The internet says Gerder Borman visited concentration camps, watched medical experiments, and documented executions.

She’s called one of the most sadistic Nazi women who ever lived.

But almost every viral post about her is actually describing a completely different person, a camp guard with the same last name who was hanged for war crimes.

The real Gerder Borman never killed anyone.

What she did was worse.

She tried to legalize polygamy to breed a master race.

And she started by offering to share her own husband.

The woman history confused.

If you’ve ever searched for Gera Borman online, you’ve probably seen the claims that she visited Dhau, that she watched prisoners torn apart by dogs, that she personally documented executions with cold detachment.

The videos get millions of views.

The post spread across every platform and nearly all of them are wrong.

[music] The woman they’re describing was Johanna Borman, a concentration camp guard at Ashvitz [music] and Bergen Bellson.

She was known as the woman with the dogs for unleashing [music] her German Shepherd on helpless prisoners.

She was tried by a British military tribunal, convicted, and hanged in December 1945.

The real Gera Borman never worked at a camp, never pulled a trigger, never stood over a mass grave.

The shared surname created a conflation that spread through the internet like a virus, merging two completely separate people into one imagined monster.

But here’s what makes the real story more disturbing.

Not less.

Gera Borman’s crimes [music] didn’t require her to set foot in a death camp.

She didn’t need to watch experiments or release dogs on prisoners.

Her contribution to Nazi horror was something far more intimate.

She tried to redesign human reproduction itself.

If this is the kind of deep dive you’re into, subscribe [music] because this story is just getting started.

Born into Nazi royalty.

Gerabuk came into the world on October 23rd, 1909 in [music] Constance, Germany.

Her father wasn’t just a Nazi.

He was one of the party’s most powerful judges.

Walter Book served as chairman of the Nazi Party’s Supreme Court, the body that decided internal disputes and enforced ideological purity among members.

Growing up in this household meant growing up inside the movement itself.

The dinner table conversations weren’t about ordinary politics.

They were about racial destiny, national rebirth, and the reshaping of German society from its foundations.

By the time she was 19, Gerder had caught the attention of a rising party official named Martin Borman.

He was ambitious, ruthless, and already making himself indispensable to the Nazi leadership.

[music] They married on September 2nd, 1929.

And the guest list tells you everything about who these people were.

Adolf Hitler served as a witness.

So did Rudolph Hess.

This [music] wasn’t just a wedding.

It was a ceremony binding two families deeper into the Nazi inner circle.

Over the next 14 years, Gera bore 10 children.

10.

Between 1930 and 1943, she was either pregnant or recovering from pregnancy almost continuously.

She received the cross of honor of the German mother, a medal the regime awarded to women who produced large families for the fatherland.

On paper, she was everything the Nazi state wanted a woman to be.

Devoted, fertile, obedient, the model German wife raising the next generation of Aryans.

But behind this facade, her marriage was a nightmare.

Martin Borman terrorized his family.

Hitler’s own valet later testified that everybody knew Borman terrorized his family.

He had affairs openly, flaunting them in ways that humiliated Gerder publicly.

He was violent.

He [music] was controlling.

Most women in that situation would have been broken by it.

Trapped, abused, with no way out.

Gerder did something nobody expected.

The affair that changed everything.

In the early 1940s, Martin Borman took a mistress.

Her name was Mana Barren, an actress, young, attractive, exactly the kind of woman a powerful Nazi would pursue.

Affairs among the Nazi elite were common enough.

What happened next was not.

Any normal wife would have protested, demanded it stop, threatened to leave, or at least withdrawn into bitter silence.

Gerder did none of these things.

Instead, she wrote to her husband encouraging the relationship, not tolerating it, not resigning herself to it, actively encouraging it.

The letters that survived are unlike anything historians had seen from Nazi wives.

Gerder offered to share household duties with the mistress.

She proposed drawing up legal documents to formalize the arrangement, making mana a kind of official second wife with recognized status.

She wrote warmly about the other woman, suggesting they could all live together, raising children as one extended family unit.

This wasn’t weakness.

It wasn’t resignation.

It wasn’t a broken woman accepting her fate.

This was ideology taken to its horrifying conclusion.

Gerder had internalized Nazi racial doctrine so completely that she saw her own marriage not as a personal relationship but as a breeding arrangement.

Her husband’s infidelity wasn’t a betrayal.

It was an opportunity.

If Martin could father more Aryan children with another racially pure woman, then jealousy was a selfish emotion she needed to overcome for the good of the race.

She actually believed this and she was just getting started.

The Vulks note he proposal.

What Gera Borman did next reveals something deeply unsettling about how totalitarian ideology can reshape even the most intimate aspects of human life.

She didn’t just accept her husband’s affair.

She developed an entire legal and philosophical framework to expand it across Germany.

She called it vulks not emergency racial marriage.

Her proposal was systematic and detailed.

Any racially pure German man should be legally entitled to multiple wives simultaneously, not as some informal arrangement, but as a formal institution with state sanction.

Younger women would rotate through pregnancy cycles while others managed the household and child care.

The entire domestic structure of German society would be reorganized around maximizing Aryan births.

Gerder drafted the legal language herself.

She offered to sign formal acknowledgements that could serve as templates for other German wives.

She argued in her letters that a healthy Aryan man had a biological imperative to father as many children as possible.

Monogamy, she wrote, was holding back the race.

Marriage, as it existed, was a relic of Christian morality that no longer served Germany’s interests.

The specificity is what makes it so disturbing.

This wasn’t vague ideological rambling.

She had thought through the logistics.

How property would be divided, how children would be registered, how the law would need to change to accommodate multiple simultaneous marriages.

She was proposing to dismantle the institution of the family and rebuild it as a breeding program.

And the Nazi leadership took her seriously.

Why? This almost became law.

This wasn’t the ramblings of one deranged housewife writing letters that nobody read.

Gerder Borman’s proposal circulated among Nazi leadership because it addressed a real problem they faced and it offered a solution more radical than anything they had publicly proposed.

By 1943, Germany had suffered catastrophic military losses.

The Eastern Front alone had consumed hundreds of thousands of young men.

Simple demographics told the story.

Millions of German women would be left without partners after the war.

If the regime wanted to replenish its population with racially pure children, where would the fathers come from? The Nazis had already created Liebons, a program encouraging SS officers to father children with unmarried women deemed racially valuable.

Pregnant women stayed in special homes, gave birth, and the children were raised as wards of the state or adopted by approved families.

It was eugenics dressed up as social welfare.

But Gder’s proposal went further.

Labensborn still operated in the shadows, never officially acknowledged as what it was.

Vnotehe would bring the same logic into the open.

It would dismantle marriage, family law, and religious morality entirely, all in service of racial biological objectives.

It would make every German wife complicit in sharing her husband, reframing jealousy and possessiveness as anti-state sentiments.

Hinrich Himmler himself had discussed similar ideas.

The notion that traditional marriage was inadequate for producing enough [music] children had circulated in Nazi ideological circles for years.

What Gerder contributed was a wife’s perspective.

A woman volunteering to be the test case, offering her own marriage as the prototype for what German families could become.

The war ended before any of it could be implemented.

But the proposal’s existence reveals how far Nazi ideology had penetrated into private life, reshaping how believers understood love, family, and intimacy [music] itself.

the woman with the dogs.

Now, let’s return to the confusion that started this story because understanding why people conflated these two women reveals something important about how we remember Nazi evil.

Johanna Borman was born in 1893, making her 16 years older than Gereda.

She worked as a concentration camp guard first at Avitz [music] Burkanau and later at Bergen Bellson.

Survivors remembered her with terror.

She was known for her sadism for the German Shepherd she kept that she would set loose on prisoners too weak to work.

Witnesses at her trial described her watching the dog attack emaciated men and women while she stood by, sometimes laughing.

When British forces liberated Bergen Belin in April 1945, they found Johanna Borman among the captured guards.

She was tried alongside others in what became known as the Bellson trial.

The evidence was overwhelming.

She was convicted of war crimes and hanged on December 13th, 1945.

The two women shared nothing but a surname.

Gerder was a Nazi wife in Munich and at the Burghoff.

Johanna was a camp guard in occupied Poland and Germany.

They never met.

They moved in entirely different circles.

But when the internet discovered both names, the stories merged.

Posts about Gera started including Yana’s crimes.

Videos mixed photographs of both women.

The camp guards atrocities became attributed to the secretary’s wife.

Clarifying [music] this doesn’t exonerate Gerder.

It reveals something more troubling about how Nazi [music] evil actually functioned and why the quiet ideologues might matter as much as the [music] uniformed killers, the quiet architects.

The Holocaust required both the Johannes and the Gerders.

This is the uncomfortable truth that gets lost when we focus only on the most visible perpetrators, the guards, the executioners, the commanders who signed deportation orders.

Johanna Borman pulled triggers, released dogs, watched people die at her feet.

Her crimes are visceral, immediate, impossible to minimize.

When we think of Nazi evil, we imagine her, someone in uniform, weapon in hand, standing over victims.

[music] But the machinery of genocide also needed people like Gera Borman.

True believers who never had to witness the camps [music] because they had already internalized the world view that made them possible.

people who sat in comfortable homes, raised children, and wrote letters proposing that German society reorganize its most intimate relationships around [music] racial breeding.

They provided the ideological foundation that made the guard’s work seem logical, even necessary.

Gera never killed anyone.

She raised 10 children, wrote letters to her husband, and drafted policy proposals that would have reshaped German families for generations.

She represents a different category of complicity.

The architect who never visits the construction site.

The theorist whose ideas become someone else’s actions.

This is why the conflation matters.

When we collapse Gerder into Johanna, we lose the distinction between different kinds of evil.

We imagine that Nazi crimes required monsters, people fundamentally unlike us, recognizable by their cruelty.

But Gera looked like a devoted mother, received medals for her fertility, wrote warmly about sharing her husband with another woman.

The horror wasn’t in her actions.

It was in her beliefs and in how completely those beliefs had replaced normal human feeling.

The end of Gera Borman, May 1945.

The Reich is collapsing.

Allied forces are closing on Berlin from every direction.

In Hitler’s bunker, the remaining Nazi leadership prepares for the end.

Martin Borman was there until the last hours.

On May 2nd, he attempted to escape the bunker as Soviet forces surrounded the chancellory.

He was never seen alive again.

For decades, his fate remained one of the war’s great mysteries.

Had he escaped to South America, been captured by the Soviets? His remains weren’t positively identified until 1998 when DNA testing confirmed that a skeleton found near the Lea Barnhof in 1972 was his.

He had died trying to flee Berlin, killed either by Soviet fire or by suicide as capture became inevitable.

Gerder never learned what happened to her husband.

As Berlin fell, she fled south with her surviving children to Morano, a town in South Tiroll that had been annexed from Italy.

American forces eventually found her there.

They interrogated her about her husband’s activities, about what she knew, about the inner workings of Hitler’s court, but they didn’t prosecute her.

Unlike other Nazi wives who faced denatification tribunals and prison sentences, Gerder was left alone.

It wouldn’t have mattered anyway.

She was already dying.

Doctors diagnosed uterine cancer.

Perhaps the grim irony of a woman who had devoted her body to producing children for the Reich, now consumed by disease in those same organs.

She died on March 23rd, 1946 at 36 years old.

No trial, no public accounting, no moment where she faced what her ideology had enabled.

Her children were eventually adopted by a Catholic priest who worked to raise them outside the shadow of their parents’ legacy.

Some rejected their Nazi heritage entirely when they came of age.

Others remained conflicted, caught between love for the parents they remembered and horror at what those parents had believed and done.

The woman who proposed dismantling the traditional family to serve racial breeding saw her own family scattered to strangers.

There’s no evidence she ever recognized the irony.

What we still don’t know, the questions that remain about Gera Borman are the kind historians may never answer.

What was in the full correspondence that didn’t survive the war? The letters we have come from fragments, pieces that made it through the chaos of 1945 when Nazi [music] documents were being burned, captured, or lost.

Did she write more explicitly about the final solution? Did she discuss the camps, the deportations, the systematic murder that her husband helped coordinate from Hitler’s inner circle? Did she ever visit the camps herself? The conflation with Johanna Borman assumes she did, but no credible evidence places her there.

Martin Borman certainly knew what was happening.

He was one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany, privy to decisions at the highest level.

What did he tell his wife? What did she understand about where the ideology she championed was actually leading? Why wasn’t she prosecuted when other Nazi wives faced tribunals? Emmy Guring served a year in prison.

Margaret Himmler was convicted as a propheteer of the Nazi regime.

The allies had the Borman letters.

They knew about Gerder’s polygamy proposal, her ideological fervor, her active participation in promoting Nazi family policy.

Yet they let her die of cancer without ever bringing charges.

The answers died with her in that South Tyrrollian town in March 1946.

What survived was a proposal for restructuring human intimacy itself, for turning marriage into a breeding program and wives into willing participants in their own degradation, all for the glory of a racial utopia that existed only in the fevered imaginations of true believers.

Gera Borman reminds us that totalitarian evil doesn’t always wear a uniform.

Sometimes it writes letters from comfortable homes, proposes policies over family dinners, and volunteers to sacrifice jealousy and possessiveness for the good of the race.

Sometimes the most dangerous believers never see a single body because they’ve already accepted a world view where bodies are just material for building a better future.

That’s what makes her story worth telling correctly.

Not to exonerate her by separating her from Johanna Borman’s crimes, but to understand that she committed her own.

They just don’t photograph as well.

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