
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In July 1933, the new German Chancellor, Adolf Hitler, passed 'The Law for the Prevention of Offspring with Hereditary Diseases'.
It required the sterilisation of Germans with physical and mental disabilities. Helga Gross was one of those sterilised.
Ben Henderson uncovers archive interviews from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, recorded in 2003.
(Photo: Helga Gross as a child. Credit: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum)
By BBC World Service4.5
898898 ratings
In July 1933, the new German Chancellor, Adolf Hitler, passed 'The Law for the Prevention of Offspring with Hereditary Diseases'.
It required the sterilisation of Germans with physical and mental disabilities. Helga Gross was one of those sterilised.
Ben Henderson uncovers archive interviews from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, recorded in 2003.
(Photo: Helga Gross as a child. Credit: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum)

7,733 Listeners

368 Listeners

533 Listeners

878 Listeners

1,039 Listeners

286 Listeners

5,510 Listeners

1,814 Listeners

3,185 Listeners

1,875 Listeners

585 Listeners

521 Listeners

599 Listeners

107 Listeners

77 Listeners

4,797 Listeners

739 Listeners

249 Listeners

844 Listeners

373 Listeners

233 Listeners

328 Listeners

3,165 Listeners

64 Listeners

844 Listeners

1,001 Listeners

499 Listeners

612 Listeners

282 Listeners

277 Listeners

25 Listeners

67 Listeners

82 Listeners

2 Listeners