Aktion Brandt (Operation Brandt) is an umbrella term for the decentralized murders of sick people in sanatoriums in Nazi Germany.[1]: 123, 135 In some institutions, sick people were deliberately subjected to overcrowding, neglect, and malnutrition; in other institutions, the transferred inmates were murdered on a large scale. The action, named after Hitler's doctor and general commissioner for medical and health services Karl Brandt, partially succeeded Aktion T4.
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Response | |
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- Early elements
- Aftermath
- Remembrance
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Camps, ghettos, execution sites and attacks |
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Camps | |
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Mass shootings | |
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Pogroms | |
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Ghettos | |
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Other atrocities | |
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| Perpetrators, participants, organizations, and collaborators |
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Perpetrators | |
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Personnel | |
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Organizations | |
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Collaboration | |
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| Resistance, victims, documentation and technical |
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Organizations | |
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Uprisings | |
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Leaders | |
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Victim lists | Ghettos |
- Kraków
- Łódź
- Lviv (Lwów)
- Warsaw
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Camps |
- Auschwitz
- Bełżec
- Gross-Rosen
- Izbica
- Majdanek
- Sobibór
- Soldau
- Stutthof
- Trawniki
- Treblinka
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Documentation | Nazi sources | |
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Witness accounts | |
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Concealment | |
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Technical and logistics | |
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