We, the comrades of
Unit 1012: The VFFDP, will honor the German Resistance Against Nazism every
year on July 20. They inspired us to fight for victims’ rights and defend the
use of the death penalty. We will post information from Wikipedia and other
links about the German Resistance Memorial Center.
The courtyard at the Bendlerblock, where
Stauffenberg, Olbricht and others were executed
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The German Resistance Memorial
Center (German: Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand), is a memorial and museum
in Berlin, capital of Germany. It was opened in 1980 in part of the Bendlerblock,
a complex of offices in Stauffenbergstrasse (formerly Bendlerstrasse), south of
the Großer Tiergarten in Tiergarten. It was here that Colonel Claus Schenk Graf
von Stauffenberg and other members of the failed 20 July plot that
attempted to assassinate Adolf Hitler were executed.
Although the memorial is primarily
intended to commemorate those members of the German Army
who tried to assassinate Hitler in 1944, it is also a memorial to the German
resistance in the broader sense. Historians agree that there was no united,
national resistance movement in Nazi
Germany at any time during Hitler's years in power (1933–45). Joachim
Fest describes it as "the resistance that never was."
Nevertheless, the term German Resistance (Deutscher Widerstand) is now
used to describe all elements of opposition and resistance to the Nazi Regime,
including the underground networks of the Social Democrats and Communists, The White
Rose, opposition activities in the Christian
churches (e.g. the Confessing Church), and the resistance groups
based in the civil service, intelligence organs and armed forces.
A plaque in the inner courtyard of the
Memorial to the German Resistance, near the spot where Stauffenberg and others
were executed in July 1944
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Design
The visitor enters the museum from
Stauffenbergstrasse through an archway, on the wall of which is inscribed:
"Here in the former Supreme Headquarters of the Army, Germans organized
the attempt of 20 July 1944 to end the Nazi rule of injustice. For this,
they sacrificed their lives. The Federal Republic of Germany and the State of
Berlin created this new memorial place in the year 1980." The visitor then
enters the central courtyard, in which a statue of a naked man marks the place
where the conspirators were executed. A plaque on a wall nearby commemorates
this event. In front of the statue, embedded in the ground, is a plaque that
reads in German:
Ihr trugt die Schande nicht.Ihr wehrtet euch.Ihr gabt das große ewig wache Zeichen der Umkehr,opfernd Euer heißes Leben für Freiheit, Recht, und Ehre.
This translates as:
You did not bear the shame.You resisted.You bestowed the eternally vigilant symbol of changeby sacrificing your impassioned lives for freedom, justice and honor.
The entrance to the museum, which
occupies three floors of one of the Bendlerblock buildings, is nearby.
German Resistance Memorial |
Museum exhibits
The museum consists of a series of
displays chronicling the history of Nazi Germany and of all those individuals
and groups who opposed it, for whatever reason. All resisters are given equal
respect. The museum, while seeking to show the many strands of German society
which engaged in resistance activity, does not seek to disguise the fact that
the great majority of Germans supported Hitler's regime and that there was
never an effective resistance movement.
Particular attention is given to
military resistance figures such as Stauffenberg, Ludwig Beck,
Erwin von Witzleben, Günther von Kluge, Erich
Hoepner, Hans Oster and Friedrich Olbricht. This underlines the modern German military
doctrine, which holds that military officers have a moral duty which goes
beyond the blind obedience of orders, and that those officers who plotted to
kill Hitler were not traitors but heroes. The same point is made about other
Germans who went into exile and assisted the Allied war effort against Germany,
such as Marlene Dietrich.
The museum also makes a particular
point of demonstrating how Hitler exploited anti-Semitism
to gain power and lead Germany to ruin. Graphic examples of Nazi
anti-Semitic propaganda are displayed. The museum reproduces many official
documents, newspapers, posters, illegal handbills, private letters and photographs:
more than 5,000 individual items in all.
Memorial statue at the Bendlerblock by Richard
Scheibe
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