken from their families, and directed to special camps, where they underwent selection.
Those of them who were declared fit for the program went through initial germanization there before being sent to German families.
Non-conforming "products" disappeared in concentration camps, or were re-used for "medical" experiments.
In all, out of 200,000 Polish children, only 30,000 were recovered after the war.
The rest vanished – their bodies erased from the face of the earth, or identity removed from their own and other people’s memory.
The author of the kidnapper’s manual, Heinrich Himmler, worried that the uprooted kids would be ostracized by the German society, and recommended subjecting them to the procedure in tender age and secrecy, so that they could blend in and disappear.
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