During World War II, Hitler launched a special operation called T-4 (Aktion T4) to recruit a group of beautiful women who had no doubts about his Nazi ideals and were loyal to him, and trained them into the "T-4 Nurse Group". And ordered them to specifically eliminate "people with no survival value", including physically disabled people, patients with mental illness, etc. The Nazi Party believed that these people were "unsound elements" of the German nation and had no need to exist.
After Hitler issued the order to massacre these people, the Nazi Party concocted a plan to systematically eliminate these patients in a villa at 4 Strasse Tiengarden in Berlin, code-named "Plan T-4." In order to keep it secret, the nurses who implemented the plan were named "T-4 Nurse Group" by the Nazis.
In December 1939, the first batch of T-4 nurses, composed of more than 20 female nurses including Maria Apinger and Pauline Kneisler, began to perform "T-4" after undergoing secret training and swearing to keep secrets. plan". After being brainwashed by the Nazis, many of them actively participated in the Nazi regime's "genocide" plan, crazily torturing and killing prisoners. There is a saying circulating in the women's concentration camp: "The men are lucky because they have not been abused by the female devil." Some of these female nurses look like gods, and some look gentle and lovely, but under the humiliation, torture, and When killing unarmed prisoners, they resorted to all possible means, including beatings, biting with dogs, shooting prisoners, and even sick people and children. They also conducted chemical and biological experiments on prisoners, used prisoners' human skin to make lampshades, and killed their children in front of their mothers, creating scenes of horrific human tragedies.
Members of the "T-4 Nurse Group" used medical methods to kill many patients and set up gas chambers in mental hospitals and sanatoriums. The "T-4 Nurse Team" will first evaluate the patient, then transfer the person to a mental hospital for execution, and finally burn the body and falsify the death certificate. It is understood that more than 100,000 people were treated by the "T-4 Nurse Team" without anyone noticing, including 10,000 children. It is foreseeable that the members of this organization will definitely accept trials and sanctions after the war, and pay the due price for their indiscriminate killing of innocent people. However, only a small number of "T-4 female nurses" were hanged. Due to various reasons, many "T-4 female nurses" did not receive the punishment they deserved (Xiao Qian's "Late Autumn in Southern Germany" contains relevant records of the trial of "T-4 female nurses").
"Good day, ladies." A beautiful female nurse with exquisite makeup and a Third Reich nun uniform walked into the director's car.
"Good day, Sister Luke." The female director stood up with a smile. The eyes of the female star Anneliese Akerman beside her lit up. When he looked into the eyes of War Girl Danielle, he couldn't help but smile knowingly.
Sister Luke, formerly known as Gabrielle van der Mal, is the eldest daughter of a Belgian noble family. She is also the heroine of "The Nun's Story". Audrey Hepburn, who plays her, perfectly portrays the journey of a pious Belgian woman from becoming a monk to returning to secular life.
Gabia is determined to serve the poor black people in Africa and spread the gospel of God. For this reason, she strives to abide by the strict precepts of the church and accepts various tests that are so harsh that they are almost unreasonable with absolute faith and obedience. Finally, he was sent to the Congo by the church as he wished. However, in her work in the hospital, her passion for serving patients wholeheartedly came into conflict more and more with the complicated rules of the Catholic Church - even during the operation, she had to take off her mask and kneel at the door of the operating room to lead Mass. Eucharist. Under the influence of the atheist Dr. Fortunati, she began to question the church's rules. After the outbreak of World War II, her father was killed by the German army while practicing medicine. Gabia could no longer maintain the restraint and forgiveness required by the teachings, and decided to request secularization.
This original plot line spawned subsequent plots on its own due to the "cross-plot fusion" of "World War II-like plot fragments" and "similar compatibility".
No, for some unknown reason, Sister Luke joined the "T-4 Nurse Group". Of course, considering the blood feud carried by the heroine, her purpose of joining the "T-4 Nurse Group" is obviously not to kill innocent people.
Just as there are devils, there must be angels. Even among evil people, there are still people who maintain a righteous heart.
In addition to the appalling "T-4 Nurse Group", there was also Poland's "Female Schindler" - Irena Sendler, who risked her life to save more than 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis during World War II. .
Elena Sendler was born in Warsaw, Poland on February 15, 1910. Her father was a doctor with a compassionate heart. Unfortunately, he died of infection while treating typhoid patients that other doctors were unwilling to touch. Sendler was only 7 years old. However, when she was young, she always remembered her father's words during his lifetime: If you see someone drowning, you should try to save him even if you can't swim.
Her father's words and spirit of teaching by words and deeds have always influenced Sendler. When she grew up, it was these simple words and her father's spirit of sacrificing herself to save others that made her become a nurse at the Warsaw Social Relief Bureau.
As the situation in the quarantine area worsened, by 1942, Jews were driven into concentration camps and faced the threat of death every day. As a nurse, Sendler had a pass to and from the Jewish ghetto. It also allowed her to see too many innocent Jews who were suffering, and she often provided them with food, clothing, and medicine.
As the situation became increasingly severe and Jews faced the threat of death every day, Sendler and his companions began to establish a Holocaust network to help Jewish children escape. For 18 months, they risked their lives almost every day and protected Jewish children from leaving the death camps countless times. Their behavior was questioned by Jewish parents, and the question they were often asked was: "How can (you) ensure that your child will survive?" Sendler could only tell the truth: "(I) can't." Because she was not sure whether she could leave the quarantine area alive. Some parents had a glimmer of hope and asked them to take their children away, while others claimed to "think about it for a few days." However, when Sendler returned, most Jewish families had already been sent to the death camps.
In this way, more than 2,500 Jewish children were hidden by Sendler under stretchers, suitcases, garbage bags and even body bags, and were secretly taken out of the quarantine area in ambulances. Some of them were sent to orphanages, monasteries, or civilian families who were willing to help Jews escape disasters. In order to protect these children whose lives were at risk at any time, Sendler and her partners worked sleeplessly for several days and nights to create 3,000 forged documents for the children.
In order to allow these children to be reunited with their relatives in the future, Sendler made a list in which the real name and false identity of each child were recorded in detail, and many names were written down on thin napkins. In October 1943, the Nazis who heard the news surrounded Sendler's residence. At the critical moment, she asked her companions to hide the list in their underwear. In order to protect her companions from escaping, she walked out of the residence calmly. In this way, Sendler, who was only 33 years old, was imprisoned in the notorious Pawak Prison. His leg and foot bones were broken, and he did not tell any information. The Nazis were determined to kill her. In order to rescue Sendler, members of the Warsaw underground organization raised a large amount of cash to bribe the executioners. The dying Sendler was thrown into the woods and was rescued by his companions. The Nazis thought that Sendler had been executed, and her name appeared on the shooting list the next day, so Sendler was rescued and could only live in anonymity. But after changing his appearance, Sendler was still fighting in the team to rescue the Jews.
In 1944, during the Warsaw Uprising, in order to reunite the children on the list with their parents, Sendler put the "Sendler List" she recorded in a glass bottle and secretly buried it under the apple tree outside her friend's apartment. In 1945, when World War II was over, Sendler dug out the bottle from under the tree and gave the list to the Central Committee of Polish Jews, hoping to fulfill his promise: to return the children he had taken out to their parents.
Unfortunately, only a few of the children have found their families, and most of the children's parents have been killed or disappeared. Fortunately, these children's lives were spared. Since then, for 54 years, due to the obstruction of the Polish government, Elena Sendler was never allowed to go abroad. She lived a life of poverty like ordinary people. Her deeds of saving more than 2,500 children were buried in the long history. It was not until 1999 that her story was "investigated" by several children on the other side of the ocean who were once on the "Sendler List". She was 90 years old. Elena Sendler was only known to the public, and what came for her was a shock to the world and a belated honor.
In 2003, Pope John Paul II wrote a personal letter to Sendler praising her outstanding conduct during the war. In October 2003, Sendler was awarded Poland's highest honor, the White Eagle Award, and her image was printed on Poland's 2009 commemorative silver coin. In 2007 and 2008, Elena Sendler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for two consecutive years.
On May 12, 2008, 98-year-old Elena Sendler passed away peacefully in Poland. At that time, the media compared her deeds with the German Oskar Schindler recorded in "Schindler's List" who hired more than 1,100 Jews to work in his factory during World War II, thereby helping them escape the massacre ( Oskar Schindler called her the "Female Schindler".
Even in a dark world, there is always the light of humanity shining brightly.