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1.1354 "T-4 Nurse Group" Vs "Female Schindler"

During World War II, Hitler launched a special operation called T-4 (Aktion T4), recruiting a group of beautiful women who had no doubts about his Nazi philosophy, trained them into "T-4 nurse groups", and ordered them to specifically eliminate "people with no survival value", including physically disabled people, mentally ill patients, etc. The Nazi Party believes that these people are "unsound elements" in the German nation and there is no need to exist.

After Hitler issued a massacre order on these people, the Nazi Party created a plan to systematically eliminate these patients in a villa at No. 4, Strasse Tiengarden, Berlin. In order to keep it confidential, the nurses who specifically implemented the plan were named "T-4 Nurse Group" by the Nazis.

In December 1939, the first batch of T-s, composed of more than 20 female nurses including Maria Apingjie, Pauline Kneisler, etc.

-4 nurses have been secretly trained and sworn to keep secrets, and began to implement the "T-4 Plan". After being brainwashed by the Nazis, many of them actively participated in the "genocide" plan of the Nazi regime, and madly abused and massacred prisoners. They acted badly and were full of crimes. They were even more cruel than men, so that in many concentration camps where women were imprisoned, there was a saying circulating: "Men are lucky because they were not abused by the female devil."

Some of the female nurses look like fairies, and some look gentle and cute, but when they humiliate, torture and kill unarmed prisoners, they use all kinds of things, and their methods are very cruel: they often beat, let dogs bite, shoot prisoners, and even sick people and children are not spared. They also conduct chemical and biological experiments on prisoners, use prisoners' human skin to make lampshades, and kill their children in front of their mothers, creating horrifying scenes of human tragedy.

Members of the "T-4 Nurse Group" used medical methods to kill many patients and set up gas chambers in mental hospitals and nursing homes. The "T-4 Nurse Group" will first evaluate the patients, then transfer the person to the mental hospital for execution, and finally burn the body and forge death certificates. It is understood that about 100,000 people were dealt with by the "T-4 Nurse Group" without knowing their knowledge, including 10,000 children. It can be foreseen that members of this organization must have been tried and sanctioned after the war, and paid the due price for their own indiscriminate killing of innocent people. However, the "T-4 female nurses" who were hanged are only a few. Due to various reasons, many "T-4 female nurses" did not receive the punishment they deserve (Xiao Qian's "The Mid Autumn in Nande" contains records of the trial of "T-4 female nurses").

"Ri'an, ladies." The beautiful female nurse wearing exquisite makeup walked into the director's carriage in the Third Reich nun's nurse uniform.

"Ri'an, Sister Luke." The female director smiled and stood up. The female star Anelice Ackermann's eyes lit up. She looked at the battlefield girl Danielle and couldn't help but smile knowingly.

Sister Luke, whose original name is Gabrielle van der Mal, is the eldest daughter of the Belgian noble family. She is also the heroine of The Nun's Story. Audrey Hepburn, who plays her, perfectly portrays a devout woman in Belgium's heart from becoming a monk to returning to secular life.

Gabiya was determined to serve poor black people in Africa and spread the gospel of God. For this reason, she worked hard to obey the strict rules of the church, and obeyed with all kinds of harsh and almost unreasonable tests with absolute faith. Finally, she was sent to Congo as she wished. However, in the hospital work, her enthusiasm for serving patients was increasingly conflicted with the complex 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 for mass to receive the holy ethics. Under the influence of the atheist Dr. Fortunati, she began to question the rules of the church. After the outbreak of World War II, her father was killed by the German army in her medical practice. Gabiya could no longer maintain the restraint, forgiveness required by the doctrine, and decided to request return to secular life.

This original plot line has its own subsequent plot due to the "cross-plot fusion" of "World War II plot fragments" and "similar and soluble".

Not that, for some unknown reason, Sister Luke joined the "T-4 Nurse Group". Of course, thinking about the deep blood hatred that the heroine bears, her purpose of joining the "T-4 Nurse Group" is obviously not to harm the innocent.

Just as there are devils, there must be angels. Even if you are in a group of evil, some people will maintain a righteous heart.

In addition to the horrifying "T-4 nurse group", during World War II, Irena Sendler, a "female Schindler" in Poland, also risked his life to save more than 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis.

On February 15, 1910, Elena Sendler was born in Warsaw, Poland. Her father was a compassionate doctor. He died of infection because he was infected by treating patients with typhoid fever that other doctors would not want to contact. That year, Sendler was only 7 years old. However, when she was young, she always remembered her father's words during her lifetime: If she saw someone drowning, even if she couldn't swim, she should try her best to save him.

My father's words and the spirit of teaching by words have always influenced Sendler. When he grew up, it was this simple word and his father's spirit of self-sacrificing his own life to save others, which made her a nurse at the Warsaw Social Relief Bureau.

As the situation in the quarantine became worse and worse, by 1942, Jews were driven into concentration camps and faced the threat of death every day. The nurse's identity gave Sendler a pass to enter and exit the quarantine area, and also allowed her to see too many innocent Jews who suffered, often providing them with food, clothes and medicine.

As the situation becomes increasingly severe, Jews face the threat of death every day, Sendler and his companions begin to build a Holocaust network to help Jewish children escape. In 18 months, they risked their lives almost every day and covered Jewish children out of the death camps countless times. Their behavior was questioned by Jewish parents, and the question often asked was: "How can (you) ensure that their children can survive?" Sendler could only tell the truth: "(I) cannot." Because she was not sure whether she could leave the quarantine alive. Some parents had a glimmer of hope and asked them to take their children away, while others claimed to "consider a few days". However, when Sendler went back, most of the Jewish families had already been sent to the death camps.

In this way, more than 2,500 Jewish children were hidden under a stretcher, in suitcases, garbage bags and even corpse bags by Sendler, and secretly carried out of the quarantine through ambulances. Some of them were sent to orphanages, monasteries, or some civilian families who were willing to help Jews escape disasters. In order to save these children whose lives could be threatened at any time, Sendler and her companions made 3,000 forged documents for the children who stayed asleep for several days and nights.

In order to allow these children to reunite with their relatives in the future, Sendler made a list that recorded the real names and fake identities of each child in detail. Many names were recorded on thin napkins. In October 1943, the Nazi Party, who heard the news, surrounded Sendler's residence. In the critical moment, she asked her companions to hide the list in her underwear. In order to cover her companions to escape, she herself walked out of the residence calmly. In this way, Sendler, who was only 33 years old, was locked up in the infamous Pavak Prison.

The legs and feet were broken, and no information was given. The Nazi Party was determined to kill her. In order to rescue Sendler, members of the Warsaw underground organization raised a large amount of cash to bribe the people who were executed. The dying Sendler was thrown into the woods and rescued by his companions. The Nazis thought that Sendler had been executed and her name appeared on the next day's shooting list, so the rescued Sendler could only live an incognito life. However, after the change, Sendler was still fighting in the team to rescue Jews.

In 1944, in 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 an apple tree outside her friend's apartment. In 1945, when World War II ended, Sendler dug out a bottle from under the tree and handed the list to the Central Committee of the Polish Jews, hoping to fulfill his promise: to return the children he brought out to their parents.

Unfortunately, only a few children found their families, and most of their parents have been killed or disappeared. Fortunately, the lives of these children have been continued. Since then, for a full 54 years, due to the obstruction of the Polish government, Elena Sendler has never been approved to go abroad, and she lives as poor as an ordinary person. Her deeds of saving more than 2,500 children have been buried in the long river of history. Until 1999, her story was under the "Investigation and Research" of several children who were once on the "Sendler List" on the other side of the ocean. Elena Sendler, who was already 90, was not known to the public, and the honor of shock and lateness came from the world.

In 2003, Pope Paul II wrote a handwritten letter to Sendler, praising her outstanding behavior during the war. In October 2003, Sendler was awarded the White Eagle Award by Poland's highest honor, and her image was also printed in Poland's commemorative silver coins in 2009. In 2007 and 2008, Elena Sendler won the Nobel Peace Prize nomination for two consecutive years.

On May 12, 2008, 98-year-old Elena Sendler peacefully spent her life in Poland. At that time, the media compared her deeds to the person recorded in Schindler's List who hired more than 1,100 Jews to work in his factory during World War II, thus helping them escape the massacre of German Oskar Schindler, calling her "female Schindler".
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