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      • Hans and Sophie Scholl placed the sixth and final White Rose leaflet around the Munich University building on February 18, 1943, throwing some down into the atrium. They were arrested at the university, sentenced to death four days later and murdered in Munich-Stadelheim Prison that same day.
      www.gdw-berlin.de/en/recess/biographies/index_of_persons/biographie/view-bio/hans-scholl/
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  2. In 1937, 19-year-old Hans Scholl was the quintessential Hitler Youth leader – blond, tall and athletic, the epitome of Hitler’s so-called ‘master race’. But after experiencing persecution himself at the hands of the Gestapo, Scholl embarked on an audacious campaign to influence the hearts and minds of ordinary Germans against the brutal ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hans_SchollHans Scholl - Wikipedia

    Scholl was arrested in 1937–38 because of his membership in a forbidden Youth Movement organisation. Hans Scholl had joined the Deutsche Jungenschaft vom 1.11.1929 (d.j.1.11) in 1934, when he and other Hitler Youth members in Ulm considered membership in this group and the Hitler Youth to be compatible. [8]

  4. Feb 17, 2023 · History | February 17, 2023. Hans and Sophie Scholl Were Once Hitler Youth Leaders. Why Did They Decide to Stand Up to the Nazis? Archival evidence offers clues on the radicalization of the German...

    • 2 min
    • Jud Newborn
  5. Feb 22, 2013 · 70 years ago this week, three young Germans: Sophie Scholl and her brother Hans along with their friend, Christoph Probst, were tried and executed on the same day by the Nazis in Munich. The three were all members of the White Rose, a group that actively, yet non-violently resisted the Nazi regime.

  6. Sophie Scholl was 22 at the time of execution, her brother Hans 25. The siblings will forever remain a symbol of resistance against the National Socialist dictatorship. From 1942, the student resistance group “Weiße Rose” (White Rose) used flyers to campaign against the Nazi regime.

  7. Hans and Sophie Scholl, often referred to in German as die Geschwister Scholl (the Scholl siblings), were a brother and sister who were members of the White Rose, a student group in Munich that was active in the non-violent resistance movement in Nazi Germany, especially in distributing flyers against the war and the dictatorship of Adolf Hitler.

  8. On February 18, 1943, Hans and Sophie Scholl dropped leaflets from the second floor of the Munich University main building calling for German youth to rise against Nazi 'sub-humanity' in the war of liberation.

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