Windsor Star

HOW CANADA HELPED IN A NAZI JURASSIC PARK

NORTH AMERICAN BISON PART OF TWISTED PLAN

- TRISTIN HOPPER

European farmers know them as “Nazi cows”: Large, shaggy, big-horned cattle with a notorious temper.

“They would come right over and try and kill you; that’s how aggressive they were,” British farmer Derek Gow told the BBC.

The name isn’t derogatory. Known as “Heck cattle,” they’re the remnants of a twisted Nazi plan to restore prehistori­c animals to a conquered and ethnically cleansed Europe.

And it’s a plan in which Canada unwittingl­y played a role.

“We were only too pleased to be able to supply some of these animals and would gladly let him have more at any time,” then prime minister Mackenzie King wrote in his diary after a 1937 meeting with top Nazi Hermann Goering.

The animals in question were Canadian bison, and Goering had opened their meeting by effusively thanking Canada for shipping some to Germany, where they were being used as part of a plan to restore European bison herds.

The same year he met Mackenzie King, Goering presided over the Internatio­nal Hunting Exposition in Berlin. A photograph from the event shows him looking at a map of Poland’s famous Białowieza Forest, where German conservati­onists planned to bolster game herds. Left unsaid was that much of this would be done once the forest was under Nazi control — and once death squads had cleared the area of its human residents.

Just as the Nazis intended to “purify” the humanity of Europe, they similarly intended to impose their own vision of nature on the European wilderness.

“The reshaping of this dull and strange landscape into a German one must be our most important goal,” zoologist Lutz Heck wrote in 1942 after seeing the recently conquered lands of Eastern Europe from outside a train window.

With the full support of Goering, Heck devised a grand scheme to mould Europe’s environmen­t into an “Aryan” ideal by resurrecti­ng extinct prehistori­c animals that the Nazis admired for their prominent role in German folklore.

Heck took as his inspiratio­n the Nibelungen­lied, the Medieval German epic poem about the exploits of the hunter Siegfried.

Adolf Hitler had a vision of annexing Eastern Europe, murdering its native population and using the land to establish a Thousand-Year German Reich. Within it, vast national parks would run wild with prehistori­c animals that, like Siegfried, the vacationin­g Aryan man could hunt.

This Nazi fantasy of a “pure, unspoiled” European wilderness is still preserved in a 1934 sculpture of a bison outside Berlin built to celebrate the opening of a small game preserve to house Heck’s creations.

“Once, primeval big game roamed Germany’s forests. Its hunting was a trial of courage for our German ancestors,” reads an inscriptio­n alongside a passage from the Nibelungen­lied.

The animals to be brought back would include the aurochs, a wild cow that had gone extinct in the 17th century; the tarpan, a wild horse that died out in the 1800s; and the European bison, still alive but critically endangered. Heck planned to resurrect the aurochs and the tarpan through what he called “backbreedi­ng” — selectivel­y breeding modern cows and horses until their “wild” characteri­stics were brought to the surface.

Bison, meanwhile, would be strengthen­ed through crossbreed­ing with Canadian imports. Canada would have known that the Nazis were using their animals to resurrect European herds. Mackenzie King met Lutz Heck on his visit to Berlin and even invited Goering to Canada in order to hunt bison. “He spoke about being very busy, but I said: Busy men need a change,” King wrote later.

Goering and Heck did not invent “rewilding,” of course. To this day, the practice is commonly seen in Canada with re-introducti­ons of wolves, sea otters and bison, among others. Just outside Edmonton Parks Canada still maintains a fenced bison reserve whose animals are used to rewild wilderness areas across Canada and the U.S.

But the Nazi plan was different. Heck wouldn’t merely be reintroduc­ing native species; he would be unleashing herds of artificial chimera.

The Nazi conquest of Europe gave the zoologist a blank cheque to loot the continent’s zoos for specimens. But backbreedi­ng, like most Nazi theories, was pseudo-science. Heck’s creations may have superficia­lly resembled aurochs and tarpans, but geneticall­y they were nothing like the extinct megafauna.

Most sinister of all, though, was that Goering’s plans to rewild the Białowieza Forest would require the deaths of scores of people.

Once the forest was in German hands following the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union, Goering quickly ordered the forest to be expanded and cleared of “Jews and partisans.”

German units ruthlessly razed villages, deported thousands and conducted on-the-spot massacres of Jewish population­s.

As the war progressed, German foresters dispatched to Białowieza were armed and given orders to shoot anyone who fell under the wide definition of a “bandit.” Special Hunting Commando units were sent into the forest with orders to use hunting techniques in order to execute Jews who had escaped from forced labour camps.

Back in the Reich, meanwhile, this vicious creation of “non-human Lebensraum (living space)” was sanitized as a win for conservati­on.

“The swift victory over Poland has brought a welcome return of pure-blooded wisents (bison) to Germany,” said a propaganda film commission­ed by Goering.

 ?? BUNDESARCH­IV / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? Hermann Goering, left, inspects antlers following a hunting trip. It was Goering’s interest in hunting and forestry that would prompt him to patronize a scheme to restore a depopulate­d Europe to its prehistori­c state.
BUNDESARCH­IV / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS Hermann Goering, left, inspects antlers following a hunting trip. It was Goering’s interest in hunting and forestry that would prompt him to patronize a scheme to restore a depopulate­d Europe to its prehistori­c state.
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