The genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities

 



they falsely accuse the great Islam, and claim that it spread by the sword!

Here is history speaking: exposing them and exposing the lies of those who carry the banner: God is love, and who slapped you on the cheek...
In pictures, the most heinous crimes of the German Catholic Nazis and their extermination of Christians from the same sect: the Roman and Sinti sects , a practical application of the commandments of Jesus (the God of love), the Lord of the New Testament: “


But as for my enemies, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slaughter them before me ” (Luke 19:27).



This is then the visible part of the iceberg.....
and what was hidden was greater!

Most Roma and Sinti are registered Catholics , and the Catholic Church gave its registers to the Nazis so they could identify "Gypsies." In 1940, families of "Gypsies" were deported from the town of Asperg in southern Germany to a concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities



The Documentation and Culture Centre for Sinti and Roma Gypsies in Heidelberg, Germany, is organising an exhibition that illustrates the Nazi genocide of more than half a million people. The photo exhibition begins with 1933, the year the Nazis came to power in Germany. This photo shows a well-off Roma family from Bamberg, southern Germany.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities


During World War II, Sinti and Roma people joined the German army to defend their homeland, Germany. One of them was Emil Kerst, pictured here with his cousin. He was soon discharged from the army and sent to Auschwitz, a Nazi concentration and extermination camp in Poland. While Kerst survived, his wife and one of his children perished in the camp.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities



The Nazis adopted a racist ideology and considered the German race superior to a number of other races, especially the Jews and the Roma. Attempts were made by so-called "race researchers" to prove their theories in this area. In 1938, Heinrich Himmler, the commander of the German SS special forces, gave the "Race Cleansing Center" in Berlin the task of studying and researching the German Sinti and Roma population.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities



Throughout the German Reich, ethnic minorities were studied and photographed. Here, a man is having a plaster cast of his head made. German geneticists and anthropologists created a racial model from which more than 24,000 casts were made.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities


In the St. Joseph children's home in Molfingen, southern Germany, there lived about 40 Sinti children.
A self-proclaimed researcher exploited these children to complete her doctoral thesis. Thirty-nine of them were later sent to the Auschwitz concentration and extermination camp, and only four survived. The management of the home did nothing.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities



Pictured is a Sinti girl named Stella Steinbach being transported by train from Westbroek in the Netherlands to Auschwitz in Poland on May 19, 1944. Stella, her mother and siblings were all killed in the gas chambers, along with more than 21,000 Roma who were killed in the chambers at Auschwitz-Birkenau.


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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities


Dr. Josef Mengele, a Nazi doctor and SS SS officer, ran the "Gypsy concentration camp" at Auschwitz in Poland. He also experimented on children there. One of his experiments was the little girl Johanna Schmidt, who died in agony, like her brother, during the experiments in 1943. After the war, the Nazi doctor fled to Argentina, then to Paraguay, and finally to Brazil, where he probably drowned in 1978.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities


500,000 Roma and Sinti were killed not in concentration camps, but in Nazi-occupied areas of Eastern Europe. The SS exterminated the Sinti and Roma in these countries immediately after the occupation. They were buried where they were shot, as this photo from Libau, Lithuania, in 1941 shows.

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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities


After the British army liberated the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in April 1945, British soldiers found more than 50,000 starving people in the camp. Most of them were terminally ill, and many were Sinti and Roma. Even after their liberation, thousands of prisoners died, and those who survived suffered physically and psychologically for the rest of their lives.


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Genocide of the Roman and Sinti Catholic communities

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