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Nevilledog

(55,165 posts)
Fri May 29, 2026, 11:28 PM 13 hrs ago

What Your Family Did Under Hitler - Find Out Here

https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/nsdap-archive-find-out-what-your-family-did-under-hitler-a-4c62a29b-054a-409f-8cc2-cfb8c46f98a9

No paywall link
https://archive.md/20260529113522/https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/nsdap-archive-find-out-what-your-family-did-under-hitler-a-4c62a29b-054a-409f-8cc2-cfb8c46f98a9

What did my grandparents do during the Nazi era? How deeply was our family entangled? For the past several weeks, millions of Germans have been confronting such questions: They have begun digging into their ancestors’ past, researching, investigating, tracking down new information.

Suddenly, myths passed down from generation to generation are beginning to crumble: Grandpa really was a Nazi? Great-grandma was in the party? And what about Aunt Anne and Uncle Walter?

For Germans interested in learning more about the role played by their family during the Nazi era, the time has never been better. For three reasons:

1. The treasure. This spring, the US National Archives published the surviving NSDAP membership card files online. The millions of entries provide a list – though incomplete – of those people who, at least on paper, supported Nazi rule and the crimes the Nazis committed until 1945. It was a sensation, which DER SPIEGEL reported on first among major German media outlets.

2. The technology. Anyone can search the roughly 12 million index cards on a smartphone, tablet or laptop (though the archive website was initially overloaded by high demand and at times could not be reached). With the help of artificial intelligence, handwriting and scrawls on millions of cards can now be deciphered at a level of accuracy which, only months ago, even experts would scarcely have dared to dream of.

3. The reawakened interest. For decades, millions of Germans wanted to believe their families had not been involved in the violence, the war crimes and the murder of Jews perpetrated by the Nazis. Now, 80 years after the end of the war, many have begun to question taboos and family legends anew – in part because of how easy it has now become to search the records.


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What Your Family Did Under Hitler - Find Out Here (Original Post) Nevilledog 13 hrs ago OP
My maternal great grandparents are likely on the list MustLoveBeagles 13 hrs ago #1
That's a hard reality. Nevilledog 12 hrs ago #2
It would been my maternal grandfathers parents MustLoveBeagles 12 hrs ago #3
I would have liked meeting rebellious Grandpa. Nevilledog 1 hr ago #10
Luckily, my grandpa was fighting the Nazis. Luciferous 11 hrs ago #4
... Solly Mack 11 hrs ago #5
My French ancestors went to Germany in the 15th century to... littlemissmartypants 10 hrs ago #6
My ancestors are there i am sure Trueblue1968 10 hrs ago #7
This message was self-deleted by its author ananda 10 hrs ago #8
My late grandmother used to brag about having Pennsylvania Dutch ancestors, thinking they were from Holland with the Fil1957 10 hrs ago #9

MustLoveBeagles

(17,556 posts)
3. It would been my maternal grandfathers parents
Sat May 30, 2026, 12:17 AM
12 hrs ago

Membership is likely. They were for certain sympathisers. Grandpa rebeled. He quit the Hitler Youth after his parents forced him to join. He knew it was bullshit. There was a prison camp in the city where he lived. He would steal food and give it to the prisoners through a small opening in the fence. That stopped when he was caught by a neighbor stealing an apple pie she'd put on a cooling rack outside her window.

Luciferous

(6,606 posts)
4. Luckily, my grandpa was fighting the Nazis.
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:19 AM
11 hrs ago

My family came to the US from Germany and Poland at the turn of the century. It would be hard to learn your family was on the other side ☹️

littlemissmartypants

(34,644 posts)
6. My French ancestors went to Germany in the 15th century to...
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:54 AM
10 hrs ago

escape religious persecution. I don't believe I'd find anything. I'm not aware of any other German connections in my genealogy. I haven't had admixture tests, aka genetic ancestry analysis done, however.

Interesting post, Nevilledog. Thanks for the discussion. ❤️

Response to Nevilledog (Original post)

Fil1957

(910 posts)
9. My late grandmother used to brag about having Pennsylvania Dutch ancestors, thinking they were from Holland with the
Sat May 30, 2026, 02:30 AM
10 hrs ago

wooden shoes and the windmills. When she found out that the Pennsylvania Dutch were actually Germans, she never talked about that part of her ancestory again.

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