Concerns Rise Over Disinformation Campaigns in German Election

Belgian author Caroline De Mulder's novel, "Himmler’s Children," uncovers the chilling reality of the Lebensborn program, established by Heinrich Himmler in 1935. This initiative aimed to increase the Aryan birthrate by housing single mothers who were deemed racially valuable in SS-controlled maternity wards. As outlined by De Mulder, these facilities operated under a clinical facade, focusing on producing "racially pure" offspring while simultaneously committing heinous acts of extermination against those deemed unfit, including newborns with disabilities.
The narrative follows three characters—a nurse, a pregnant woman, and a prisoner from Dachau—offering a multifaceted view of life within the maternity ward in Steinhöring, Bavaria. De Mulder asserts that these maternity wards were akin to “baby factories,” emphasizing their operational role in Nazi eugenics. She explains that despite the perceived care provided, the women were systematically treated as mere vessels for reproduction, entrapped in a cold regime that demanded obedience. "We have never recovered from the Second World War," De Mulder states, highlighting the ongoing impact of such atrocities.