Rolf Mengele regarding his father, SS Dr. Josef Mengele

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2019
  • A departure from my normal posting of vintage music, I am also an historian, focusing on the world wars.
    I captured this interview in 2012 from the 1985 documentary, "The Search for Mengele". I previously posted it to my channel but removed it some years ago. It had drawn a great deal of interest with viewers debating the pros and cons of Rolf Mengele's position on his relationship with his father.
    I think it still has significant historical interest, the son of an infamous SS doctor explaining how he confronted his father, and trying to resolve his moral conflicts with his father.
    It should be noted that since the interview, Rolf Mengele changed his name so that he could further separate himself from his father's legacy.
    A related article was published in the Chicago Tribune on June 30, 1985. It is linked below.
    www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...

Komentáře • 878

  • @rscottlogan9471
    @rscottlogan9471 Před 3 lety +13126

    No child has any responsibility for the crimes of their parents.

    • @thepolemic5970
      @thepolemic5970 Před 3 lety +613

      Absolutely. Or their grandparents or great grandparents etc.

    • @michaelfisher1537
      @michaelfisher1537 Před 3 lety +1068

      This is why white people don't owe reparations to black people

    • @fenecofeneco19
      @fenecofeneco19 Před 3 lety +184

      A full grown man who still helped and called father a monster like him YES.

    • @JV-tg2ne
      @JV-tg2ne Před 3 lety +706

      Tell that to the democrat aka communist party who promote critical theory and insist an entire race of people today are responsible for the slave trade without any culpability to any other race when we know these assertions to be 100% false

    • @mgmassey174
      @mgmassey174 Před 3 lety +338

      Bless u for saying that.
      Took me fifty years to realize their crimes were not my shame

  • @bethroesch2156
    @bethroesch2156 Před 3 lety +9613

    I can't begin to fathom how complicated his feelings about his father had to have been. I think it was brave for him to speak publicly about it

    • @ellemontgomery1037
      @ellemontgomery1037 Před 3 lety +440

      Yes, it was also brave of him to keep his father’s whereabouts a secret too. Apparently by keeping his father’s location a secret, the son, and his family didn’t think his father deserved to be punished for the atrocities he committed on innocent people.

    • @kinglear5952
      @kinglear5952 Před 3 lety +113

      He sounds like a very fine man

    • @saberur66
      @saberur66 Před 3 lety +277

      His family hid him from authorities and still have their family name in their business. They are a gross family they harbored one of the most horrific war criminals in the history

  • @TomRivieremusic
    @TomRivieremusic Před 3 lety +3632

    My mother uses to tell me. You can pick your friends but not your family. How true!

    • @fenecofeneco19
      @fenecofeneco19 Před 3 lety +107

      You can stop sending money to a father who killed thousands and never paid ...

    • @AbcAbc-br9ku
      @AbcAbc-br9ku Před 3 lety +21

      I am positive he picked the fruits

  • @jessicamilestone3934
    @jessicamilestone3934 Před 3 lety +8318

    I feel desperately sorry for Rolf. His father's actions had nothing to do with him. He must carry a burden for which he did nothing to deserve

    • @evamarek5205
      @evamarek5205 Před 3 lety +311

      I agree 100%. He's carrying guilt that's not his. How does he get help, being the son of Dr. Mengele?

    • @extanegautham8950
      @extanegautham8950 Před 3 lety +451

      i feel much more sorry for his victims. i also feel sorry that Rolf did not have the integrity and humanity to report this mass murderer's location to authorities who could bring him to justice, whether Germany, USA, or Israel.

    • @extanegautham8950
      @extanegautham8950 Před 3 lety +4

      czcams.com/video/EeShMYn_fjs/video.html

    • @kkkkkkkkkkkkkkjable
      @kkkkkkkkkkkkkkjable Před 3 lety +69

      We are, in part, what our ancestors were. We carry the same genetic material, same potential and same limitations

    • @susiehoralek7642
      @susiehoralek7642 Před 3 lety +7

      @@evamarek5205 go to dr. morel

  • @Zihannya
    @Zihannya Před 3 lety +4645

    What is striking is the son's strength in not letting the father go on with his denials, letting him know that he knows what is true. The intensity of that moment is riveting.

  • @albertardiscohn4900
    @albertardiscohn4900 Před 4 lety +2409

    Very very important. To have things like this documented . I truly appreciate your channel.

  • @emmanueldidier7122
    @emmanueldidier7122 Před 3 lety +2034

    Rolf: responsibility is individual. Never collective. You are NOT responsible for this monster.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 Před 3 lety +36

      Very well put.

    • @mfst100
      @mfst100 Před 3 lety +51

      If whole country like Poland suffers consequences of war and Stalinism that came after war, till nowadays, then whole countries like Germany and Russia owe something to Poland. Each of theirs citizens owes a tiny bit to each Pole.
      Greets... guess from where.

    • @lauraoneil6408
      @lauraoneil6408 Před 3 lety +102

      He hid his father and sent him financial help. Why help a mass murderer if you are not the same. He should have turned him in

    • @a.f.7246
      @a.f.7246 Před 3 lety +58

      They tried to say germans have collective guilt. Not so. Do Americans have collective guilt for killing unborn children?

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 3 lety +80

      He is responsible for not giving his father up to justice.

  • @kamalaji1008
    @kamalaji1008 Před 3 lety +934

    I can feel Rolf's pain. He was very brave to be interviewed.

  • @jandedick7519
    @jandedick7519 Před 3 lety +1885

    I can’t even imagine what it would be like to be the son of the angel of death, I see pain in Rolf eyes.

  • @jt-eb4sp
    @jt-eb4sp Před 3 lety +2143

    The poor guy. Imagine knowing that your father was responsible for killing so many thousands of innocent men, women and children and on top of. That knowing he tortured thousands more with medical experiments on thousands more. HE IS LIVING A TORTURED LIFE WITH VAST INTERNAL STRUGGLES. I truly feel so sorry for him.

    • @waynelast1685
      @waynelast1685 Před 3 lety +222

      Rolf has nothing to be guilty of. It wasn’t him that did anything.

  • @francinerosie2631
    @francinerosie2631 Před 3 lety +1757

    Rolf you are the man your father should have been. He did not deserve a wonderful son like you. God be with you

  • @seviregis7441
    @seviregis7441 Před 3 lety +704

    Interesting how people who have committed horrific crimes can live in complete denial and deflect their guilt onto others. This fellow has had to suffer the terrible realization of who his father was and then having the courage to confront him is commendable.

  • @purplemoon8637
    @purplemoon8637 Před 3 lety +905

    “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing” - Edmund Burke

  • @ephraimbrown6657
    @ephraimbrown6657 Před 3 lety +1185

    You can see on Rolf's face the horrible burden he carries with him. I can't even imagine being the son of such a monster. But you can also see in his face and in his words that he is a far better human being and a far better man than his father could ever be. I think there is a great amount of courage and dignity in the way he tells his story. -He could've simply changed his name, kept quite and stayed out of the public eye, but perhaps he understood the importance of sharing his story. It's one thing to carry such a horrible burden: to be the son of one of the worst monsters in human history; but he carries this burden with grace, dignity and what appears to be a genuine desire for people to learn from his experience.

  • @Ocelot1962
    @Ocelot1962 Před 3 lety +2557

    I feel so sorry for Rolf. I'm glad to see that his father's psychopathy was not genetic and passed down to him.

  • @jimilee4609
    @jimilee4609 Před 3 lety +384

    WOW! Rolf did a great job on this interview .... you can see how kind and understanding and painful it was for him 😞

  • @whyaddnamehere
    @whyaddnamehere Před 3 lety +414

    The Nazi hunters already knew Mengele was in Argentina. The problem was with the Argentinian government, not Rolf giving him up.

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 Před 3 lety +1344

    I have empathy for Rolf, the burden he bears as the son of an infamous monster that he has to come to terms with, and the the stigma he suffers from others who want to somehow hold Dr. Mengele responsible for his atrocities, and being unable to do so, make Rolf and his family a lightening rod to somehow gain that satisfaction. From personal experiences of having been born to parents, whose poor decisions and irresponsibility led to the deaths of two people. I, and all of my siblings (we were all small children) were scorned by each of our respective parent s' families. Each family of course hated the spouse their relative was married to, (mom's family hated dad's and vice-versa), they treated my siblings as "no good", as if we were somehow guilty of our parent's behavior. Since my parents weren't around to hate, we became the focus of their hate. All of my siblings had to suffer the consequences of what it did to our family unit, then come to terms with the awful things our parents were responsible for, and last but not least, deal the burden of the scorn and animosity we suffered, because our parents weren't around to bear that burden. Their guilt became ours to bear. When you have had to live with that from childhood into adulthood (I'm 60 now), being ostracized from both branches of the family (and the families of the victims of my parents), it's quite a lot to overcome. Being the child of one history s' most evil characters, (and the whole world knows who you are) makes my own experiences pale by contrast. There is also the terrible weight that comes with having that connection that NEVER goes away. I am in no way trying to diminish the suffering of all of Dr. Mengele s' victims when I say that his children were also victims of his heinous atrocities because they have had to bear that shame in public in place of the father who hid from the world and let his children odium for his sake. I hope that Rolf has been able to find peace, and shield his children from the hate of the world that they don't deserve to suffer.

    • @georgealderson4424
      @georgealderson4424 Před 3 lety +161

      This is such a touching, intelligent comment. The phrase "rest in peace" is ofen said about the deceased but my I offer YOU, a living being and all who are in similar positions, these words too? I hope you may rest in peace during your lifetime
      Blessings and peace

    • @steenystuff1075
      @steenystuff1075 Před 3 lety +94

      I understand and agree with you. The judgement and terrorism of the ignorant is shocking to bear. God bless you.

    • @littleboots9800
      @littleboots9800 Před 3 lety +89

      Wow. That was incredibly unfair. Im sorry you went through that.

    • @Rosebud2503
      @Rosebud2503 Před 3 lety +61

      Hear hear....well spoken.

    • @carolv8450
      @carolv8450 Před 3 lety +28

      By a lot

  • @Una...
    @Una... Před 3 lety +625

    "With not a word of regret." A monster to the end. Rolf, that poor man.

  • @lunasinger2735
    @lunasinger2735 Před 3 lety +1917

    The worst part of having an evil parent is knowing that you have DNA from them and looking in the mirror and seeing a resemblance. I used to struggle with that-- my father is incredibly evil and I look like him.

  • @franchk8372
    @franchk8372 Před 4 lety +529

    What a horrendous legacy for his son to endure.

    • @evamarek5205
      @evamarek5205 Před 3 lety +59

      Yes. Horrible. I feel very bad for him. He shouldn't carry any shame or guilt. He's not responsible for his father's actions. He's not his father. God bless him.

  • @BanjoLuke1
    @BanjoLuke1 Před 3 lety +281

    A man of quiet dignity and humanity. The enormity of his father's wrongs was crushing, but he remained reasonable. This is a telling part of the archive about how societies can move on.

  • @alisonholland7531
    @alisonholland7531 Před 3 lety +315

    He bears no guilt, his father was the monster, not him.

  • @SilentNoMore64
    @SilentNoMore64 Před 3 lety +172

    He somehow looks like his father, but without the harshness. What a terrible thing to live out your days carrying the same last name. I hope he can find release from the actions of his father. None of that was his fault. He seems like a very nice guy.

  • @mariopermawan9284
    @mariopermawan9284 Před 4 lety +747

    very difficult to be a son of a beast...

    • @danielheartfire614
      @danielheartfire614 Před 3 lety +54

      My father was a murderer. I know how he feels.

    • @marcobagut
      @marcobagut Před 3 lety +77

      Murderer is bad, but a monster that experimented on children is far worse!

    • @Jackmerius_Tacktheritrix5733
      @Jackmerius_Tacktheritrix5733 Před 3 lety +34

      @@danielheartfire614 Not like Mengele

    • @davids2742
      @davids2742 Před 3 lety +32

      it is much more difficult to be the son of a victim than of a murderer. there are jews in thirt or fourth generation who are still traumatized.
      there are even many young belorussians and russians who still feel hate towards the germans.

    • @myhyusri9103
      @myhyusri9103 Před 3 lety +32

      But in the country called Usa the father of the beast Satanic Bush Jr walk freely after ten of thousands innocent peoples & childrens killed in MEast region.

  • @thereseduran7377
    @thereseduran7377 Před 3 lety +379

    It's disgusting that he was allowed to live a full life after what he did.

  • @WeWhoBelongtoYou
    @WeWhoBelongtoYou Před 3 lety +327

    “Old, small, broken” and still a coward.

  • @rebeccamoore6965
    @rebeccamoore6965 Před 3 lety +81

    Can u imagine having to live with that legacy. He seems so ashamed. As for turning in his own father for something Rolf has nothing to do with how would u feel. He was just a child when all this happens. Rolf has been left with a horrible legacy and I hope he finds peace for he had nothing to do with this.

  • @StevenTorrey
    @StevenTorrey Před 3 lety +24

    Himmler's daughter, Gudrun Himmler, still sang his praises into even her old age. She died in 2018.

  • @kbp341
    @kbp341 Před 3 lety +131

    I can’t imagine the guilt and shame of having him as your father. Through no fault of your own, you are related to this monstet

  • @rrbaggett7
    @rrbaggett7 Před 4 lety +129

    Thank you for posting this. I truly hope Rolf found peace.

  • @Wolfdragon92584
    @Wolfdragon92584 Před 3 lety +351

    History exists not just for memory's sake, but as a grandscale lesson as well.

  • @jeffwarr11
    @jeffwarr11 Před 3 lety +78

    You can really see the confused shame and humiliation in his eyes. His father was evil, and to be able to reconcile that within one's own mind. Let alone detach oneself from it would be nearly impossible, due to the magnitude of the Mengele atrocities. I feel truly sorry that people like his father can ever exist.

  • @karenlong5622
    @karenlong5622 Před 3 lety +40

    As a young girl, I met Corrie ten Boom in person one night near Pittsburgh, PA (Greensburg) in a lovely, elegant ballroom of a hotel, matching exactly the persona of the gracious woman herself who spoke to all of us that night and encouraged us to "forgive those who persecute you."
    My life has never been the same.

  • @mikeford1273
    @mikeford1273 Před 3 lety +41

    This must be the first time I've ever heard someone describing the torture and murder of 1000s of people as 'problematic!'.
    I hope the poor old soul is slowly burning somewhere!

  • @randomami8176
    @randomami8176 Před 3 lety +422

    In every book I’ve tried to read about the holocaust, there is always a chapter that I can’t simply go on reading after and I have to stop because of nauseas and distress. It is the one about Mengele’s murders and atrocities. The level of cruelty simply goes beyond human comprehension, so hard that, the concept of it in itself, is impossible to even grasp. I can’t begin to imagine what it must be for this guy to even have to acknowledge for himself (not to mention for others) he is the blood and genes of such despicable monster, even if he isn’t guilty himself.

  • @SIRDKA
    @SIRDKA Před 3 lety +106

    Imagine Rolf being asked by a stranger 'what did your father do for a living?'... well...

  • @okramra
    @okramra Před 3 lety +170

    At least he isn't trying to justify his father's actions, unlike the children of other nazis.

  • @Brace67
    @Brace67 Před 3 lety +366

    The son is not the father who, as the narrator says, spoke “not a word of regret”, for the terrible things he did at that infamous death camp. ‘Dr. Death’s’ son is both handsome and very articulate in English as he explains his meeting with his father. A very interesting picture of history.

  • @lsmart
    @lsmart Před 3 lety +837

    As a son of two Holocaust survivors, and as one who never could understand how an entire country could become so murderous, with only a handful lifting a finger for a Jew, I have a certain admiration for Rolf, and I wonder where this man got his heart from - certainly not from his beastly father.

  • @1suitcasesal
    @1suitcasesal Před 3 lety +94

    This is very sad for the son to have to deal with and accept what his father did. I feel bad for him.

  • @davidroman1342
    @davidroman1342 Před 3 lety +181

    I am annoyed he got to live to an old age. Living his life. I wish mossad would of got him

    • @jc4evur661
      @jc4evur661 Před 3 lety +24

      Life imprisonment is often a greater punishment than death

    • @brunodallari7602
      @brunodallari7602 Před 3 lety +33

      In fact, when the Mossad captured Eichmann in Buenos Aires in 1960 taking him to be judged and executed in Israel, the idea was to get Mengele as well. But as soon as he heard about the operation he ran away to hide in Brazil, never to be found again until his death.

  • @charleswilcher6158
    @charleswilcher6158 Před 3 lety +224

    I feel for Rolf...he is not the blame for his father's missgivings....I can't imagine how Rolf felt when they called his father a monster...a sadist..but the truth was he was his father and I'm sure he loved him to some extent...that's really sad

    • @carolinehowell5203
      @carolinehowell5203 Před 3 lety +23

      ‘His father’s misgivings’ What misgivings? Rolf said his father stood by his actions. His father said he helped many thousands of people & the mass murder at Auschwitz wasn’t his fault, but the regime’s. Either you didn’t listen properly to the interview, or you used the word ‘misgivings’ in error.

    • @dianneckcu
      @dianneckcu Před 3 lety +52

      Parents do not always love their children. Some parents are monstrous and only love themselves and their ideas and ideals. Some parents are severe psychopaths.

  • @albertarthurparsnips5141
    @albertarthurparsnips5141 Před 3 lety +219

    He destroyed his own son. Rolfs eyes speak in volumes of pain, anguish, and shame. Rolf : the world knows you bear absolutely NO responsibility for the unspeakable crimes of your father. Please, please do not feel in any way tainted by the fact that he was your father. These are things we simply cannot control.

  • @geni2906
    @geni2906 Před 3 lety +138

    Rolf free yourself from this burden. God knows your heart

  • @catherinehazur7336
    @catherinehazur7336 Před 3 lety +173

    Bold and brave of Rolf to do this interview and how painful for him to confront his unrepentantly evil father who remained fixated in his sins without apology. If anyone deserved Hell it was Dr Josef Mengele

  • @xpat73
    @xpat73 Před 3 lety +14

    I'm always amazed Mossad didn't do a job on Mengele.

  • @dianealbrecht496
    @dianealbrecht496 Před 3 lety +159

    Hell, I'd change my name too. Who wants to be known as a relative of that evil man.

  • @ChristChickAutistic
    @ChristChickAutistic Před 3 lety +141

    Man, I feel so bad for this guy. Imagine knowing your own dad tortured and murdered so many people. I'm just thankful that his dad almost, but luckily didn't, get ahold of my grandma, who was preggers with my uncle. She was going to be sent to Auschwitz, and then the liberation happened.

  • @taxidude
    @taxidude Před 3 lety +63

    It's a horrendous situation to be put in! You can see the trouble and conflict it's causing him!

  • @ColinH1973
    @ColinH1973 Před 3 lety +112

    Thank you for this. What incredible humility and dignity from the son of a monster.

  • @richardturner9317
    @richardturner9317 Před 3 lety +19

    from the family who always denied being in contact with this vile mass murderer, or knowing where he was.

  • @thomassperduti4500
    @thomassperduti4500 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for posting.

  • @mthomas3547
    @mthomas3547 Před 3 lety +205

    Monsters are not born, they're made. That's the truth. Rolf, you don't have to feel guilty for your father's legacy of death, you do have an obligation to create a better, healthier, more compassionate legacy. Speaking out is rough, but it's far better than hiding in that shadow. Good video.

  • @mgmassey174
    @mgmassey174 Před 3 lety +37

    I so understand wanting to distance yourself from your morally compromised parents.
    Bless his heart
    How difficult this must have been for him.
    Much empathy and respect

  • @laylaali5977
    @laylaali5977 Před 3 lety +39

    His father was a evil

  • @iveg8905
    @iveg8905 Před 3 lety +174

    i wonder why he didnt inform on his location if he claim that he was horrified with his actions.....

    • @kingcharles3508
      @kingcharles3508 Před 3 lety +33

      Cuz hes still his dad lol

    • @KindCountsDeb3773
      @KindCountsDeb3773 Před 3 lety +38

      I think there was NO extradition treaty in the country. He legally could not be removed, and I'm sure people knew he was there.

    • @hannorasmusholtiegel6044
      @hannorasmusholtiegel6044 Před 3 lety +19

      He didn't know, they where separated, he barely knew his father

    • @elfulano5884
      @elfulano5884 Před 3 lety +16

      Because he isn't being sincere.

    • @chuckbuckbobuck
      @chuckbuckbobuck Před 3 lety +18

      Mossad never really made attempts to find Mengele after the 1950s so it wouldn't have mattered. They had bigger things to worry about in the 60s and 70s. PLO, Six day war, Black September, etc. By that time getting Mengele just wasnt that important unfortunately

  • @colintraveller
    @colintraveller Před 3 lety +167

    It's easy to blame the Son for nothing giving up his Fathers location .
    The real blame should be at the Brazillian Authorities that knew where he was and never lifted a finger

    • @MTCali70
      @MTCali70 Před 3 lety +7

      Have you watched The Boys From Brazil? I mean wow, Mengele really did this, I am pretty sure. I am surprised Rolf did not change his last name.

    • @amramjose
      @amramjose Před 3 lety +14

      Mengele was assisted by many, including the Strasner regime in Paraguay, where Mengele supposedly trained their secret police.

    • @20greeneyes20
      @20greeneyes20 Před 3 lety +10

      The Vatican also knew where he was all the war criminals they helped out of the country

    • @allankalynchuk8409
      @allankalynchuk8409 Před 3 lety +8

      The CIA protected him

  • @rozchristopherson648
    @rozchristopherson648 Před 3 lety +41

    His son is right. Sometimes you have to have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH EVIL. In this world, it is impossible to avoid all evil. But some things you have to avoid getting into or, if you do get into something evil, come out of it as soon as possible.

  • @rebeccamoore6965
    @rebeccamoore6965 Před 3 lety +43

    I'm so glad he changes his name. I hope he moves on and makes a nice life. He seems kind and if he ever has a family he would be a good father I beleive. He must distance himself from that horrible legacy and realize he is a totally different man and he can't do anything about his ancestry. None of us can and he happened to be the unlucky one.

  • @TheArtenez3
    @TheArtenez3 Před 4 lety +88

    Funny and strange thing is they share the same exact birthday. March 16 if sources are correct for Rolf is 1944 and his father Josef is 1911 difference in birth years

    • @reesemorgan2259
      @reesemorgan2259 Před 3 lety +13

      It's my birthday too, March 16th. When I realised we shared the same birthday (apart from the year obviously), I felt queasy.

    • @wallykloubek4079
      @wallykloubek4079 Před 3 lety +14

      Reese Morgan ...I was born March 16, 1945 in Germany....🇨🇦

    • @ozzydoop1473
      @ozzydoop1473 Před 3 lety +5

      That’s very interesting

    • @TheArtenez3
      @TheArtenez3 Před 3 lety +1

      @@reesemorgan2259 Is it nature vs nurture that makes a monster? Despite being born on a notorious birthday like this one for example. LOL.

    • @TheArtenez3
      @TheArtenez3 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wallykloubek4079 Is it nature vs nurture that makes a monster? Despite being born on a notorious birthday like this one for example. LOL.

  • @jimallen19
    @jimallen19 Před 3 lety +81

    That being said, the family helped hide him for years. Secretly visiting him, including Rolf.

    • @tinafrohlich377
      @tinafrohlich377 Před 3 lety +8

      Really?

    • @anneterry5038
      @anneterry5038 Před 3 lety +10

      @@tinafrohlich377 yes

    • @ellemontgomery1037
      @ellemontgomery1037 Před 3 lety +27

      They kept their mouth shut on their father’s location because the family didn’t think he deserved to be punished for his atrocities against people. If you hide a monster, your just as bad.

    • @lorraine9242
      @lorraine9242 Před 3 lety +21

      Sometimes it is necessary to turn your relative into the authorities, especially if you believe that they will go on to harm and kill other people. Ted Kaczynski's brother turned his brother into the FBI, because he knew he was the Unabomber, for example. Rolf may have been afraid that his father would be executed if he turned him in. A very difficult dilemma for a son.

    • @Celisar1
      @Celisar1 Před 3 lety +33

      Thay being said many politicians and locals in South America helped famous nazis as well as the US American government who had no objection against profiting from their knowledge.

  • @LK-bz9sk
    @LK-bz9sk Před 3 lety +24

    Rolf is a good man who had to carry such a horrific burden which he had zero to do with. Many of my family died in Auschwitz but a piece of Rolf seems to have died too and this is not fair.

  • @rosiemackenzie5976
    @rosiemackenzie5976 Před 3 lety +67

    I can't even begin to imagine how it must have felt to come face to face with such a person, never mind that person being your father.

  • @rodrigodezubiria2007
    @rodrigodezubiria2007 Před 3 lety +16

    Children should never be held responsible for the sins of their parents
    A good concept for the Catholic Church to embrace.
    Amazing to see the extremes of humanity in these two individuals.
    Thank you for posting an amazing discussion.

  • @teresayeates3437
    @teresayeates3437 Před 3 lety +173

    Those that gave Mengela safe haven after the war should be charged as conspiritors.

  • @missmodern
    @missmodern Před 3 lety +46

    It was a time for all sociopaths to shine.

  • @annwillett7489
    @annwillett7489 Před 3 lety +14

    Father or no father the man got away with brutal unimaginable acts of cruelty and mass murder unforgivable and should of been brought to justice many years ago Rolf it’s unfortunate for you to have a parent who is globally hated and with very good reason

  • @bettegregory4960
    @bettegregory4960 Před 3 lety +97

    Having him for a father had been traumatic for you. It is obviously very painful for you. His actions were never your fault. You are in no way responsible for him. By the grace of God you turned out to be a fantastic example of a very decent, morally positive influence on the human race. And appears to be fine gentleman. I'm sure God will grant you his blessings on you.

  • @sunh1213
    @sunh1213 Před 3 lety +81

    Scrolling through the comments I see so much finger pointing. It is too easy placing blame from the outside. Far more is unknown and unsaid. Children of any age have their own reasons for their actions or non action outsiders may or may not know regarding a parent or parents. For this man to publicly say as much as he did is an act of bravery. Outsiders cannot know the non-monetary price and/or backlash.

  • @mkl5448
    @mkl5448 Před 3 lety +47

    He also stalled giving his blood sample for a year when they wanted to identify his father's bones.

  • @ticolandia100
    @ticolandia100 Před 3 lety +3

    What year was this interview

  • @clayleslie8895
    @clayleslie8895 Před 3 lety +12

    I like to think that even in the absolute worst of people there is a part deep within us all that is able to reflect on what we've done in our lifetime and are able to bring about guilt, remorse, empathy, but to some people all they care about is themselves. I hear of people such as Josef and all of the horrible things he had done and yet I feel sorry for him, knowing everything he's seen and done in his lifetime, the countless times he must've reflected back upon his actions and felt something; that he had done something wrong, and maybe he did at one point reflect on his past and just came to terms with it and told no one, but from what we know he was remorseless till the end of his days. As God is his only witness.

  • @YackBackatcha
    @YackBackatcha Před 3 lety +39

    His Father escaped justice. I am surprised by this. How could he claim he was innocent. Hundreds of stories of his cruel experiments. I feel very sorry for his son.

  • @shaneembry7565
    @shaneembry7565 Před 3 lety +9

    Poor guy. I’d have to get my last name changed.

  • @alexvibe9066
    @alexvibe9066 Před 3 lety +45

    And I thought my father was evil

  • @trapezoidspangle934
    @trapezoidspangle934 Před 3 lety +2

    Truly fascinating. So important for people to understand or at least witness.

  • @gavincook4684
    @gavincook4684 Před 3 lety +92

    He sewed two gypsie twin children back to back. Apparently their mother was able to get some morphine which had been smuggled out of the camp infirmary and killed them with it to end their suffering. Hard to understand how a man trained as a doctor, decorated after serving at the Easter front could sink so low into abject sadistic madness to conduct these experiments. The woman who was recruited by him to find twins was told that he wanted them to have extra milk rations.

    • @maryshaffer8474
      @maryshaffer8474 Před 3 lety +30

      I'm glad there are no photos. That's a sight your brain would never forget.

    • @dodibenabba1378
      @dodibenabba1378 Před 3 lety +13

      What are your sources for such a story?

    • @skontheroad2666
      @skontheroad2666 Před 3 lety +22

      @@maryshaffer8474 There certainly are photos. As well as all of the stories that have been documented by the Wiesenthal center. BUT... we still have so many Holocaust deniers.

    • @gwecasagwecasa2928
      @gwecasagwecasa2928 Před 3 lety +32

      Men trained as doctors rip babies apart every day with their mothers hiring them to do so.

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před 3 lety +14

      @@dodibenabba1378 There are scores of witnesses from the camps who say even worse than that. There is no conspiracy to blacken his name - he did everything they accuse him off. Had it not been for the war he would have probably been a common serial killer.

  • @tracywhitcher2128
    @tracywhitcher2128 Před 3 lety +4

    Complicated points? Mass murderers deserve to be uncomfortable.Smh

  • @Reaper1947
    @Reaper1947 Před 3 lety +59

    You can feel his pain when he talks, this must have eaten at him his entire life. Strange how the family turned on Rolf and stuck by and supported Josef. TheReaper!

  • @tracyotrhuiskamp1012
    @tracyotrhuiskamp1012 Před 3 lety +9

    This is why i get so upset when peop;e nowadays casually call people nazis. Do they not realize the severity of how evil these peoples actions were

  • @jonathanrio6587
    @jonathanrio6587 Před 4 lety +313

    I don't feel bad for Rolf . I do not hold him responsible for his father's actions and know that he and his mother had nothing to do with what Josef did. However, I DO hold him responsible for not turning his father in when he knew where he was, especially since they had no real relationship. It makes me SICK that his father got away with all he did and was NEVER held accountable. Rolf knew what his father did all this time and stayed silent. In the 70's there were still A LOT of survivors that needed some kind of sense of justice and closure which Rolf could have provided. Even today, there are many of us who have lost relatives in Auschwitz who would love to know this man was found and held accountable. It's an open wound of frustration that will pass on through generations.

    • @ayeshayesh6097
      @ayeshayesh6097 Před 4 lety +37

      You would 🐀 on ur dad?

    • @subg8858
      @subg8858 Před 3 lety +21

      Pretty sure he was up to more heinous activities in south america

    • @pkrones
      @pkrones Před 3 lety +19

      @@ayeshayesh6097 yes

    • @mrs.garcia6978
      @mrs.garcia6978 Před 3 lety +1

      I had no idea, wow. 💔

    • @wildnature8773
      @wildnature8773 Před 3 lety +19

      He couldn’t turn him in, all of the ones who are in authority we’re on the same side who is he going to turn him into

  • @KS-se9jb
    @KS-se9jb Před 3 lety +98

    Strange. He seems to have kept himself disconnected in a way, as he is very selective with his words and how he describes things.

    • @leighcunningham756
      @leighcunningham756 Před 3 lety +25

      called self preservation.....I think I would have gone mad had my father done such evil

    • @ivovandeboom6767
      @ivovandeboom6767 Před 3 lety +42

      He's not a native english speaker

    • @KindCountsDeb3773
      @KindCountsDeb3773 Před 3 lety +33

      english is not his first language as well. I think he wanted to be respectful to the truth and still acknowledge his father's evil ways.

    • @CBeatty59
      @CBeatty59 Před 3 lety +31

      English is not his first language. That would account for some of that hesitation.

  • @beagledog2001
    @beagledog2001 Před 3 lety +9

    I love your choice of music and I love history also, thank you for posting this fascinating documentary

  • @SpaceBoyRay.
    @SpaceBoyRay. Před 4 lety +134

    I really don’t know what to feel for this guy.

    • @fredman1956
      @fredman1956 Před 4 lety +23

      LeviSquadReject / Anbu Avengers they are as guilty for sheltering the monster.

    • @eviken1982
      @eviken1982 Před 4 lety +58

      @@fredman1956 Indeed. They all say Rolf is a great man and he is not responsible for his father's crimes that is true ofcourse, but he barely knew his father. I would betray my father if i barely knew him and knowing he did this horrible crimes.

    • @CanadianMonarchist
      @CanadianMonarchist Před 4 lety +9

      Pity

    • @carltonpoindexter2034
      @carltonpoindexter2034 Před 3 lety +28

      Rolf was originally lied to and told that his father was his uncle. His family was providing support for his father from Germany along with former SS officers. He learned about his father in the public library and reading about his crimes against humanity. In post Germany there was no one to report such to and since all officials had served under Hitler. The children of that generation had to quietly confront their family nightmares on their own. Almost all children of high ranking/ famous Nazis never married or, if they did, refused to have children for fear of passing on an inborn evil or something monstrous. Read the lives of these children, it is heartbreaking.

    • @wirelessone2986
      @wirelessone2986 Před 3 lety

      @@eviken1982 How old was he

  • @shanewolfe4986
    @shanewolfe4986 Před 4 lety +77

    If he were innocent he could have easily left that camp and made his way to the American lines. Surrendering, knowing Germany would lose the war anyway from the get go and trying to help stop something so bad it's unbearable to even begin to think about. That's not a human that's a demon straight out of hell.

    • @bashpr0mpt244
      @bashpr0mpt244 Před 4 lety +25

      Yeah. Right. Americans were nowhere near by and the Russians committed more atrocities than the Nazi's ever could. Ten times the factor. To the point the Nazis literally found and reported mass graves to the Red Cross, horrified at their extreme nature, and let British investigators in to examine them (the massacre when the Russians murdered thousands and buried them in a mass grave then faked a retreat to try and let the Germans occupy the area so they can claim it was the Germans who did it similar to the Katyn massacre their MO was commonly to turn the public on the Nazi's by committing mass atrocities themselves.) You know when the Nazi's think you're horrific you've done bad.

    • @bashpr0mpt719
      @bashpr0mpt719 Před 4 lety +12

      Ok so like six accounts of mine I cannot comment with as CZcams has currently censored me. So sorry in the future if multiple comments show up. Blame Wisckizniski and her evil censorship campaign.

    • @clioaspinade9275
      @clioaspinade9275 Před 4 lety +5

      He was captured by the Americans and became a prisoner of war, they let him go.

    • @subg8858
      @subg8858 Před 3 lety +1

      US was nearby. Mengele retreated to western front immediately prior to soviet advance

    • @Goneintension
      @Goneintension Před 3 lety +7

      bashpr0mpt the Nazi regime lasted 12 years, and yet managed to murder directly near 12 million people systematically. Not to mention the war crimes they committed in combat or the POWs killed, so please give me your evidence which suggests that the Russians killed over 120 million people.

  • @theresaholguin699
    @theresaholguin699 Před 3 lety +5

    Without a word of regret. How sad

  • @charlesyoung8600
    @charlesyoung8600 Před 3 lety +45

    That poor man. To have that as your father. I hope he can find peace and people don't judge him for his father sins.

  • @colmoreilly1323
    @colmoreilly1323 Před 3 lety +147

    Why didn't you turn him in then Rolf?

    • @charlottebarlow5440
      @charlottebarlow5440 Před 3 lety +23

      Because it isn't easy to turn in a family member. If my father was evil I wouldn't have the heart to turn him in as horrible as it is.

    • @reesemorgan2259
      @reesemorgan2259 Před 3 lety +19

      Family pressure I suspect. I had to report a family member to the police for something particularly ugly and it took every ounce of strength I had in my soul. Nobody wants to be rejected by their entire family and that's what you risk when you act.
      Extremely disappointing that Mengele wasn't redeemed and remained a cruel, self-justifying murderer to the end. Karma keeps receipts though, as the Katie Perry lyric goes. I know he's suffering for his evil actions right now, even if he wasn't held accountable and hanged after the war. I don't blame his son, he looked like he'd stared into the abyss and spent plenty of time reflecting on his father's guilt. He knew how horrifying the camps were. Unless he's said something suspect about what his father did, then I don't blame him for his father's sins. Imagine being related to that bastard.

    • @ronaldarceo2453
      @ronaldarceo2453 Před 3 lety +10

      Blood is thicker than water

    • @carlosreyes5371
      @carlosreyes5371 Před 3 lety +7

      Would you turn in your own father? Yeah, I thought so...

    • @michellefili7521
      @michellefili7521 Před 3 lety +3

      Best question ever.

  • @tereysaocak3062
    @tereysaocak3062 Před 3 lety +8

    Why did he continue naming his company mengele ?

  • @jerryloufretz1797
    @jerryloufretz1797 Před 3 lety +32

    It is important for all of us to know that he was unrepentant. That man is with his father, Satan, in hell, where he belongs. Rolf, his son, was very brave to visit his Dad and ask him about it. What a horrible legacy for the son to deal with. Rolf seems like a good person, interested in the truth.

  • @AmRFuKYaH
    @AmRFuKYaH Před 3 lety +18

    I wonder if Rolf's children were dissected while they were alive if he would want the children of the person who committed this crime to turn in their parent?

  • @audreymlean-roberts1394
    @audreymlean-roberts1394 Před 3 lety +29

    Rolf Mengele seems like a very decent human being. I’ve no idea what age he was when he found out the truth about his father. The realisation had to be totally devastating for him. His father could never have been remorseful or to have changed his views on nationalist socialism. It was just not possible after all the human suffering and death he was directly responsible for. It would have been psychological suicide and very probably, it would have led to his physical death.

  • @adesiree196
    @adesiree196 Před 4 lety +127

    He kept his fathers secret for years, even after he knew they were searching for him. What he did was conceal one of the worst murderers. He didn’t do it by force, he liked doing it. My father was horrible and I let authorities know. Why this man didn’t makes me hate him. My father didn’t do all those horrible things but he wasn’t given the opportunity. Why let a murderer or possible murderer go free? Especially a mass murderer who experimented and tortured children, mothers, fathers...not ok. If I could curse this man I would but he’s not worth it. I’m sure he already is anyway. Family or not, murder is murder. Torture is torture. Those families deserved to see that monster on trial

    • @eviken1982
      @eviken1982 Před 4 lety +15

      Certainly because he actually didn't know his father very well i would do the same. I would betray my father.

    • @XxMobileWizXx
      @XxMobileWizXx Před 4 lety +22

      You guys have no decency. I would never turn my father in even if he was Hitler himself. For what? just because some people think he is "bad guy" lol. Fuck that. Blood is thicker than water.

    • @CanadianMonarchist
      @CanadianMonarchist Před 4 lety +28

      I have no idea what I would do if my father was a Nazi war criminal, so I won't pass judgement on Rolf.

    • @jeffsutton950
      @jeffsutton950 Před 3 lety +18

      I would without question turn anyone in for being a nazi war criminal.

    • @subg8858
      @subg8858 Před 3 lety +18

      Odds are Mengele was continuing his experiments in South America. There is circumstantial evidence supporting this

  • @ernestmachpro3341
    @ernestmachpro3341 Před 3 lety +12

    Around Nice, France, I've met a nephew of Himmler. He was 6 years old at the end of the war and morally destroyed as he said.

  • @waynem7634
    @waynem7634 Před 3 lety +29

    So sad for the Son carrying the horrible atrocities of his Father on his shoulders.

  • @williamkirkbride9379
    @williamkirkbride9379 Před 3 lety +17

    " Sins of your father " do such things exist ? Evil deeds require the help of many. From the pen pushers to the train drivers to the signal men and on. Guilt is for the individual.
    Many soldiers do not talk about some things they did because they are haunted by memories.

  • @Yasi_nzi
    @Yasi_nzi Před 3 lety +93

    He looks exactly like his mother.. such a handsome guy

  • @victoriacharlesworth7099
    @victoriacharlesworth7099 Před 3 lety +10

    Anyone thinking about his mother who must have formed some kind of relationship with that evil monster to have Rolf??

  • @snowgurl21
    @snowgurl21 Před 3 lety +13

    I can even imagine knowing your father was a demon on earth basically. This poor son & his dirt bag father stilled lied about the atrocities he did maybe helped some but it doesn’t excuse the beguiling cruelty he in acted on so many many human beings!! Poor Rolf having seen no remorse from his monster father.