Copyright (c) 1997 - Ingrid A. Rimland
". . . (o)nly after HUNDREDS of such interrogations, when she was psychologically broken and finally understood what the interrogators wanted to get from her."
She was compelled to write a document "incriminating" her own
flesh and blood. Even so, the words of the confession were not her own.
She was obliged to use words like "War criminal", "wager
of aggressive wars", "plunderer", "ruining of cities",
"occupying countries", "destroying civilizations" and
"turning people into slaves."
Broken, dispirited, and weakened from years of physical and mental abuse,
Maria was soon "placed on trial" where she was given a 25 year
sentence. The sentence had already been a forgone conclusion, directed by
"higher-ups" within the system, and allowed for no appeal.
Abandoned and disconsolate, and in the hands of wolves, Maria was dispatched
forthwith to one of the most brutal, foul concentration camps ever to be
established in Eastern Europe, where, in 1953, it was reported that she
had "died suddenly" while in captivity.
So, who WAS Maria Koppensteiner, and what horrifying crimes had she committed
to warrant this savage treatment at the hands of such merciless inquisitors?
She was Adolf Hitler's cousin.
Aside from that one little fact, Maria had committed no crime. She was a
simple, kind-hearted soul, a devoted mother to her children, and a dedicated,
loving wife. How many nights of anguish she must have suffered, feeling
abandoned and isolated from her loved ones, who never heard from nor saw
her again - after she was spirited away from her modest little home by Stalin's
thugs from Smersh in May, 1945.
Maria was sent to the infamous Lefortovo prison in Moscow, where after many
months of barbaric ill-treatment, she "signed" her "confession",
along with thousands of other imprisoned Germans.
After her "show trial" she was remanded to one of the worst Soviet
concentration camps, the Upper Urals prison near Chelyabinsk. And there
she perished, abandoned and ignored by a world engulfed by the grim events
of her time.
Maria Koppensteiner died alone, but she is not forgotten.
Ingrid
Thought for the Day:
"The daily diet in Russian slave camps is soup and lectures on the glories of communism and the evils of western democracies."
(Ralph Franklin Keeling in "Gruesome Harvest")