The Star Malaysia

Nazi victims to get proper burial in Berlin

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BERLIN: More than seven decades after the end of World War II, the remains of political prisoners executed by the Nazis and dissected for research will be given a proper burial in Berlin.

The microscopi­c remains – 300 tissue samples each a hundredth of a millimetre thin and around one by one centimetre large – were uncovered by the descendant­s of the late Hermann Stieve, an anatomist who worked on the bodies of Third Reich opponents.

“Such small tissue samples are usually not deemed worthy of burial,” Andreas Winkelmann, who had been tasked to determine the origin of the histologic­al samples, said.

“But this is a special story, because they came from people who were actively denied graves so that their relatives would not know where they are buried.”

A ceremony will be held on Monday with descendant­s of the Nazi victims expected to attend, before the remains are finally laid to rest at the Dorotheens­tadt cemetery in central Berlin.

The 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 along with Berlin’s university hospital Charite.

Tuchel said a decision was made to bury the specimens as they are “the last remains of people who were victims of the Nazi unjust justice system”.

“They were denied a grave at that time, and so today, a burial is a matter of course.”

A plaque will also be put up to explain the find.

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.

Most of the 300 specimens found in Stieve’s estate stemmed from women, adds the plaque, which would, however, not list the names of individual victims at the request of relatives. — AFP

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