On this date, 2 June
1948, 7 of the 23 defendants at the Doctors’ Trials who were sentenced to death were
executed by hanging at Landsberg Prison. I will post the information about The
Nazi Bone Collector, Rudolf Brandt from Wikipedia.
Portrait of Rudolf
Brandt as a defendant in the Medical Case Trial at Nuremberg. [Photograph
##07335], Porträt von Rudolf Brandt als Angeklagter im Nürnberger Ärzteprozess.
[Fotografie#07335]
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Rudolf Hermann Brandt (June 2, 1909 – June 2, 1948) was a German SS officer
during 1933-1945 and a civil servant.
A
lawyer by profession, Brandt was Personal Administrative Officer to the Reichsführer-SS
(Persönlicher Referent vom Reichsführer SS) Heinrich Himmler, and a
defendant at the Doctors' Trial at Nuremberg for his part in securing the 86
victims of the Jewish skeleton collection, an attempt to create an anthropological
display of plaster body casts and skeletal remains of Jewish Untermenschen.
Life
and work
Rudolf
Brandt, the son of a railway worker, was born on June 2, 1909, and raised in
modest circumstances in the town of Frankfurt an der Oder. Brandt was a member
of the student's stenography (shorthand) club at the Realgymnasium, and in
1927, at the age of 18, won a competition with a transcription speed of 360
syllables per minute.
He
attended the University of Berlin and the University of Jena (1928–1932),
simultaneously working from 1928 to 1930 as a court reporter at the Provisional
National Economic Council. Brandt would continue to practice stenography in the
evenings with his colleague and former Frankfurt schoolmate Gerhard Herrgesell.
Brandt
was awarded a Law Degree from the University of Jena in July 1933. He joined
the Nazi party in January 1932 (NSDAP 1 331 536) and the SS in October 1933 (SS
129 771) (*1). By February 1934, Brandt and his skills in transcription were
noticed by Heinrich Himmler, who had him transferred to his staff. (*3)
In
1936, Brandt was named Leiter des Persönlichen Stabes RFSS, and in 1937,
Persönlicher Referent des RFSS, a position he held until May 1945. In
this position Brandt handled Himmler's entire correspondence with the exception
of matters pertaining to the Waffen SS or the Police.
Walter
Schellenberg, the Ausland-SD department chief who reported directly to Himmler,
said of Brandt:
"Because of his ability as a perfect stenographer, his punctuality, his untiring diligence, he became Himmler's convenient and omnipresent registering, reminding and writing machine, complaining about being overworked, and on the other hand, declaring with pride that he had to produce 3000 – 4000 outgoing letters per year."
"Brandt would begin work at seven in the morning, no matter what time he had gone to bed the night before. Three or four hours of sleep were sufficient for him. As soon as Himmler had risen in the morning and washed, Brandt would go to him loaded with papers and files, and while Himmler shaved he would read him the most important items of the morning’s mail. This was done with the greatest seriousness. If there was bad news, Brandt would preface it by saying, ”Pardon, Herr Reichsführer,” and thus forewarned, Himmler would temporarily suspend his shaving operations: a precautionary measure to prevent cutting himself. Brandt was certainly most important. He was the eyes and ears of his master and the manner in which he presented a matter to Himmler was often of decisive importance."
From
1938, Rudolf Brandt was Ministerial Councilor and Head of the Minister's Office
in the Reich Ministry of the Interior.
Brandt
was a member of the entourage which accompanied Himmler into hiding, leaving Flensberg
on May 10, 1945, with the vague goal of attempting to reach Bavaria. He became
separated from Himmler and surrendered along with most of the party to British
troops on May 21. Himmler was captured, though not identified on May 22, along
with his Waffen SS aides, Werner Grothmann and Heinz Macher.
Brandt
watched from inside the wire at the Westertimke detention camp when Himmler was
brought in with his aides on May 23, 1945. It was then that Himmler identified
himself to the camp commandant. Himmler committed suicide later that evening
when he bit down on the cyanide ampule about to be discovered by the British
Physician.
Doctors’
Trials [PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.holocaust-history.org/hirt/]
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Trial
and execution
Rudolf
Brandt was indicted after the war by the US Military Tribunal, on charges of:
1. Conspiracy to commit war crimes and crimes
against humanity;
2. War crimes, to wit performing medical
experiments without the subjects' consent on prisoners of war and civilians of
occupied countries, as well as participation in the mass-murder of concentration
camp inmates;
3. Crimes against humanity: committing
crimes described under count 2 also on German nationals; and
4. Membership in a criminal organization,
the SS.
Brandt,
in common with most of the defendants at the Doctor's Trial, was acquitted on
the first count as the Tribunal felt that it fell outside their jurisdiction.
He
was found guilty on the other three counts, as he had been responsible for the
administration and coordination of the experiments at the camps. He was hanged
on June 2, 1948, his 39th birthday.
The
career of Erik Dorf in the 1978 miniseries Holocaust, mirrors that of
Brandt. Both were lawyers by profession, both were administrative aides to top
SS leaders, and both performed a clerical role in the unfolding of the Final
Solution.
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