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Berlin Memorial Remembers WWII Euthanasia Victims

Berlin Memorial Remembers WWII Euthanasia Victims

02.09.2014 14:47

A 24-meter glass (80-foot) wall was unveiled in Berlin's Tiergarten on Tuesday, a monument for the round 300,000 people deemed "unworthy of life" and killed by the Nazis in their infamous euthanasia campaign. The federal government and the city of Berlin unveiled on Tuesday a monument for the victims.

A 24-meter glass (80-foot) wall was unveiled in Berlin's Tiergarten on Tuesday, a monument for the round 300,000 people deemed "unworthy of life" and killed by the Nazis in their infamous euthanasia campaign.

The federal government and the city of Berlin unveiled on Tuesday a monument for the victims of Nazi euthanasia at a ceremony in the central Tiergarten park.



The open air installation, which comprises a 24-meter-high (80-foot) glass wall, is meant as a symbol to inform people about the scope of the euthanasia murders and their "repercussions that reach to the present day."



Federal culture secretary Monika Grütters said the monument reminded of the Nazis' "inconceivably inhumane distinction between 'life worth living' and 'life not worth living'," adding that the site also served as a warning not to view life in such utilitarian terms.



Victims' relatives and other political figures gathered in the Tiergarten for the ceremony, at the site of a now-demolished villa at Tiergartenstrasse 4. More than 60 Nazi bureaucrats and doctors worked in secret there under the "T4" program to organize the mass murder of sanatorium and psychiatric hospital patients.



Misfits no more



The monument is made of blue glass and contains information panels detailing the Nazis' campaign to exterminate the sick, the physically and mentally handicapped as well as people branded social "misfits."



In 1940 and 1941, around 70,000 people were gassed as part of the Nazis' official euthanasia program. It was cancelled in August 1941, following public protests, but the killings continued under wraps and using different methods, including forced starvation and poisonings.



A total of 300,000 people deemed not worthy of life by the Nazis are believed to have been murdered. Neither West nor East Germany ever compensated the victims' families or the survivors, and critics had been long calling for official recognition of the injustices.



glb/cd (AFP, dpa, epd)



 
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