Draft of a letter to the Reich Security Main Office
TRANSLATION OF DOCUMENT 089
The Reichsfuehrer-SS Personal Staff Diary No. 41/1/43 Secret.
(1) To the RSHA
Field Command Post 6.11.42.
SECRET
Department IV B4
For the attention of SS Obersturmbannfuehrer Eichmann
Berlin SW 11
Prinz-Albrecht-Str. 8
Re: Establishment of a collection of skeletons at the Anatomical Institute at Strassburg.
The Reichsfuehrer-SS has issued a directive to the effect that SS-Hauptsturmfuehrer Prof. Dr. Hirt, who is the director of the Anatomical Institute at Strassburg and the head of a department of the institute for Military Science Research in the Ahnenerbe Society, be furnished with everything he needs for his research work. By order of the Reichsfuehrer-SS, therefore, I ask you to make possible the establishment of the planned collection. SS-Obersturmbannfuehrer Sievers will get in touch with you with regard to straightening out the details.
By order
[signed] Brandt
SS-Obersturmbannfuehrer
2. To the "Ahnenerbe" Society Berlin, 27 November 1942.
Berlin-Dahlem
Puecklerstrasse 16
Copy sent with request that cognizance be taken thereof. I refer to your letter of 2.11.42.
By order
[signature illegible]
SS-Obersturmfuehrer.
[in pencil] 27.11
[in pencil] M
TRANSLATION DOCUMENT NO 087 PROSECUTION EXHIBIT 181
LETTER FROM SIEVERS TO EICHMANN {COPY TO RUDOLF BRANDT), 21 JUNE 1943, CONCERNING SELECTION OF SUBJECTS FOR A SKELETON COLLECTION
Ahnenerbe Office Institute for Military Scientific Research G/H/6, S2/He.
[Handwritten] XI a 56
Berlin-Dahlem, Puecklerstrasse 16, 21 June 1943
Top Secret
To Reich Security Main Office
Office IV B 4
Attention: SS Obersturmbannfuehrer Eichmann,
Berlin SW 11, Prinz Albrecht Strasse 8
Subject: Assembling of a skeleton collection.
With reference to your letter of 25 September 1942, IV B 4 3576/42 g 1488, and the personal talks which have taken place in the meantime on the above matter, you are informed that the coworker in this office who was charged with the execution of the above-mentioned special task, SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Dr. Bruno Beger, ended his work in the Auschwitz concentration camp on 15 June 1943 because of the existing danger of infectious diseases.
A total of 115 persons were worked on, 79 of whom were Jews, 2 Poles, 4 Asiatics, and 30 Jewesses. At present, these prisoners are separated according to sex and each group is accommodated in a hospital building of the Auschwitz concentration camp and are in quarantine.
For further processing of the selected persons an immediate transfer to the Natzweiler concentration camp is now imperative; this must be accelerated in view of the danger of infectious diseases in Auschwitz. Enclosed is a list containing the names of the selected persons.
It is requested that the necessary directives be issued.
Since with the transfer of the prisoners to Natzweiler the danger of spreading diseases exists, it is requested that an immediate shipment of disease-free and clean prisoners' clothing for 80 men and 30 women be ordered sent from Natzweiler to Auschwitz.
G.R.Z.I. A.H. Sk No. 10 5 copies-2d copy no enclosures
At the same time one must provide for the accommodation of the 30 women in the Natzweiler concentration camp for a short period.
[Signature] SIEVERSevers
SS Standartenfuehrer
Carbon copies to--
a. SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Dr. Beger
b. SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Prof. Dr. Hirt
c. SS Obersturmbannfuehrer Dr. Brandt
TRANSLATION OF DOCUMENT 088
The Reichsfuehrer-SS
Personal Staff
Department A
Teleprint
To SS-Standartenfuehrer Ministerialrat Dr. Brandt
Personal Staff of the Reichsfuehrer-SS
Berlin
Waischenfeld/Ofr., 5.9.44.
Top Secret.
[Marginal notes in shorthand]
Re: Collection of Jewish Skeletons.
According to the proposal of 9/2/42 and your approval of 23/2/42 AR/493/37, Prof. Dr. Hirt has assembled the skeleton collection which was previously non-existent. Because of the vast amount of scientific research connected therewith, the job of reducing the corpses to skeletons has not yet been completed. Since it might require some time, Hirt requested 80 copies of the directives pertaining to the treatment of the collection stored in the morgue of the Anatomical Institute, in case Strassburg should be endangered.
The Collection can be defleshed and thereby rendered unidentifiable. This however, would mean that at least part of the whole work had been done for nothing and that this singular collection would be lost to science, since it would be impossible to make plaster casts afterwards. The skeleton collection as such is inconspicuous. The flesh parts could be declared as having been left by the French at the time we took over the Anatomical Institute and would be turned over for cremating. Please advise me which of the following three proposals is to be carried out:
1. The collection as a whole is to be preserved.
2. The collection is to be dissolved in part.
3. The collection is to be completely dissolved
[Signed]
Sievers,
SS-Standartenfuehrer.
TRANSLATION OF DOCUMENT 091
[Marginal notes in shorthand]
Note:
On 12.10.1944, I had a telephone conversation with SS-Standartenfuehrer Sievers and asked him if the Strassburg Skeleton collection had been completely dissolved, as directed by SS-Standartenfuehrer Baumert. SS-Standartenfuehrer Sievers could not advise me on that matter, since he had not as yet heard anything further from Prof. Hirt. I told him that in case the dissolution had not yet been carried out, a certain part of the collection should be preserved. However, guarantee should be given that a complete dissolution could be made in time in case the military situation should endanger Strassburg. SS-Standartenfuehrer Sievers promised me that he would find out about it and let me know.
[signed] Berg.
SS. Hauptsturmfuehrer.
15.10.1944
Bg/HM
Note for SS-Standardtenfuehrer Dr. Brandt.
During his visit at the Operational HQ on 21.10.1944, SS-Standartenfuehrer Sievers told me that the collection in Strassburg had been completely dissolved in the meantime in conformance with the directive given him at the time. He is of the opinion that this arrangement is for the best in view of the whole situation.
[signed] Berg
SS-Hauptsturmfuehrer.
26.10.1944,
Bg/HM
These exhibits were produced after Sievers testified at Nuremberg during the trial of the "organizations", especially that of the SS, where the question was to determine if the SS was a criminal organization or not.
Oddly Sievers was called to the stand as a witness for the defense; neither the accused nor Sievers expected the production of these letters, which Sievers must certainly have thought destroyed (as he believed that the bodies had been likewise, see the last message from Berg where Sievers affirmed this).
The effect of the production of these exhibits was naturally disastrous for the defense. Sievers was hung in 1948 by the Americans.
next
Struthof home page