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Nazi zombies in real life 2
Nazi zombies in real life 2







The Ahnenerbe (which literally means “Inheritance of the Forefathers”) was a research group into the paranormal, established by order of SS head Heinrich Himmler on 1 July 1935. (I wrote about the Ahnenerbe in my book "Stealing the Mystic Lamb: the True Story of the World’s Most Coveted Masterpiece.") Relatively few people are aware of a very real organization that was the inspiration for the Indiana Jones plots: the Nazi Ahnenerbe, or the Ancestral Heritage Research and Teaching Organization. The Nazis did, in fact, have teams of researchers hunting for supernatural treasures, religious relics and entrances to a magical land of telepathic faeries and giants (I wish I were making this up). But this is only because those plots were inspired by real, but little-known, facts. The idea that the Nazis looked into the possibility of raising the dead might sound like an outtake from an Indiana Jones movie.

nazi zombies in real life 2

But though even asking the question may sound preposterous, a world of people believe that such a program was in the works - and knowing what facts we do about Nazi research and beliefs, this concept is entirely plausible. No reliable evidence has been found that the Nazis tried to raise the dead.

nazi zombies in real life 2

We can begin with the conclusion, because that is really just the start. Nazi zombies make for a grabber of a headline, but what real evidence is there that raising the dead was on the agenda for even the most outrageous among the Nazis? From the pages of "Hellboy" and the pixilated corridors of "Wolfenstein 3D," popular culture has wondered whether the Nazis, who had no shortage of well-documented kooky ideas, might have researched the possibility of reanimating the dead.









Nazi zombies in real life 2