 Ableton on Air is sponsored by Green Mountain Support Services, empowering people with disabilities to be home in the community. Washington County Mental Health, where hope and support comes together. Media sponsors for Ableton on Air include Park Chester Times, Muslim Community Report, WWW, This is the Bronx.info, Associated Press Media Editors, New York Parrot Online Newspaper, U.S. Press Corps, Domestic and International, Anchor FM, and Spotify. Partners for Ableton on Air include Jihad, New York, and New England, where everyone belongs, the Orthodox Union, the Vermont Division for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Vermont Association for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Montpelier Sustainable Coalition. Ableton on Air has been seen in the following publications, Park Chester Times, New York Parrot Online Newspaper, Muslim Community Report, WWW, This is the Bronx.info, and www.h.com. Ableton on Air is a member of the National Academy for Television Arts and Sciences Boston, New England Chapter. Welcome to this edition of Ableton on Air, the one and only program that focuses on the needs, concerns, and achievements of the differently able. I've been your host, Lauren Seiler. And on this show, before we show the documentary of Hadamard, Hadamard was a program within the Nazi regime that basically we turned around and killed 300,000 Jews with disabilities, between 270,000 to 300,000 Jews with disabilities. But before we talk about that, we would like to thank our sponsors, Washington County Mental Health, Green Mountain Support Services, and many, many, many others, including the Division for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Association for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Sustainable Montpelier Coalition, and many other supporters of Ableton on Air. Let's talk about the Holocaust for a minute and go into the actual numbers before we go into the documentary. The Holocaust victims were people targeted by the government of Nazi Germany based on their ethnicity, religion, political beliefs, and sexual orientation. The institutionalized practice of the Nazis slinging out and persecuting people resulted in the Holocaust, which began with legalized social discrimination against specific groups, involuntary hospitalization, euthanasia, and forced sterilization of persons considered physically or mentally unfit for society. The vast majority of the Nazi regimes, the Nazi regime were Jews, center Roma peoples, and Slavs from Slovenia. But victims were encompassed people identified as social outsiders for Nazi worldview, such as homosexuals and political enemies. Nazi persecution escalated during World War II and included non-judicial experimentation, undernourishment, execution of a variety of methods for specified groups like the Jews, genocide, and Nazi's primary goal. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, USHMM, the Holocaust was a systematic, bureaucratic, and state-sponsored persecution of six million Jewish men, women, and children by the Nazi regime and collaborators. In addition, 11 million members of other groups were murdered during the era of Holocaust. Now the following groups, before we get to the film, the following groups were killed during the Holocaust. 500 to 6 million Jews, Soviet citizens, 5.7 million excluding Jews, Soviet prisoners of war, 2.8 to 3.3 million, Polish people, 1.8 to 3 million, Serbs 300,000 to 600,000, Disabled people 270,000 to 300,000, Romanian people 130,000 to 500,000, Freemasons, those that belong to the Masons Organization, 80,000 to 200,000, Slovenians 20,000 to 25,000, homosexuals or LBGT gay individuals 5,000 to 15,000, Spanish Republicans 3,500 and Jehovah Witnesses 12,1,250 to 5,000 people among other people who had passed away. Now these numbers are according to Wikipedia.com, but there are a lot of people in other groups also that were killed that were probably not on this list, including Gypsies. Now what you're about to see is parental discretion advised. It's from the Minnesota Governors Committee for People with Disabilities. Hadamard was part of the Nazi regime that killed 270,000 to 300,000 people with disabilities. Parental discretion is advised. Let's take a look at this video. The Holocaust. Hitler's extermination of an estimated six million Jews during World War II. Before the Holocaust, there were many other victims of Hitler's attempt to create a master race. Thousands of people with disabilities, along with others determined to have lives unworthy of life, all murdered at the hands of Hitler's Nazi regime. This is their story. Once he came into power, Adolf Hitler was interested in advancing his own version of eugenics, a 19th century concept to improve the genetic quality of the human race by excluding people in groups judged to be inferior while promoting those deemed to be superior. Hitler's legal justification had its roots in the United States with the State of Virginia's Sterilization Act of 1924, a form of eugenics. The law required the sterilization of people afflicted with forms of idiocy, imbecility, feeble mindedness, or epilepsy. In 1927, a Virginia court determined Kerry Buck would be the first person sterilized under Virginia's new law because she was said to be incorrigible and had a child out of wedlock. After appeals, the case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, where in an eight to one decision, Buck versus Bell upheld Virginia's Sterilization Act, saying it did not violate the due process clause of the 14th Amendment. Six years after the Supreme Court decision, Hitler's Nazi party enacted its own version, called the law for the prevention of offspring with hereditary diseases. This led to the forced sterilization of more than two million Germans over the next 12 years. Hitler believed the Germans to be a superior race that should dominate, calling this master race Aryan. He believed those not part of this superior race had no place in Germany, and that cultures degenerated when distinct races mixed. His vision was to unite Germany and make it the strongest nation on earth. But Hitler took Virginia's sterilization law to another murderous level in his ambition for the master race. He ordered the outright elimination of those citizens deemed defective, including people who were intellectually disabled or those born with genetic illnesses, as well as those the Nazis declared racially inferior. A wave of legislation between 1933 and 1936 identified categories unworthy of life that soon became targets of the Nazi killing policy. These included those diagnosed with mental illness, epilepsy, dementia, encephalitis, chronic psychiatric or neurological disorders, those not of German blood, the criminally insane or those committed on criminal grounds. A 1939 Reich government program permitted mercy killings or euthanasia in the case of incurably insane persons. Many of these policies are generally seen as precursors to what eventually became the Holocaust. According to the program's own internal calculations, the euthanasia program claimed the lives of over 70,000 institutionalized people with mental or physical disabilities between 1940 and 1941. A quiet little town of 12,000 nestled in a sleepy pastoral valley in western Germany, Hadamar appears today to be an idyllic place, but its looks belie its evil past. This is Hadamar Clinic. Constructed in 1883, this former sanatorium was home to some of the cruelest treatment of people with disabilities in human history. Early one morning, beginning in 1941, gray buses from the Volunteer Ambulance Service began rumbling into the Hadamar Clinic, carrying passengers from orphanages, children's homes, hospitals, nursing homes, and other facilities. They were told this was a brief stop. Pleasant-looking nurses helped them prepare for a physical and dental exam as they were instructed to disrobe before proceeding to another room down the hall. There, doctors would select from a list of 60 fatal diseases to record on their paperwork as their cause of death, typically tuberculosis, pneumonia, or heart failure. A nurse would then place a piece of tape between their shoulder blades to indicate what would happen to their bodies after being put to death. Some would have their brains preserved for study or gold teeth harvested after death. Their paperwork would be set upstairs where clerical workers would type their death certificates and condolence letters to their families. After their examination, the people would be ushered to the basement where they were told they would be taking a therapeutic shower. Those who could not walk were carried down on stretchers. 60 to 75 people at a time were crammed into a 9 by 16 room. Once the heavy doors were sealed shut, deadly gas was pumped into the room. In only 10 minutes, all would be dead. Workers removed the bodies one by one and carried them to the mortuary room, the dissecting room, or directly to one of two cremation ovens. Cremation took 30 to 40 minutes per body. Canisters of random ash were delivered with the letters of condolence to family members. An average of 65 people were processed each day, Monday through Friday, except holidays. On the day the 10,000th person was gassed to death, the director halted work so he and the staff could celebrate the milestone with beer, wine, and cheese. A witness reported that they cleaned out the skulls of some victims and used them as drinking cups. The first people killed at Hadamar were children, followed by residents from nursing homes and other group quarters. Nearly all were German and had physical or developmental disabilities and or mental illness. The gassing was halted after about eight months due to the complaints of townspeople about the stench of the fumes, along with the efforts of the Catholic Bishop of Münzta, a sharp critic of the Nazis. The ovens were simply dismantled and shipped to new more infamous extermination camps in Sobibor and Treblinka. And this still was not the end of mass murder at Hadamar. A year after gassing was halted, a more covert phase began where victims were given massive doses of drugs were starved to death. To avoid cremation and the noxious fumes it caused, these victims were buried in mass graves behind the facility, surrounded by walls topped with broken glass. The killing finally ceased when the U.S. Army Second Infantry Division liberated Hadamar in April 1945. Each of these 481 mass graves contained the remains of at least 10 people. Today, visitors can tour the same waiting room where the 15,000 pass through before meeting their demise. The room has displays and memorials detailing what happened in this facility. A life-sized photo shows one of the cremation ovens and where it was located. Hadamar was the last of six official killing centers across Germany, set up specifically to exterminate people with disabilities. But there were others built in Poland and Austria once the Nazis occupied those countries. The Nazi euthanasia policy led to the murder of over 100,000 people with disabilities between 1939 and 1945, including over 10,000 at Hadamar. The destruction of worthless life was at the center of Nazi euthanasia policy and was designed to cleanse the master race of imperfections and rid the country of so-called useless eaters. As time went on, any German who could not contribute to the war effort was selected for death, even soldiers with disabilities from the First World War. Despite the brutality and atrocious nature of the crimes carried out at Hadamar, American authorities could not prosecute Hadamar defendants as a violation of international law since it was German nationals mistreating German citizens with disabilities as directed by the German head of state. However, the Germans kept meticulous records and investigators found Polish and Russian nationals were among the victims. International law agreed upon at the 1907 Hague Convention, protected civilians during wartime. This agreement, along with the Geneva Convention and Moscow Declaration, allowed US authorities to prosecute Hadamar defendants for war crimes. The jurisdiction of the US Military Commission trying the Hadamar defendants was challenged immediately and throughout, but in the end, the commission relied on the absence of regulation to prove jurisdiction. All seven Hadamar defendants were found guilty, but only three received death sentences. The remaining four received prison sentences based on their involvement, but in the ensuing years, many of these sentences were reduced. By 1951, not one surviving Hadamar defendant remained in prison. Modern Berlin, the Reichstag, Germany's national legislature. A few blocks from the Reichstag is Tiergartenstrasse Fier, also known as T4, the address of a villa where the National Euthanasia Program was planned and implemented. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, access to further research increased the number of T4 victims to more than 300,000. A gray bus monument was installed at the site in 2008. It is the same size and dimensions as the buses that transported so many to their deaths, all over Germany and elsewhere. It's inscribed with the words of one victim in German. Wo hin bring dir uns? Where are you taking us? While doing genealogy research, Siegfried Falkenstein found that her Aunt Anna was one of the T4 victims. Anna Lenkering was diagnosed with mild intellectual disabilities as a teenager, was later moved to a nursing home and eventually executed when only 24. Siegried launched a citizen's campaign to build a more fitting memorial. At the dedication of this memorial in 2014, a culmination of years of planning, building, and coordination, Mrs. Falkenstein concluded with these remarks, I can hardly imagine a better form of remembrance of the victims. Every human life is worth living. We can only hope that such a murderous dictator will never again emerge to inflict pain and death on people in need. The compassion given to those in need is a statement or indictment of our society and its legacy for future generations. We would like to say, you know, please continue looking at Jewish history. For more information on Jewish history, you can contact the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. US, that's www.ushmm.org. That website, once again, is USHMM.org. We would like to thank the, especially thank the Minnesota Governor's Council for People with Disabilities for the video on Hadamard, the extermination video, the extermination film about the 300,000, 270,000 to 300,000 Jews and other people with disabilities. We must continue, we must continue our heritage being Jewish ourselves. We must continue our heritage. And this puts an end to this edition of Abledon on Air. Thank you to our sponsors. I'm Lauren Seiler. I'm Lauren Seiler. See you next time. Abledon on Air is sponsored by Green Mountain Support Services, empowering people with disabilities to be home in the community. Washington County Mental Health, where hope and support comes together. Media sponsors for Abledon on Air include Park Chester Times, Muslim Community Report, this is the Bronx dot info, Associated Press Media Editors, New York Parrot Online Newspaper, US Press Corps, Domestic and International, Anchor FM, and Spotify. Partners for Abledon on Air include Jihad, New York and New England, where everyone belongs, the Orthodox Union, the Vermont Division for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Montpelier Sustainable Coalition. Abledon on Air has been seen in the following publications, Park Chester Times, New York Parrot Online Newspaper, Muslim Community Report, www.thisisabronx.info, and www.h.com. Abledon on Air is a member of the National Academy for Television Arts and Sciences, Boston, New England Chapter.