Read Hitler's Forgotten Children Online
Authors: Ingrid Von Oelhafen
Stari Pisker prison, Celje, former Yugolsavia, summer 1942. Partisans are lined up against a wall prior to being shot;
Stari Pisker prison, Celje, former Yugolsavia, summer 1942. The partisans' bodies lie where they fell.
Inside the school, Celje, former Yugoslavia, August 1942. The children are held in makeshift enclosures, packed with straw, as they wait for their racial examinations.
Ingrid Matko-von-Oelhafen today, with the first official document of her existence, a vaccination certificate issued by Lebensborn.
F
inding my roots has been a long and rocky road, but I have met many wonderful people who accompanied me along the way.
I particularly want to say thank you to my best and most long-standing friend, Dorothee Schlüter. She has been with me from the first timid steps I took in the search for my origins. She has supported me mentally and emotionally and has been deeply involved as I progressed. Thanks are also due to Jutta Schröder, who has always been there with help and care.
I must express my gratitude to Dr Georg Lilienthal for guiding me and to Josef Focks, who pushed me over and over again (as I hesitated) until at last I agreed to go to Slovenia.
To my friends in Lebensspuren, where I first met other children of the Lebensborn programme: you, above all, know how important you have been.
For their company and support on my trips to Rogaška Slatina, I thank my friends Ute Grünwald, Ingrid Rätzmann and Helga Lucas. And I am grateful to my Slovenian family for being so friendly and open.
I owe a special debt to Dr Dorothee Schmitz-Köster. From the moment I met her, she has been a great help. She not only encouraged
me to believe that my story could be written but also contributed her extensive knowledge of Lebensborn. She was very good and sensible company on my last trip to Slovenia.
When Tim suggested this book, I made myself examine all the stages of my life. So much had been unknown and troublesome, but as we worked together I found the darkness which had enveloped me gradually disappearing. I also discovered that in the process of writing I was able to âtalk' to Helena, Johann and even Erika Matko. I was able, on the page, if not in reality, to ask âwhy'. I did not necessarily find all the answers. But these conversations (some of them heated!) helped me to forgive and to love life as it is.
Ingrid Matko-von-Oelhafen
Osnabrück, April 2015
T
his book grew out of a film I made in 2013. I had heard of Lebensborn several years earlier and had tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade various television networks to commission a documentary about it. Finally, Channel 5 agreed to fund a sixty-minute film: I am indebted to its commissioning editor, Simon Raikes, for seeing the importance of the story and backing it.
I met Ingrid while researching the programme: she agreed to be filmed and was immensely generous when I was unable, for reasons of space, to include her story within the documentary. She was also kind enough to listen when I subsequently suggested that we should write a book about her extraordinary and brave journey to discover the truth about Lebensborn and her past.
Neither that film nor this book could have emerged without the efforts and encouragement of Dr Dorothee Schmitz-Köster. The
Lebensborn children have no greater champion than Dorothee, and her commitment to telling their stories in her own books (sadly published only in Germany) has been crucial in bringing Himmler's shadowy organisation into the light.
Our thanks are also due to our British publishers, Elliott & Thompson, for so enthusiastically supporting this book, and to our editor there, Olivia Bays: her cool-headed advice significantly improved our manuscript.
Similarly, Andrew Lownie is the very model of a perfect literary agent. His initial guidance, and thereafter his relationship with publishers across the world, has ensured that this story will be read in countries as far apart as Finland, Italy and the United States.
Finally, I could not write without the love and support of my partner, Mia Pennal. After a lifetime of searching, I was lucky enough to be found.
Cursum Perficio
: my journey ends here.
Tim Tate
Wiltshire, April 2015
Aller, river
23â24
Allies
5â8
,
10â13
,
17
,
24
,
60
,
71
,
77
,
111
,
114
,
122
,
123
Supreme Allied Headquarters in Europe
76
Alnova
118
America
see
United States
Andersen, Ingrid (âEka')
9
,
15
,
27
,
29
,
30
,
40
,
46
,
48â50
,
55
Ansbach
10
Aryans
65â66
,
79
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82â83
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88
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89
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91
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110
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112
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116
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117
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121
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124
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126
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129
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160
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162
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164
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166
,
180â181
,
185
Australia
136
Austria
10
,
43
,
45
,
52
,
67
,
72
,
98
,
105
,
144
,
173
,
180
Avenarius, Ingeborg von
128
Bad Arolsen
75â88
,
101
,
118
,
172
,
174
Bad Toelz
163
Bahrdorf
24
Bavaria
4
,
111â112
,
163
,
183
,
191
Bayreuth
133
Beck, Anneliese
195
Beria, Lavrenti
13
Berlin
16
,
21
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45
,
53
,
72
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84
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85
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109
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112
,
122
Black Forest
45â46
carpet
6
RAF
114
Bonn
136
Agreement
78
Brandenburg
108â109
Brandt, Rudolph
106
Budapest
52
Bundestag
78
camps
vii
,
4
,
10
,
87
,
105
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109
,
130
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131
,
143
,
144
,
166
,
168
,
180
,
182â183
concentration
1
,
3
,
13â14
,
131
,
141
,
146
,
160
,
169
,
173
,
180
,
188
see also Schweigelager
and named camps
Caritas
173
Celje (Cilli)
1
,
3
,
139
,
141â144
,
149
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176
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179
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180
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183
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184
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187
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191
,
194
Central Tracing Bureau
see
International Tracing Service
Churchill, Winston
7
Congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia
140
Constance, Lake
43
Crimea
118
Danzig
164â165
Darré, Walther
92
Death's Head regiments
59
,
95â96
Dietmar
see
Holzapfel, Dietmar DivaÄa
141
Doležalová, Marie
130â131
Dollinger, Hannes
111â113