The mass graves of Hohne and the French attempt (and failure) at exhumation (1958–1969) | Amsterdam University Press Journals Online
2004
Volume 3, Issue 1
  • E-ISSN: 2666-5050

Abstract

Abstract 

The Bergen Belsen Nazi concentration camp has been widely described and studied, especially as the images taken by British troops at the moment of the camp's liberation shaped the very representation of Nazi crimes and the Holocaust. Much less-known are the debates about the exhumations of more than 20 000 corpses of inmates, the ones who died in the weeks before or after the liberation. The French mission in search of corpses of deportees, the so-called 'Garban mission', tried to negotiate the access to the camp grounds. After an international uproar and a decade of negotiations, the permission was finally not granted.

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2023-05-10
2024-05-11
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References

  1. BardgettSCesaraniD [Eds] (2006) Belsen 1945: New Historical Perspectives. London/Portland, 250 pp.
  2. DreyfusJ-M (2015a) Renationalizing Bodies? The French Search Mission for the Corpses of Deportees in Germany, 1946–58. In: Anstett E, Dreyfus J-M (Eds) Human Remains and Violence: Methodological Approaches, Manchester University Press, Manchester, 67–78.
  3. DreyfusJ-M (2015b) L'impossible réparation. Déportés, biens spoliés, or nazi, comptes bloqués, criminels de guerre, Flammarion, Paris 2015, 180–191.
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