Brunhilde Pomsel

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Birth Date:
11.01.1911
Death date:
27.01.2017
Length of life:
106
Days since birth:
41351
Years since birth:
113
Days since death:
2618
Years since death:
7
Categories:
Long-living person, Nazi, Official, War criminal
Nationality:
 german
Cemetery:
Berlin Corners, Berlin Cemetery

Brunhilde Pomsel (11 January 1911 – 27 January 2017) was a German centenarian who was a personal secretary to Joseph Goebbels, and later a broadcaster.

She worked for Goebbels from 1942 onwards, and was one of the last surviving eyewitnesses of the Nazi power apparatus.

Biography

Born in Berlin in 1911, Pomsel worked as a stenographer for a Jewish lawyer and as a typist for a rightist nationalist, at one point working for both simultaneously. In 1933 she gained a job as a secretary in the news department of the Third Reich’s broadcasting station after joining the Nazi Party.[3] On the recommendation of a friend, she was transferred to the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in 1942, where she worked under Joseph Goebbels as a shorthand writer until the end of the war.[3][2] According to Kate Connolly in the Guardian, Pomsel's tasks included "massaging downwards statistics about fallen soldiers, as well as exaggerating the number of rapes of German women by the Red Army". After the Fall of Berlin in 1945, Pomsel was sentenced by the Soviets to five years in prison.

After being released from prison in 1950 Pomsel worked in German broadcasting until her retirement in 1971. On her 100th birthday in 2011, she publicly spoke out against Goebbels. A documentary called A German Life, drawn from a 30-hour interview with Pomsel, was shown at the Munich International Film Festival in 2016.

Towards the end of her life Pomsel lived in Munich, where she died on 27 January 2017 at the age of 106.

Source: wikipedia.org

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