Hartheim: the Nazi Castle of Horror

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Among the sinister buildings that have left their mark on history, Hartheim Castle stands out like no other. No one could have guessed that this beautiful Renaissance castle nestled in the Austrian countryside, would become one of the most terrifying scenes of history. The shock on arrival is beauty. I know very well what happened there, but every time, its beauty shocks me. Intended as a care center, Hartheim was officially a peaceful refuge for the physically and mentally disabled. However, by the end of the 1930s, disturbing phenomena began to occur. Some people say they saw that there were people on the bus when they arrived and the bus was empty when it left. There was a lot of smoke, and it was smelling. It was the smell of burnt meat, of burnt human flesh. People were beginning to think something strange was happening in this house. Hundreds of sick people were mysteriously disappearing under strange conditions. What intrigued the German population was that, a lot of families were receiving very standardized documents informing them that their relatives had died of pneumonia or cardiac arrest. It was very fishy. What secrets are hidden behind the walls of Hartheim Castle? What no one knew is that the 17th-century building was completely renovated as an extermination center, a place that was to house one of the very first gas chambers of human history. Hartheim is not a concentration camp, Hartheim is a place of murder. Behind this diabolical plan was the Nazi regime that sought to purify the German race by removing the genetically sick. Those deemed useless, a clandestine project that transformed the mansion into a secret base. WWhat was the daily life of the executioners? What atrocities did they commit? We will reveal the secrets of these heinous crimes that the Nazis tried so hard to hide from the world. This is the horrifying story of Hartheim Castle. The small village of Hartheim is situated in the northeast of Austria, around 50 kilometers from the German border. A peaceful province in the middle of the Danube countryside and its farm markets, which supply the whole of Austria. Hartheim Castle is located in the center of this rural village, steeped in Catholic traditions for many centuries. Hartheim Castle, in its present configuration, was built at the beginning of the 17th century, between 1610 and 1620 approximately, in the purest Austrian style. It is a Renaissance castle with painted archways. There is a big indoor courtyard. As the centuries went by, the castle changed owners, and it ended up in the hands of the Starhemberg family. A family of local nobility. In the year 1896, it was given to a Catholic society, and they had to treat handicaps. For over 40 years, Hartheim Castle became a home for the mentally disabled from the entire region. It was a place where 200 people were treated. The special thing was that the people who were cared for, they also helped in the surrounding. It was a little farm and it was very interesting to see that they tried to work with the people and not only care for them. A place where you don't exclude, but you include. You include because the mentally disabled worked alongside the physically disabled. The disabled people that could, had the opportunity to work with animals. It didn't look like they were being used, but that they were given the best life possible. In that sense, it was more progressive and even unique. It's a place of life. For decades, disabled people had the right to live in Hartheim without judgment. An oasis of tolerance that would soon disappear. At the end of the 1930s, the atmosphere in the castle became more serious. Officially, Hartheim was still an institution for the care of the disabled, but they decided to close it off from the public. Disabled patients disappeared completely from the gardens and the villagers noticed buses that arrived and left daily in the courtyard of the castle. In the village next door, people were surprised to see these cars and buses of sick people. People say they saw that there were people on the bus when they arrived, and the bus was empty when it left. Little by little, people were noticing what was happening. The weird things that were happening in the castle, and they never brought out the sick people. Even more disturbing, thick, nauseating fumes began to emanate from the chimneys of the castle and spread across the town. There was a lot of smoke. It did not smell like normal smoke when you burn wood. Witnesses at the time reported the horrible stench that was permanently being emitted. A smell of burnt poultry and burnt human flesh. The villagers, frightened, began to ask questions. They were quickly summoned by the castle authorities, who gave them an explanation. Of course, people were afraid. Local people spoke about it, that something was going on and it was something wrong in the castle. There was a meeting in a local restaurant, in a top-secret area, of course, and they said they were working up diesel for submarines there, which is why it smelled so bad. These justifications hardly convinced the inhabitants of the village. However, how could anyone imagine what was really going on behind the walls of Hartheim Castle? What no one knew was that the castle was part of a diabolical plan developed by the Nazi powers in Berlin. When Hitler came to power in Germany a few years earlier, he targeted those accused of corrupting the purity of Aryan blood, all the sick and disabled people suspected of having undesirable genes. The Fuhrer wanted to prevent them from ever reproducing. Tens of thousands of the handicapped in Germany are sterilized by force. Often without asking the advice of their families. To legitimize this war against disabled people, a propaganda campaign was even launched by his minister, Joseph Goebbels. From 1933, there was a massive campaign managed by academic education with posters and leaflets, and also by the cinema. We will distribute these in exhibitions, in films, and in photos. Monstrous, designed to shock and make these people seem useless. These campaigns were not yet calls to murder. They were awareness campaigns. In the end, these brutal measures led to the sterilization of over 400,000 disabled people considered a threat to the German Aryan race. However, this was still not enough. With Germany's entry into the war, Hitler wanted to completely eradicate all these additional mouths to feed. This is where Hartheim Castle will soon enter the Fuhrer's plans A top-secret operation was launched called Action T4. There was a meeting in the chancellery with Hitler and the doctors in which they decided to assassinate disabled and sick people. One of the rare orders signed by Hitler by hand. The T4 administration sent all the clinic forms that they had to fill out. Then medical experts from the T4 studied each patient's file and they decided who had the right to live and who had to be exterminated. To carry out their plan, the Nazis created in the greatest secrecy six euthanasia centers throughout the Reich. Five in Germany, the majority in old hospitals and one in newly annexed Austria in Hartheim Castle. The geographical situation of Hartheim played an important role in this decision. It is located near Linz, a city that constitutes an important communication hub. However, it is not in the center of the city nor in the middle of a dense urban zone. an important communication hub. This position, a little bit apart, could guarantee that the crimes which would be perpetrated there would remain secret. They are aware that they are crossing boundaries that the German people with their Christian liberal and humanist morality, would not understand. That's why Operation T4 remained a secret because the operation would massacre German people. Their first step was to transform the Renaissance Castle into an extermination center. Work began in the winter of 1939. The 4,000-square-meter building was completely refurbished for the needs of the T4 operation. The third floor was transformed into a storage area for confiscated belongings and clothing. On the 2nd floor, dozens of spacious single rooms were built for staff members, as well as a large reception room. The first floor is dedicated to the bureaucracy, the area reserved for dozens of secretaries and administration officials. The bulk of the work will be concentrated on the ground floor under the arches of the courtyard. First, in the north wing, the creation of several rooms to treat convicts. Then in the West Wing, they built what looked like a shower room, which, in reality, was one of the first gas chambers in history. It's the first time in history that they made a prototype of a gas chamber. In the framework of Hartheim, the shower was not effective, unlike some other extermination centers. It didn't work in masking the noise of the gas which entered. This gas chamber measures barely 25 meters squared. To make it completely airtight, two accesses were dug out, closed off by two bomb-proof doors. The door to the courtyard is completely blocked. The gas is released from a small room next to the chamber where the gas bottles are arranged. There is a small room that has always been there where they kept the gas cylinders. In Hartheim, they used carbon monoxide. Bought from a pharmaceutical and chemical industry in Germany. Basically, they ordered the gas cylinders. As an extension of the gas chamber, they built a morgue to store the corpses. Finally, at the extreme southwest of the building is the room where they burned the tortured bodies to ashes. The crematorium. It's a crematorium with two ovens, called a muffle furnace. It could burn two to eight bodies at a time. In it was a grinder which was used to crush the bones that came out of the crematorium. In May 1940, construction was completed. Hartheim Castle was now ready for use. Administration entrusted the management of the new center to a man with a particularly disturbing profile. Christian Wirth, nicknamed Christian the Terrible, a German policeman who had become an SS officer and was close to the Chancellory. Christian Wirth, here we enter the category of criminals. Let's say a man, a feared man. He was the man who made sure everything was functioning. They describe him as a rather rude guy, really tough, and they were so afraid of him. He was a feared and formidable man. He was a member of the SS, meaning of the secret Nazi police. He was then a man who Hitler trusted before he came into power. Known for his sadism without limits, Wirth organized an assassination project in Hartheim that was planned down to the last detail. From the moment of their arrival, the people brought here had a maximum of three hours to live. Throughout the country, delivery buses were chartered, especially to transport the disabled who were being sent to their deaths. They arrived in the east wing of the castle where a garage with a roof was built. This way they disembarked out of sight. The condemned men then entered the courtyard to begin their last walk outside. As they arrived at the courtyard, a fence surrounded them. This fence restricted them from moving around the courtyard and directed them towards the northern wing. In the first room, the nurses were tasked with welcoming them and undressing them completely. There were nurses on the transport and others here in Hartheim, that had a really important role. They knew how to handle handicaps. They created a safe situation for them under the circumstances when 100 people arrived at this place. Some people were nervous, so they got medication to get to calm down and that's why they needed nurses. The tasks were clearly divided, and organized in a systematic way. The whole thing worked like an assembly line, so to speak. Once they were naked, they were taken to the adjoining room. Then there was a large room in the corner with a table and white clothes. This room, or as they called it, the examination room, was in reality how they verified their identity. Actually, the examination they did was to look into the mouth and look for golden teeth. They were given a sign, a cross either on the chest or on the back. Afterwards, they were told that they had to go for a shower and before they can enter the rooms later. Then they were guided into the gas chamber. As soon as the door closed, that's when the murder process began. One of the doctors in the castle was responsible for opening the valve that released the carbon monoxide. The gas chosen for use by T4. After debates between scientists, it was finally decided that it would be carbon monoxide, as it prevents the red blood cells from receiving oxygen. The symptoms were vomiting. From this moment, after a few minutes, the person is normally unconscious. They died 20 minutes after. With the overcrowding, the number of people, it must have been five horrible minutes. The gas chamber was not big, yet 120 people were inside. I refuse to imagine how you can cram 120 people in there. After these long minutes when screams gave way to silence, a ventilation system started up to evacuate the gas. The macabre work of the so-called burners begins. A group of men who work 24-hour shifts. Their mission is to collect gold teeth from the corpses marked with a cross. They must then transport the dozens of bodies to the crematorium. Once the bodies are burned and the bones crushed, the burners are in charge of getting rid of the evidence. Tons of ashes. Disposing of them into the surrounding waterways. Among the Hartheim burners, an interesting character, Vincent Noel, a family man in search of work. Strangely enough, he was a disabled man himself. He could very well have been on the side of the victims. He was a really interesting person because he had a small accident and he was handicapped afterwards. He describes himself as having a little, slow mind. He was hemiplegic, he had a right arm that was difficult to use. Some of his comrades said that, his place was not in front of the crematorium, but inside it. It's this simple individual who found himself in the middle of this murder and monstrosity. In order to endure the horror of his work, the fragile Vincent Noel was given an extra half a glass of schnapps each day. Like the disabled burner, many Hartheim employees were not initially convinced by the Nazi program, but no one was oblivious to what was happening. The systematic murder of vulnerable and sick people, the extermination center, functioned as a secret administrative base whose mission was to create false death certificates to deliver to the victims' families. You have to imagine that Hartheim was not deserted, but inhabited. It was a hive of activities. There was an army of secretaries in charge of drawing up false death certificates with fake dates, fake places and fake causes of death, which were sent to the families. It was a secret mission because there was no law in 1940, that allowed someone to kill the handicapped. The perpetrators, of course, wanted a lex euthanasia. Natural causes, such as pneumonia, influenza, appendicitis, or heart attack were used. This false information was meant to mislead the administration as well as the famiies, so that the real events at the castle would not be revealed. There was a real falsification of history. To add insult to injury, some families were even given urns filled with ashes taken at random from the crematorium. In total, within the castle walls, there were nearly 70 employees living in isolation, forbidden to mix with the rest of the population. In the evening, nurses, burners, bus drivers, secretaries and doctors regularly met to dine together. We know that they threw a party to celebrate the 10,000th corpse. All these extermination centers were places where alcohol flowed freely, where they had parties and where those who enjoyed music would dance and sing, romances between men and women, they would drink alcohol. Hartheim was more than a place to live, it was a place of debauchery. On weekends, the Hartheim administration also gave its employees special treats for their entertainment. There were organized group outings to the theater for the entire staff, as well as excursions. Every Sunday, they took buses and went on excursions in the countryside. In upper Austria, they often went to a nice lake in the mountains where the Aktion T14 had its own rest center. As soon as you get on the side of the executioners, there is a moment when they lead a normal life. They compartmentalize, and this compartmentalization is part of the monstrosity. In this place, bathed daily in smoke and nauseating fumes, a wedding was even celebrated. We have a couple who fell in love here. She was a nurse and he was a burner, and they also married in this house. They had their wedding celebration, not outside or in a restaurant, they had it here in the house. There is also a photograph taken in front of the castle with the witnesses of the wedding, who is none other than Christian Wirth, the chief of police. You ask why. Why not go outside and celebrate your wedding? Why choose to celebrate it in the house? Among the members of this exclusive society, one man has forever marked the history of Hartheim Castle. A 30-year-old German doctor who joined the group when he was just a student, Dr. Georg Renno. Mireille Horsinga Renno is Dr. Renno's great-niece. She's one of the last people still alive that personally knew the doctor from Hartheim during his lifetime. He was a very proud and arrogant person. He was tall and had bright eyes. A good Aryan. He was convinced that for the good of the nation, it was necessary to create a superior race. In Hartheim, Georg Renno had been commissioned by T4 for his very particular skills. It seems that he was noticed by his way of mastering barbiturates. This specialty, even before Hartheim, was to kill patients without leaving a trace. He accepted the idea that he would be killing patients because, for him, these people didn't deserve to live. His pride was above all else. It was his mission as well, his vehicle to achieve success in his career. In Hartheim Castle, he earned double what he could have earned in another hospital. Often presented as an artist, a lover of classical music, Dr. Renno was not at ease in the castle. Renno was a disturbing character because he had a refined side to him. He knew how to perform concerts, how to play the flute, and so he had an artistic, cultivated side. He had a room on the right side of the house where he played the flute in the evening after work, while corpses were still burned downstairs and the castle reeked of burning flesh. As a doctor, Renno was directly involved in the extermination process. He was responsible for turning the valve that released carbon monoxide into the gas chamber. One of his functions was to ensure that the execution ended with the death of the patients. He also was responsible for welcoming the Nazi officers who regularly visited the castle. Hartheim Castle was cited as an example, and from time to time there were Nazi dignitaries who came to witness the demonstration gassings. Renno confessed to having turned the valve. There was an eyepiece that allowed him to see the inside of the gas chamber. The Berlin dignitaries were very curious to see how it worked. The idea was also to see how it was, so they could set up the same for their camps. It was all to see how the extermination machines functioned. More disturbing, although he denied it, was that the doctor performed dissections on the lifeless bodies of the murdered disabled. A small dissection room was specially set up on the first floor on the other side of the courtyard. Sometimes they were marked and after their death, there was a dissection of the brain. To study the brain of a schizophrenic 15-year-old, they would kill a 15-year-old, extract the brain, and send it to the faculty of medicine. It seemed that dissections were used to make anatomical plates. Dr. Renno, as a zealous disciple of National Socialism, took part in the darkest missions of the T4 Operation in Hartheim. Mireille Horsinga Renno, his great-niece, only discovered this dark side many years later. In the mid-1980s, while digging into her roots, she discovered her uncle's secrets. At the time, she knew nothing about his life. She didn't know that the former doctor of Hartheim changed his name after the war and managed to escape justice all these years. He very kindly invited me, my husband and son to Italy several times. We were always welcomed like family, almost as if we were his own children. He was someone very kind, warm and interesting. We had very interesting conversations. Then it got very cold. One day, a passing discussion about the Second World War made the demons of the old man resurface. He tells me that it is a difficult period. He also told me, "Don't believe everything you read in books or hear on the TV or radio." "The gas chambers never existed." That shocked me, coming from an intelligent person. I said, "You can't say that." He said, "All that was built afterwards" "by the Americans to harm our country." There, I did not understand him anymore. Deeply shocked, Mireille researched history books and discovered the true role of her uncle in Hartheim. I asked myself: is it the same person? I asked him and he said it was him. He said: yes, but now we have other worries, it's been a long time since it happened. You must forget. He seemed to think that it was just a detail of his life. A little detail from his life, as if gas chambers weren't a detail of history. We took our distance, we didn't return there. On the other hand, every month he would send me an envelope which contained cutouts from revisionist articles. Monstrous at this point, it was unimaginable. Harassed by his letters, Mireille put an end to their relationship. In 2006, she published a book to tell the story of her uncle's horrific past. At the beginning of 1941, the number of gassings increased at Hartheim. Every week, around ten buses dropped off patients condemned by the regime to their deaths. To get rid of the evidence that accumulated each day, the burners continued to pour their wheelbarrows full of ashes into the waters of The Danube. The pace of exterminations was so fast that the chimney connected to the crematorium couldn't hold up. They had a problem with the chimney that they have to build a second one. It was told that there was a fire in the first chimney because it was too small and there was just one chimney. One chimney had to do the central heating and also the crematorium roof. Another chimney was installed in the castle courtyard, a professional chimney, so to speak. The decision was made to build a second chimney in the castle grounds, in the southwest corner of the courtyard. An industrial brick chimney connected to the crematorium, measuring 20 meters high and not one meter higher, so that it didn't protrude from the roof and instead, remained invisible to the outside world. Completely destroyed at the end of the war, no trace of this second chimney remains today. In the village, bellows of toxic smoke were constantly released into the air, and unsurprisingly, the terrified local population avoided the perimeter of the property. Nobody dared to break the omerta imposed by the Castle administration, but the remnants of the murders continued to multiply. In a crematorium, not everything burns, and we know that the hair gets carried away when they don't burn. If it never rains, this hair dies, if there is rain and wind, it falls down. The peasants in the area knew very well what happened there as they found human hair. At one point, the local population collected bones that they found around and made a little pyramid at the side of the road. It was a method of disturbing the peace. They knew. In spite of the danger, a Hartheim resident defied the ban. In 1941, Karl Schumann, who lived on the neighboring farm, took a photo of the castle from his barn when a plume of smoke was rising from the chimney. This is the only existing visual evidence of the Hartheim crematorium in operation. While the village was kept in the dark, hundreds of Catholic families throughout the Reich began to grow concerned about the increasing number of disabled people who were dying under strange circumstances. The secrecy surrounding Action T4 began to crumble. What intrigued the German population after a few months was that a lot of families were receiving these very standardized and conventional documents informing them that their nieces, daughters, nephews, cousins, had died from pneumonia or cardiac arrest or breathing problems. Sometimes they would receive an urn. It became obvious that something very fishy and criminal was going on. A man of the church then publicly denounced this extermination, the Bishop of Munster, Monseigneur Von Galen. It was 1941, and Monseigneur Von Galen gave a speech. Very courageously, as he literally denounced this political murder and the protected murderers and what they were doing, that all this was contrary to the prescription of the Gospel. The Nazi regime at that time did not want any chaos within the population. On the contrary, the objective was to unite all the forces of the country, so that they could concentrate on the war effort. In the face of Von Galen's intervention, the Nazi hierarchy stepped back and they decided to stop the T4 Action, the murder of the masses by gas. It was at this moment that Berlin called on the Nazis to stop. In August 1941, the T4 Action ended, and the chimney of Hartheim Castle finally stopped smoking. However, in the end, with over 70,000 disabled people murdered, of which almost 20,000 were in Hartheim alone, the mission was, from the Nazi point of view, a success. The objective was 70,000, they are at a little bit more. This first operation has reached its objective. We can move on. The crematorium in Hartheim didn't remain inactive for long. Back in Berlin, Hitler already had a new plan in mind. The Nazis had invaded almost all of Europe and were terrorizing populations. Everywhere, opponents of the regime were systematically arrested and deported to labor camps, and very quickly the number of them became a problem for the regime. A problem that had to be solved. Hitler then launched a new operation called Action 14F13. Action 14F13 was an operation aimed at easing the concentration camps. The idea was simple, to empty the concentration camp population. They would use the assassination methods available, which means to transport all the people in the concentration camps elsewhere. Logically, Hartheim Castle was chosen to become the killing center of the nearest labor camp located 30km away, Mauthausen. There were three categories of camps, Mauthausen was classified as three, which means unwanted return. It's a camp where they sent people who they didn't want to return. These prisoners in the Mauthausen camp must have been in deplorable health conditions. They were those that the SS treated in the worst way. There were prisoners of various categories. Political prisoners, "asocials", "gypsies". They came mainly from Poland and the Soviet Union, but also from France, Spain, and Italy. Authorized by Berlin, the Hartheim killing center was reopened for a second time, with its doctors, who once again found themselves with the responsibility to select those who were too old or unfit for work. Doctors were also sent to the camps, and Dr. Renno made the choice of who would be. It was often a rudimentary selection, they made them walk and run. Under Action 14F13, they decided whether a person was executed in Hartheim based on whether or not he could work. If he could no longer work, he was of no interest to the SS. The decision was made to transfer prisoners from Mauthausen to Hartheim in order to eliminate them. The same trickery, the same methods of murder, and the same hiding of evidence. The process was well established in Hartheim and was as horribly effective as ever. Besides the mentally disabled, nearly 15,000 prisoners were exterminated in the Austrian castle. In March 1942, Hitler, assisted by Reichsfuhrer Himmler decided to launch the Reinhardt action in Poland. It was the first phase of the Holocaust. It will lead to the murder of over 1.6 million Jews. For this stage, three new extermination camps were constructed: Belzec, Sobibor and Treblinka. Very quickly, to carry out this new large-scale criminal operation, the skills of the Hartheim staff were called upon. According to our current knowledge, about 25 people who worked at Hartheim were sent to occupied Poland to take part in Action Reinhardt. They included a cook, who played a central role in Action Reinhardt, police officers, and crematorium employees. The burner, Joseph Vlasta, the man who got married in Hartheim, continued his career in the Soviet war camp. Christian Wirth, the head of the Hartheim police, was even appointed to be responsible for the construction of all the Reinhard action camps. He was to become the head of the Belzec camp. He gained a reputation for the extreme cruelty with which he treated the Jewish prisoners, always equipped with a horsewhip that he did not hesitate to torture to the point of death. Christian Wirth is the real central point. It was he who was put in charge of the so-called 'industrial' process of murder. The mechanization and industrialization. Hartheim killed around 20 to 30 thousand people over many years. In Belzec, they killed 20 to 30 thousand people in a few days. It is because of Hartheim that Belzec and Sobibor became possible, and that they could take it to the next level. The first Holocaust camps thus benefited directly from the expertise acquired by the executioners in Hartheim. For historians, Hartheim Castle is considered a school of crime that made the Holocaust technically possible. Hartheim served as an example, and played a big role in the choice of mass murder. In that sense, Hartheim had a more important function than simply logistical. It was a school of humanity. A school of murderers that will soon see its last hours. In 1944, in the wake of the American invasion, Hitler's armies were experiencing more and more military defeats. The Nazis knew that the war was lost. Berlin quickly ordered the demolishion of the Hartheim facilities. At the end of December, a group of workers entered the courtyard of the castle. The military ordered the workers to completely destroy the ground floor of the building. The partitions, the tiles, nothing must remain of the original configuration of the place. They are going to erase things, break the chimney, fill in certain doors, reopen other doors. They wanted to make all the evidence of their atrocities to disappear. To make it look as if nothing ever happened. On the upper floors, the secretaries gathered all administrative documents, archives, even the least incriminating files to set them all on fire. Under the gaze of German soldiers, Hitler's men hoped to hide the massacre that took place here from the world. To better fool the future liberators, the castle will even reopen its doors only a few weeks later to a completely different public. In 1945, they arranged an asylum for kids, and for widows here, just to show that it was a place where kids were treated actually. The idea was that when the war is over, it looks like a special house because it's a castle, a beautiful house with children being cared for. Once all the evidence was removed, the castle became, unbelievably enough, a home for underprivileged children. With the end of the war, Hartheim's terrible secrets could have been buried forever. However, this was not the case. Thanks to the determination of an American soldier in charge of investigating war crimes. Major Dameran. Major Dameron was an American officer. He belonged to a unit that discovered war crimes. He accompanied the Allies, and was in charge of the different sites suspected of war crimes. This team conducted a very thorough investigation of the crimes committed at Hartheim. They were able to interview staff members, take photographs, and interview people who lived nearby, accumulating a large amount of evidence. The major also came across some incriminating documents that had been forgotten by the Hartheim employees in their haste. Major Dameron was lucky. He found Nazi and T4 documents in an armoire. In these documents were the statistics established by T4 and these documents in the T4 action, 100%. This means that Major Dameron also proved the existence of T4 through what he found. It is to the credit of this American official that the trickery did not succeed. Even today, the Dameron report remains the most important historical source of information about what actually took place behind the high walls of Hartheim Castle. At the end of the war, Hartheim's executioners all had different fortunes. Christian Wirth, the bloodthirsty police chief, was shot in the back by his own men in Italy. The disturbing Dr. Renno, after he continued to work under a false identity, died in his bed at the age of 90. Both of them have it in common that they escaped justice. [German spoken audio] That was not the fate for all of them. Vincent Noel, The Hartheim burner, a man who was disabled himself, answered for his actions at the Mauthausen trial in 1946. He was caught up in the justice system and they served him the maximum punishment since he knew what he was doing, that the committed murders, and participated in the concentration camps. He was given maximum punishment. He said that he had nightmares etc, he also seemed like someone who didn`t have full intellectual capacity. That was taken into account in the judgment as well. He was intellectually limited. Sentenced by the Court, Vincent Noel was the only employee of Hartheim to be tried and executed. Today, peace has returned to the gardens of Hartheim Castle. In 2003, the building was converted into a memorial and a study center to honor the thousands of victims of Nazi barbarism who were murdered there. It's not just a place of remembrance. It's a place for the younger generation, who are invited to ask themselves essential questions on subjects that are still relevant today. Eighteen thousand visitors come here every year. Most of them are pupils with their classes. It's good when thousands of pupils come here and learn about this because something that happened once can happen again. With respect to history, a center for the disabled was built in the 1960s on the outskirts of the park. People with mental disabilities are once again welcome in Hartheim. It's a sign that life goes on. Hartheim Castle is not only a place of death and determination, but also a place where disabled people can lead an ordinary life, just like everyone else. I think that the institution for handicapped people being just on the other side of the road is a great sign. We have a lot of people from this institution around in the park who sometimes visit us. It seems important to me that they made this and came back to this place for treatment again, not in the castle, but around this castle. Even if it appears as if life has resumed its course, not everyone has received closure. Hundreds of the dead, reduced to dust, are still waiting to be identified. The Nazi cover-up led to a situation where we know we will never know the whole truth. We know that we will never know and that is also motivation for scientists. We know that there are unknown victims in Hartheim. We know that there are victims we know nothing about, and the goal of the historians is to move forward as much as possible and if possible, to find the names and identities of the victims who are unknown. Historians are still far from lifting the veil on the many mysteries that surround this cursed castle. The ghosts of Hartheim will forever haunt the Great Danube Plain.
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Channel: Best Documentary
Views: 2,177,435
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Keywords: documentary, history, hitler, war, austria, germany
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Length: 52min 12sec (3132 seconds)
Published: Mon Apr 03 2023
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