Hermine Braunsteiner (Spanish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Hermine Braunsteiner" in Spanish language version.

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axishistory.com

  • Wendel, Marcus. «Third Majdanek Trial». Axis History Factbook. Consultado el 15 de octubre de 2008.  (Also cited in Jewish Virtual Library.)

books.google.com

  • Wistrich, Robert S. (2001). Who's Who in Nazi Germany. Routledge. p. 215. ISBN 9780415260381. Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2008. 
  • Frühwald, Wolfgang (2004). Internationales Archiv Für Sozialgeschichte Der Deutschen Literatur. M. Niemeyer. p. 92. Consultado el 16 de octubre de 2008. «...Hermine Braunsteiner-Ryan's pay at... Majdanek ... four times what she earned in a munitions factory.»  Original from the University of Michigan. Digitized Mar 18, 2008.
  • Rabinowicz, Dorothy; Elie Wiesel, Elliot Lefkovitz, Robert McAfee Brown, Lucy Dawidowicz (1990). «The Holocaust as Living Memory». En Eliot Lefkowitz, ed. Dimensions of the Holocaust: Lectures at Northwestern University. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press. pp. 34-45. ISBN 9780810109087. Consultado el 15 de octubre de 2008. «In the winter of 1973 in New York City, deportation hearings were held for Hermine Braunsteiner Ryan, wife of an American citizen, a resident of Queens, New York. Former SS guard at Ravensbrueck and Majdanek, Mrs. Ryan stood accused of beating inmates to death durint the years 1939-1944 while performing her duties as vice-commandant of the women's camp at Majadanek; of being responsible, also, for the death selection of hundreds of others. A stream of witnesses arrived at the small hearing room of the Immigration and Naturalization Service headquarters to give evidence. These were former prisoners at Majdanek. ... They had learned, among other things, that in this society a show of vengeance or any talk of it would be a form of behavior strictly to be avoided. They had learned...to say that they were not interested in vengeance: justice, only justice was their concern.»  (Conflates extradition and deportation.)

buecher4um.de

  • Schlink, Bernhard (13 de diciembre de 1996). «Der Vorleser». Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin (en alemán). Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2008. «Hermine Ryan nannte man "Kobyla, die Stute": weil sie mit ihren eisenbeschlagenen Stiefeln die Menschen trat.» 

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query.nytimes.com

  • «BEHIND BARS, FINALLY». New York Times. 5 de julio de 1981. Consultado el 15 de octubre de 2008. «She ran as far as the United States, to a marriage with an American and a home in Maspeth, Queens. But Hermine Braunsteiner Ryan couldn't hide indefinitely and, finally found out, she was stripped of American citizenship in 1971 and deported in 1973. And last week, after a five-year trial, she was convicted of murder as a guard in the Maidanek concentration camp near Lublin, Poland, during World War II. Seven other former guards were convicted with her, but of lesser offenses. They got relatively light sentences; Mrs. Ryan got life in prison.» 

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