Posted on 11/28/2004 7:13:51 AM PST by SJackson
WHEN Beate Niemann went in search of her father she hoped to find a man she could be proud of, but instead uncovered a truth that lay hidden for nearly six decades under family lies and deceit.
While she went looking for Bruno Sattler, a father, First World War soldier, Berlin policeman and family man, she found only SS Major Bruno Sattler: mass murderer with the blood of hundreds of thousands of Jews on his hands.
At a time when Germans have begun to embrace victimhood about the Second World War, projecting themselves as having suffered equally under RAF bombs, from Red Army rapes and under their Nazi masters on a scale that somehow equates with the millions upon whom Germany inflicted its savagery, Niemanns story shatters this cosy attempt to retreat into shared pain.
Now Jewish groups and schools are being given special showings of an extraordinary film which chronicles Niemanns journey in search of her father. Her disturbing voyage into the past is told in The Good Father which has won documentary prizes in the US and Canada.
It is showing in select cinemas in Germany and being screened to schoolchildren and Jewish groups. The film is a journey that many of Niemanns generation found too painful to take.
She said: "I went in search of father I never knew and I hoped that the nagging doubts I had had about him down the years would be dispelled and I would find a man that I could be truly proud of.
"Instead I found a man who was a mass murderer, whose life was glossed over by my mother; my mother who lied to me and who continued to lie up until the day she died. I found a man who, when I was being suckled on my mothers breast, was ordering mobile gas wagons each day to a concentration camp outside of Belgrade to kill women and children.
"I found a man who gave the orders for tens of thousands of Jews to be shot in Smolensk and outside Moscow and who participated in the destruction of 500,000 partisans, Jews, gypsies and others in Yugoslavia.
"This is what I found. This is the truth. It is inescapable. And in my greatest rage I wonder why, why he didnt even have the decency to kill himself, to do that small thing for me?"
Broke and desperate to avoid being one of the millions on the human scrapheap of the German great depression after World War One, Sattler took a job selling jewellery in the Wertheim department store in Berlin in the 1930s. The store owned by the Jewish Wertheim family.
Then he left, joined the Nazi party, became a policeman and took the fast track to promotion with the Gestapo. Then he went into the SS security service, the SD, and then into the ranks of the Einsatzgruppen, the Action Squads which killed 1.5 million civilians in the Soviet Union before the human abattoirs of Auschwitz and Treblinka came on-stream in Poland.
In 1997, 17 years after her mother died, Niemann, now 62, went in search of the truth in 100 different archives in three countries.
But it was in her mothers possessions and in the local planning office in Berlin that she first began to piece together the fading paper mosaic that would illustrate the moral collapse of her parents.
She discovered that in 1942, before she was born, her father negotiated to buy the spacious family house in Dahlem from a Jewess named Gertrud Leon for the knock-down price of 14,617 Reichsmarks. Sattler was able to strong-arm the property from her by offering her protection from the transports that shunted Jews eastward to their deaths every day.
He did nothing of the sort: two weeks later she was shipped to the Theresienstadt camp in Czechoslovakia and then taken to Auschwitz for gassing.
By the time one defenceless Jewish lady was shipped to her doom, Sattlers Einsatzgruppen B had blooded themselves in the fields around Minsk, Moscow, Smolensk and numerous other places where individuals were dispatched in ones and twos and then in their hundreds and their thousands.
The film shows Niemann travelling to Belgrade where she met Liliane Djorjevic, a Jewish woman whose father was murdered by Sattler. She was incarcerated in a concentration camp that Sattler oversaw and where he ordered mobile gas vans to dispatch more than 8,000 women and children to their doom.
Tears are never far away but they do not flow from Niemanns eyes, not even when she walks into the killing fields where her father oversaw the execution of more than 500,000 Jews and hostages, 100 of whom died for every German soldier who was killed.
Russian agents kidnapped Sattler from the streets of Berlin in 1947 and he vanished into the East German prison gulag.
Niemanns journey of painful discovery ended in the cellar of a Stasi jail in Leipzig, long abandoned, the tiny cells where men slept 20 at a time on wooden pallets. On October 10 1972 Sattler was killed with a shot in the head in the execution cell in the jails cellars, a lightless, airless place the inmates called the U-Boat.
"My sympathies are solely for his victims," Niemann said. "I came away from this project only wishing I had not been born a German and that I did not have parents such as these. It is my experience that Germans of this generation are all liars."
Remind me to think about this man if I EVER start bitching about my parents.
This lady doesn't sound like such a sweetheart herself.
You are not the carrier of guilt for your parents' inhumanity unless you chose to be. You are what you make yourself to be. The INDIVIDUAL is the core concept of America. God will only love you or punish you for what YOU do.
Did you notice something I did'nt? She seems pretty honest to me. If that had been my father you can know damn well I would'nt exactly advertise it.
I agree, but wouldn't you be sickened if you had found the gruesome truth that she is dealing with?
I see no point in piling on the Nazis at this point. If you're not convinced that Nazism is pure evil, obviously we do not share the same principles. People on this forum argue that because a Jewish family "sold" artwork or jewelery to some Nazi son of bitch, the heirs have no right to try to reclaim it. I would maintain that any sale or contract by a Jew in Nazi Europe is, prima facie coerced and not a voluntary contract.
Agreed. I just would'nt go out of my way to share that with others. I'd have a hard enough time dealing with that horror myself.
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"My sympathies are solely for his victims (who were murdered under the hand of the Nazi SS)," Niemann said. "I came away from this project only wishing I had not been born a German and that I did not have parents such as these. It is my experience that Germans of this generation are all liars."
At 62 it seems like she waited a long time before trying to understand more about her parents. Or at least speak out about what she had discovered. I'm probably reading too much into the story, but I wouldn't be surprised if she had long held suspicions and her search was more to confirm her fears at a point in her life when she had little left to fear.
Why do you say that?
Boy is this remark right on. We continue to wallow in Nazi butchery of 40 years ago all the while averting our eyes to the present day butchery of the islamo-fascists. What is that?
If you want to see human savagery you don't need to go to the archives. Just look at the throat cutters in Iraq, the rapists in Sudan, the bus bombers in Israel ... And more to the point there is something we can, and thanks to Bush, we are doing about Islamo-fascism.
God Bless the Marines.
In the US the legal system would agree with you as to post 1993 sales.
I do not believe in collective guilt. An innocent child is not responsible for the crimes committed by her father. The Bible says we are to honor our parents. But there are times when they don't deserve our love - as when they harm innocent people. Beate Niemann's story is worth hearing. Its hard growing up in the shadow of a parent like Bruno Sattler and discovering the man was a monster instead of a saint. What it all points to is each man and each woman is responsible for their own sin. We can hope the daughter learned that while she can't change the past, she can see to it that it never happens again. Worth thinking about.
When will the KGB, AVO, Stasi and all the other state sanctioned killers gainfully employed by the Communists get theirs?
She made a film about her father. That hardly impedes the war on terror, nor is there any indication of her feelings towards jihadists.
You know, some day I would like to read an article, see a news story, read a best-seller, or see a movie chronicling the atrocities of Communist regimes. When it comes to the Museum of Evil, seems that the only exhibit is the Nazi exhibit.
This is good--it teaches future generations what a good ass-kickin' is like.
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