Nazi day planner reveals how mass murder institutionalized

The June 3, 1944 photo provided by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum shows Heinrich Himmler, centre, SS Reichsfuehrer-SS, head of the Gestapo and the Waffen-SS, and Minister of the Interior of Nazi Germany from 1943 to 1945, as he reviews troops of the Galician SS-Volunteer Infantry Division Michael Karkoc a top commander whose Nazi SS-led unit is blamed for burning villages filled with women and children lied to American immigration officials to get into the United States and has been living in Minnesota since shortly after World War II, according to evidence uncovered by The Associated Press. Michael Karkoc became a member of the Galician division after the Ukrainian Self Defense Legion was incorporated into it near the end of the war. AP Photo

The June 3, 1944 photo provided by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum shows Heinrich Himmler, centre, SS Reichsfuehrer-SS, head of the Gestapo and the Waffen-SS, and Minister of the Interior of Nazi Germany from 1943 to 1945, as he reviews troops of the Galician SS-Volunteer Infantry Division. AP FILE PHOTO

BERLIN— Nazi SS leader Heinrich Himmler’s day planner reinforces historians’ views of how mass murder was institutionalized and routine in Adolf Hitler’s Germany.

Bild newspaper this week has been publishing excerpts from the calendar, which was found in a Russian archive in 2013 and is being prepared for publication next year.

The Jan. 3, 1943, entry published Wednesday shows Himmler ate a late breakfast followed by a massage, then chatted on the phone with his wife and daughter. He ends his day ordering civilians in Poland executed in retaliation for a partisan attack on a police station, and the families of the policemen, who didn’t fight back, to be sent to concentration camps.

Political theorist Hannah Arendt once famously called Himmler underling Adolf Eichmann an example of the “banality of evil.” TVJ

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