Remains of Nazi victims studied by German doctor to receive burial
300 victims of the Nazis will be buried in Berlin next month after samples found in black boxes included some labelled with names
The remains of 300 people killed by the Nazis and used by a German doctor for research will be buried in Berlin next month.
The late Hermann Stieve kept tissue samples of the mostly female victims after he dissected their bodies for his research at the University of Berlin. He sometimes received the bodies of resistance fighters minutes after they were killed at the Berlin-Ploetzensee prison, the German newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported Sunday.
The samples were found in small black boxes and some were labelled with the name of the victim, according to the newspaper. Stieve was researching menstruation and the effects of stress on the reproductive system.
Stieve died of a stroke in 1952. The samples were discovered by his heirs and turned over to Berlin’s Charité university hospital. They will be buried on May 13.
Although Stieve’s research is widely considered to have violated medical ethics, he was elected to the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin and the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences also extended membership to him in recognition of his research.
This comes after six Holocaust victims were laid to rest at Bushey Cemetery in the UK.
More than 1,200 mourners, including 50 survivors, attend the burial at Bushey New Cemetery of six unknown Jews murdered in Auschwitz.
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