The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Microscopi­c remains of Nazi victims to be buried in Berlin

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BERLIN: More than seven decades after World War II ended, over 300 tiny pieces of human tissue from political prisoners executed by the Nazis will be buried Monday at a Berlin cemetery.

The samples – each a hundredth of a millimetre thin and about a square centimetre in size – were uncovered on microscopi­c glass plates by the descendant­s of the Third Reich anatomy professor Hermann Stieve.

Stieve dissected and researched the bodies of inmates killed at the Berlin Ploetzense­e jail, including those of executed resistance fighters – in part to examine the physical impact of fear experience­d by women.

A ceremony will be held, with descendant­s of the victims expected to attend, before the remains are finally laid to rest at 1300 GMT at the Dorotheens­tadt cemetery in central Berlin with a Catholic and a Protestant priest and a rabbi present. A ceremony will be held, with descendant­s of the victims expected to attend, before the remains are finally laid to rest at 1300 GMT at the Dorotheens­tadt cemetery in central Berlin.

“With the burial of the microscopi­c specimens... we want to take a step toward giving the victims back their dignity,” said Karl Max Einhaeupl, the head of Berlin’s university hospital Charite.

He said the burial was part of a historical project by the hospital to confront its role in the medical profession’s difficult relationsh­ip with Nazism.

The burial site had been picked as there are many graves and memorials for the victims of Nazism there, said Johannes Tuchel, director of the German Resistance Memorial Centre, which is organising the special event with Charite.

Tuchel said the human tissue samples were among “the last remains of people who were victims of the Nazis’ unjust justice system... They were denied a grave at that time, and so today, a burial is a matter of course.”

More than 2,800 people held at Berlin-Ploetzense­e prison were put to the guillotine or hanged between 1933 and 1945, and most were then sent for dissection at the Berlin Institute of Anatomy.

Stieve was the institute’s director from 1935 to 1952 and carried out controvers­ial research on the female reproducti­ve system.

Most of the 300 specimens found in Stieve’s estate stemmed from women, adds a plaque to commemorat­e them, which does however not list the names of individual victims at the request of relatives.

Among those executed at Ploetzense­e were 42 resistance fighters from the Berlin group Red Orchestra. Stieve is believed to have dissected at least 13 of 18 executed female Red Orchestra fighters.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Department head at the Institute of Anatomy of the Brandenbur­g Medical School (MHB) Andreas Winkelmann poses next to a poster from 1926 detailing the human body as an ‘Industry Palace’, in his office in Neuruppin.
— AFP photo Department head at the Institute of Anatomy of the Brandenbur­g Medical School (MHB) Andreas Winkelmann poses next to a poster from 1926 detailing the human body as an ‘Industry Palace’, in his office in Neuruppin.

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