Werner Blankenburg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Werner Blankenburg, (June 19, 1905 – November 28, 1957) was head of the Section IIa in the Kanzlei des Führers in Nazi Germany, and thus one of the main responsible persons for the National Socialist "Euthanasia"-program Action T4, the annihilation of the Polish Jews in the "Aktion Reinhard", and the experiments with castration by X-Rays in KZ Auschwitz-Birkenau.
[edit] Life
Blankenburg was born in Caputh, Kreis Belzig (today Landkreis Potsdam-Mittelmark) in the Province of Brandenburg.
On April 1, 1929, Blankenburg entered the NSDAP (Member Nr. 124744) and the SA. In the year 1938 he became Oberreichsleiter (in the rank of SA-Obersturmführer) of the section IIa in Hitler's Chancellery ("Kanzlei des Führers"). By that he was deputy for Oberdienstleiter Viktor Brack as head of section II, responsible for affairs of the Party, State, and the Armed Forces. Later, he became Brack's successor.
From July 1939 planning started for the mass destruction of adults with intellectual or physical disabilities, later called "Aktion T4". In October 1939 (although dated retroactively to September 1, 1939) it was Blankenburg who dictated to a secretary Hitler's authorisation to start the National Socialist "Euthanasia" program. In this declaration, Philipp Bouhler and Hitler's physician Karl Brandt were named administrators of the program. Bouhler left the administration of "Aktion T4" largely in the hands of Viktor Brack; Blankenburg as Brack's deputy was therefore involved in the program in a leading position.
Since neither the Chancellery nor the Reich Interior Ministry were supposed to show up as responsible for the program, dummy companies were founded which acted as fronts for the government. The Hauptamt II der Kanzlei des Führers, responsible among other duties for recruiting and appointing of personnel, equipment and controlling of the killing centers, is referred to in documents as "Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft Heil- und Pflegeanstalten" (Reich work group for sanatoriums and care institutions). The members of the Chancellery also used fake names; Blankenburg's alias as deputy of the head of non-medical staff, Viktor Brack, was "Brenner". At recruiting of non-medical staff for the Aktion T4 and the various killing centers it was, among others, Blankenburg who introduced selected candidates to the killing program and informed them that the actions were ordered by the Führer and therefore legal; though nevertheless the program had to be kept secret.
After the end of phase one of the "euthanasia"-program on August 24, 1941, the work of the Chancellery and the central headquarter of Aktion T4 was continued in the second phase, borne by "local initiative" rather than central organisation. Personnel freed from T4 duties was mostly transferred to the "Aktion Reinhard", which continued to be subodinate to the Zentralorganisation-T4, while technical orders were given by the SS and Police Leader of the Lublin district, Odilo Globocnik.
In April, 1945, Blankenburg was evacuated from Berlin to Bavaria together with other members of Hitler's Chancellery, among others Viktor Brack. After the end of World War II he hid under the name "Werner Bieleke" (his wife's maiden name) in the Wangen district of Stuttgart. He worked as a bank clerk in Ludwigsburg, and later on as representative for a textile company in Freudenstadt. On February 19, 1949 he got engaged to a nurse. In spite of being wanted by the police from 1945 to his death, he managed to live quietly, even keeping in contact with his parents in an old people's home in Ulm as well as with former colleagues at the Aktion T4.
Blankenburg died in Stuttgart-Wangen and is buried there under the name of Werner Bieleke. At the funeral service numerous former members of the Aktion T4 were present, among others August Dietrich Allers and Erwin Lambert. He had been officially declared dead on December 31, 1945, upon request of his wife in 1956.
[edit] References
All references are in German.
- Ernst Klee: "Euthanasie" im NS-Staat. 11. Ed. Fischer-Taschenbuch, Frankfurt/M. 2004, ISBN 3-596-24326-2
- Ernst Klee: Was sie taten – Was sie wurden. Ärzte, Juristen und andere Beteiligte am Kranken- oder Judenmord. 12. Ed. Fischer-TB, Frankfurt/M. 2004, ISBN 3-596-24364-5
- Ernst Klee: "Werner Blankenburg" Eintrag in ders.: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945. Actualised Edition. Fischer-Taschenbuch, Frankfurt am Main 2005, ISBN 3-596-16048-0, p. 52.
- Henry Friedlander: Der Weg zum NS-Genozid. Von der Euthanasie zur Endlösung. Berlin, Berlin-Verlag, 1997. ISBN 3-8270-0265-6
- This article was initially translated from the Wikipedia article Werner Blankenburg, specifically from this version.

