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Friday, May 18, 2012

Nurnberg Ritual Murders

Nurnberg Ritual Murders - Purimfest 16 October 1946

The following is a translation of an article that appeared at a Spanish-speaking website. It presents some interesting information. After this, the link to the original article and pictures are shown of the four people it references.
        The Jewish ritual murders of Nuremberg are indescribable, judging by these photographs, in which all the corpses of the "hanged people" show a cut in the neck, right underneath the ear, and a thread of blood that falls behind the ear until the high part of the head .... The fact that the line of dried blood was flowing upwards - towards the forehead and the hair - demonstrates that they were hung [upside down] while they were bled and also explains the terrible condition of these corpses. From top to bottom, we see the bodies of Julius Streicher,Arthur Seyss-Iquart, Wilhem Keitel and Ernst Kaltenbrunner. Jews had to quickly show these corpses to the international press that covered the judgment. The Jewish executors had no time to prepare the bodies in order to properly hide the marks of the ritual sacrifice, especially in Keitel, who still shows his face covered in blood. (Or they felt it unnecessary to hide these marks.) No explanations have been given on this matter. Although we have selected only these four images, we must stress that ALL the executed ones had this.
     Julius Streicher 
                                                           
                                                                                          Arthur Seyss-Iquart

   
    Wilhem Keitel                                                          
                                                                                               Ernst Kaltenbrunner

Executions at Nuremberg

Nazi_death1
Above clockwise: Streicher, Jodl, Sauckel, Frick, Ribbentrop; below, clockwise from topright, Keitel, Rosenberg, Seyss-Inquart, Frank, Kaltenbrunner, Goering.
Nazi_death2Although the Nuremberg Trials had been a media circus, only a selected group of reporters were allowed into the execution chambers of the Nazi war criminals. The authorities feared that the Nazi leaders would get sympathy or they would become martyrs if the executions turned into a media spectacle. Eight journalists from Big Four countries were selected by lottery, but only one photographer (and he was from U.S. Army) was allowed behind the close doors to report the last moments inside the prison.
The French judges suggested the use of a firing squad for the military condemned, but the other judges deemed undignified execution by hanging more appropriate. The hangings were carried out on 16 October 1946 by the executioner John C. Woods. Of the 12 defendants sentenced to death by hanging, two were not hanged: Hermann Göring committed suicide the night before the execution and Martin Bormann was not present when convicted. The remaining 10 defendants sentenced to death were hanged. The bodies were brought to Dachau and burned (the final use of the crematories there) with the ashes then scattered into a river.
The pictures of the executed corpses made by Edward F. McLaughlin (the U.S army photographer) were released in November (to dispel the rumors that the hangings which were conducted secretly, were bungled or never carried out), and were received by much disapproval. Many feared the criminals becoming the martyrs through these pictures. The British government voted against releasing the pictures on moral grounds, and no British publications reproduced them, honoring their government’s desires. The pictures were forbidden in the German press. LIFE magazine, above, however , reproduced them.

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