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Nazi War on Women

Prisoners at Ravensbruck concentration camp in Germany stand near barbed wire in 1945 (Source: Daily Mail/ Gamma-Keystone, Getty Images)

Nazi War on Women. The Adolf Hitler and the racist Nazi party killed millions of Jewish people in the Holocaust, including an estimated 2 million women and over 1.5 million children.  In addition to the Nazi war on Jewish women, Adolf Hitler built a separate Nazi concentration camp designed specifically for non-Jewish women at Ravensbrück, which was situated about 50 miles north of Berlin. Approximately 130,000 women were sent to this women’s concentration camp, 50,000 of which were murdered (gassed, shot, starved), including 2,500 women killed in Hitler’s gas chambers in one weekend. As reported by Sarah Helm, the Nazi attack on women included every walk of life: doctors, opera singers, politicians, prostitutes, members of the resistance. Women were worked to death, and those who became too ill were selected for extermination by being shot or sent to the gas chambers.

Prisoners at Ravensbruck concentration camp in Germany stand near barbed wire in 1945 (Source: Daily Mail/ xXX)

Prisoners at Ravensbruck concentration camp in Germany stand near barbed wire in 1945 (Source: Daily Mail/ Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)

The Nazis conducted medical experiments, including testing new ways to kill women, freezing them to death in the snow, and letting dogs rip into the women. They sexually abused the women with rape and infected some women with bacteria to experiment on their bodies, including “syphilis being injected into the spinal cord.”

After Adolf Hitler, the Nazi terrorist war on women has continued, with Nazi violence against women around the world and throughout the United States,  including the well-publicized rape attacks by Nazi  Keith Luke in Massachusetts, Nazi rapist in Arlington, Virginia, and child molesters among Nazi leaders.  The amoral Nazi ideology to prey on those they view as vulnerable leads them to such hate of women.

In 2014, the Nazi war on women included the killing of  Terri
LaManno, a woman visiting to help care for her elderly mother in Kansas City.  Terri was an occupational therapist at Children’s Center for the Visually Impaired (CCVI) for eight years. She was visiting her elderly mother at the Village Shalom as she did every Sunday. She left behind three children, after her murder by the Kansas City Nazi terrorist Frazier Cross Jr., who was shouting “Heil Hitler,” after he was arrested.

Kansas City: Terri LaManno Murdered in 2014 by Nazi who Shouted "Heil Hitler"

Kansas City: Terri LaManno Murdered in 2014 by Nazi who Shouted “Heil Hitler”

The Nazi war on women has included the murder of African-American women by Nazis in the United States, including the recent terror attack in Charleston, South Carolina where six African-American women were murdered by terrorist Dylann Roof (a poster with the Nazi Daily Stormer group).

Charleston Women Murdered by Nazi Dylann Roof

Charleston Women Murdered by Nazi Dylann Roof