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WilliamPitt

(58,179 posts)
Tue Dec 3, 2013, 11:06 AM Dec 2013

The Last Dead Nazi



American soldiers with captured Nazi flag, WWII.
(Photo: Za Rodinu / Flickr)


The Last Dead Nazi
By William Rivers Pitt
Truthout | Op-Ed

Tuesday 03 December 2013

A piece of history died on Monday.

Heinrich Boere was 92 years old when he passed away in a prison facility in Froendenberg, Germany, where he was being treated for dementia. At the time of his death, he was the state's oldest prisoner, and perhaps its most notorious. After all, some 68 years removed from the end of World War II, how many living Nazis from the days of Hitler's Reich can there be left?

Boere was one such.

Boere was born in Germany to a German mother and a Dutch father, but moved to Maastricht in the Netherlands when he was two. When the Nazis invaded the Netherlands in 1940, he recalled seeing Stuka dive-bombers flying overhead, and remembered his parents being elated instead of afraid. At the time, his mother said, "They're coming, now things will be better." Many years later, during testimony he gave at his own trial in Germany, Boere said, "It was better."

Not long after seeing those Stukas flying above his adopted country, Heinrich Boere became a Nazi himself, wore the uniform, and fought for the Reich on the Russian front. Later, he volunteered for the Waffen SS, the para-military muscle of the Nazi Party that was the brainchild of Heinrich Himmler. By 1943, Boere was part of a hit squad targeting members of the Dutch resistance and anyone else harboring anti-German sentiments. He killed three people by his own admission, and aided in the killing of many more.

After the war ended, he evaded justice for some 60 years, fought the law once he was cornered, and was finally convicted for his crimes. On Monday, he died behind bars, lost in dementia. Only the orderlies, nurses and doctors know what demons were loosed from his mouth once his mind was gone, what confessions he made. He knew what he had done was wrong in the end, or at least he knew others thought he had done wrong; during his trial, he explained why he had never married: "I always had to consider that my past might catch up with me. I didn't want to inflict that upon a woman."

Heinrich Boere, known Nazi, known murderer, known collaborator with the filthiest tide to ever wash up on the human shore, is dead. He was not the worst of them, but he was willingly one of them. He did not die free, but in fetters on a prison bed without even his own mind left to him. More than some would say it was a better death than he deserved. Most would say that justice, at least to some degree, was finally served.

But what of us, the children and grand-children and great-grand-children of this awesome and terrible history?

(snip)

In my own way, I mourn the passing of Heinrich Boere. Not because of what he believed or what he did; were I able, I would spit on his grave...and then light a candle, and stand a vigil, because Heinrich Boere is important to us all. When men like Heinrich Boere die, we are one step closer to forgetting that men like him lived at all, one step closer to forgetting that party-sponsored murder gangs like the Waffen SS ever existed, one step closer to forgetting that hate-fueled thuggery thrives in economic chaos, can take over, and can wreak bloody havoc.

When men like Heinrich Boere die, we are one step closer to having men like Heinrich Boere among us again, because we forget what they did when they are gone, and by forgetting, we allow them to live again. Sooner or later, inevitably, they rise when we forget.

The rest: http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/20387-the-last-dead-nazi
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Last Dead Nazi (Original Post) WilliamPitt Dec 2013 OP
Hardly ... Scuba Dec 2013 #1
Reich-era. WilliamPitt Dec 2013 #2
Excellent! frogmarch Dec 2013 #3
On a related note, the people who remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki are passing phantom power Dec 2013 #4
which is equally worrisome. countryjake Dec 2013 #5
Up WilliamPitt Dec 2013 #6
The death of one particular man I did not know or know about will in no way lessen my knowledge uppityperson Dec 2013 #7

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
7. The death of one particular man I did not know or know about will in no way lessen my knowledge
Tue Dec 3, 2013, 07:31 PM
Dec 2013

of history and I do not understand how it will allow them to live again. The memory of the nazis and the holocaust is not dependent upon the perpetrators being alive.

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