Originally posted by johnny_ola2000
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I think you will get any number of different answers to your questions depending on whose perspective you use. C. Browning has shown in Orginary Men that participation was NOT mandatory and that those who chose to excuse themselves were NOT punished. However, documentation also demonstrates that the SS desired to keep the inner-workings of their camps a secret, so they tended to recycle men and women in an effort to keep those "in the know" to as few as possible. For instance, those who had been initated into the program during T-4 were pulled in to administer some of the camps because they already knew the scope and purpose of what was going on--Franz Stangl is an example of such a person. I knew an elderly SS officer who, in his extreme old age, acknowledged that he had bounced around the camps for a time. He claimed--I STRESS "claimed"--that he never approved of what went on and tried to get ouf of camp duty...eventually bribing a doctor to declare him fit from font line service. Of course, soldiers entering Germany in 1945 were surprised to find that you could walk from one end of the country to the other and talk to everyone along the way yet not meet a SINGLE Nazi.
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