Chilling pics show academy where Hitler’s nephew and other ‘racially flawless’ youngsters were trained as future leaders and SS henchmen
Evil school of National Socialist hate explored after being left untouched for more than 70 years
EERIE images of an abandoned purpose built elite Nazi boarding school that was attended by the Fuhrer’s own nephew Heinz have been revealed.
They show grand assembly halls where children as young as eleven would have been educated to become leaders of a super race who themselves dominated the Third Reich.
Two large projectors can be seen that would have once played educational propaganda to brainwash youngsters.
Other images show never ending corridors.
Paint is peeling from the ceiling and there is a creepy view from a smashed window looking out towards the school’s tower.
The haunting images were taken by project manager, Jan Bommes,41, from Kiel, Germany while he was doing his hobby, urban exploring.
Jan said: “When I am walking through a place I imagine and I see the people that have been there and how everything might have looked many years ago.
“I get to go outside and see things that not many people see in their life."
During the rise of Nazi Germany there were thirty-eight National Political Institutes of Education (NPEA).
The first was founded in May 1933, the aims of NPEAs were to educate future political, military and administrative leaders of the Nazi state.
There were high expectations for children who attended these schools as they had to have above average intelligence and be racially flawless.
This school was attended by Heinz Hitler, the Nazi Party Leader’s nephew.
Heinz met a grizzly end when he was captured by Soviet forces in January 1942 and tortured to death at Butyrka military prison in Moscow.
Thirteen-percent of children who attended these schools eventually became members of the Schutzstaffel or SS, an organisation that was initially formed of Hitler’s personal bodyguards but soon expanded to over 250, 000 members at the start of World War Two.
Members of the SS ran concentration camps and intelligence organisations during the war.
“These places are beautiful and deserve to be saved, not only for the sake of the buildings but also for the sake of our own history,” added Jan.
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