Nazi General: He Impregnated Three Prisoner Sisters – Then the Unimaginable!
I was ten years old when I learned that a woman’s body can turn into a battlefield. Not in books, not as a real metaphor. On the skin, in the belly, in the silence that comes afterwards. My name is Mélis Durock. I was born in 192 in a village called Saint-Rémy sur Loire, so small that it didn’t even appear on military maps.
I grew up between vineyards and wheat fields, between Sunday laughter and sung masses. My mother baked bread every morning. My father repaired clocks. My sisters, Aurore and Séverine, were all I knew of unconditional love. Aurore was 19 years old and dreamed of becoming a schoolteacher. Séverine, 21, embroidered wedding dresses that she never wore.
I simply wanted time to stop, for the war everyone was talking about to never reach us. But she arrived in June 1942. They came to get us. Not because we were criminals, not because we had done anything , simply because we were young, French, and in the wrong place at the wrong time. A VerreM officer knocked on the door at dawn.
My mother fell to her knees. My father tried to argue but he was pushed against the wall. Three soldiers dragged us outside while the sun was still rising over the fields that we would never see the same way again. They threw us into the back of a truck covered with a dirty tarpaulin. There were other women there, all young, all terrified. No one was speaking.
She was just crying silently. I was holding Aurore’s hand so tightly that I could feel her under my palm. Séverine murmured a prayer that never ended. The truck moved forward on the potholed road while the smell of sweat, fear, and burnt gasoline choked us. We didn’t know where we were going. We didn’t know if we would come back.
All we knew was that something had ended that morning. Something that would never be recovered. We arrived at the camp in the late afternoon. It was not a concentration camp like Auschwitz or Dachao. There were no gas chambers or crematoria. It was something different, something that official history rarely mentions.
A forced labor camp administered directly by a high-ranking officer of the Vertmarthe. A place where the rules were dictated by a single man. His name was Auberst Friedrich Funsteiner, general. 42 years old, grey hair combed back, straight posture, calm voice. He never shouted, he never hit anyone. He gave orders in an almost polite tone, as if he were asking for sugar for his coffee.
That was the scariest thing. Von Steiner administered this camp as one would administer a rural estate. There were rules, there were hierarchies, there were punishments that didn’t need to be said out loud because everyone knew what happened to the one who disobeyed. He personally chose who would work in the kitchen, who would clean the officers’ rooms, who would sew the uniforms, and who would be chosen for other tasks.
No one explained what this other thing was, but we all knew. For the first few days, we tried to become invisible. We worked in silence, kept our heads down, and avoided looking directly at any soldier. But Von Steiner was still watching us. He walked between the rows of women during the morning headcount and his gaze lingered.
It wasn’t a vulgar look of lust, it was something worse. It was a look of ownership. One evening, Séverine received a call. Two soldiers appeared at the door of our barracks and called out his name. She stood up slowly, her legs trembling, and looked back before leaving. I will never forget that look. It was a goodbye.
It was a request for forgiveness. It was pure fear. She returned at dawn. She said nothing. She simply lay down on the plank bed and turned her face towards the wall. Aurore tried to touch her, but Séverine curled up as if she had been hit. I stayed there, sitting on the frozen ground, feeling something dying inside me.
Three weeks later, it was Aurore’s turn. Then, as for mine, I’m not going to describe what happened those nights, not because it’s forbidden or because I’m ashamed, but because there are things that, even after six years, are still too heavy to be put into words. I would only say this. Fun Steiner did not need to use physical violence.
He used absolute power and that was enough. When I realized I was pregnant, it was winter. My body was skeletal, my hair had fallen out, but my belly was starting to grow. Aurore too, Séverine too, three sisters, three pregnancies, same father. The silence that fell over the camp when they discovered it was deafening.
The other women looked at us with pity, with horror, with relief that they were not her. The soldiers looked away . Even the most brutal guards seemed uncomfortable . Von Steiner, however, remained impassive. He summoned us to his office one afternoon in February. We stood there , the three sisters of the rock, while he signed papers without looking at us.
Finally, he looked up and said in almost perfect French, you will give birth here. The children will be registered as war orphans and sent to suitable German families . You will return to work as soon as you are physically able. There was no room for discussion. There was no possibility of appeal.
Séverine gave birth first in April 1943. A girl. They snatched him from his arms even before the umbilical cord was cut. Séverine screamed for three days straight. Then she stopped. She simply stopped talking, eating, and reacting. She died six weeks later. Officially from Tyfus. In reality, heartbroken.
Aurore had a son in May. She managed to hold onto him for a few hours before he came to get him . I was next to her when it happened. I saw his face shatter into such small pieces that it could never be put back together again. I gave birth to another boy in June. Dark hair, closed eyes, tiny hands that clung to my finger with inexplicable strength.
I felt love and hate at the same time. Love because he was my son, hate because he was his son. They took him away the next day. The war ended in Maisteiner disappeared before the arrival of the Allies. Some say he fled to South America, others that he was killed by his own men when they realized they were going to lose.
We’ll never know . I returned to Saint-Rémi sur Loire. My mother had died of grief. My father didn’t recognize me when I knocked on the door. I stood there, watching the old watchmaker look at me as if I were a ghost. Perhaps I was. I survived for another 65 years after the end of the war. I lived alone. I worked as a seamstress.
I have never been married. I never had any other children. For decades, I didn’t talk about what happened in that camp. Not because I wanted to forget, but because no one wanted to hear. until I was about 20 , I agreed to give an interview for a historical memory project about the forgotten women of the Second World War.
That was the first and only time I told my full story. What I revealed in this interview goes far beyond what has been said so far because what happened to my sisters and our children did not end in 1945. In fact, it was only just beginning. In the next chapters of this documentary series, I will reveal secrets that have remained buried for almost six years.
Secrets about the true fate of the children born in this camp, about the clandestine network that Von Steiner coordinated, about the day I found something I thought was lost forever. But before we continue, if my story touches you in any way , if you believe that stories like mine deserve to be remembered, leave your support with a like and tell us in the comments where you are watching from because memory is built collectively and every voice counts.
I spent the two years following the end of the war in a sort of fog. I wasn’t really sleeping, I wasn’t really living. I simply existed like a yellowed photograph that one keeps in a drawer without ever looking at it. Aurore had returned with me to Saint-Rémi, but she was no longer Aurore. She almost never spoke.
She would sit by the window for hours, her hands resting on her knees, her gaze fixed on something that only I could not see. Sometimes she would whisper a name, always the same one, the one she had given her son during the few hours she had been able to hold him. She died in 1947. The doctor said it was tuberculosis.
I knew it was grief. I was left alone. The people in the village look at me differently, not with pity, but with unease, as if I were a living reminder of something they wanted to forget. France wanted to turn the page, rebuild, move forward. Women like me, those who carried the scars of war in their bellies and in their souls, did not fit with this new image.
So, I did what was expected of me. I kept quiet. I found work as a seamstress in a workshop in Orléans. I was renting a small room above a bakery. I used to sew wedding dresses for women who still believed in fairy tales. I was going home in the evening. I ate alone. I fell asleep thinking about my son. What did he look like now? Was he five years old? Six years old? Could he read? Was he afraid of the dark like I was at his age? Had they told him he was an orphan? Had they lied to him about who I was? These questions were eating away at me, but I didn’t
know where to begin. I didn’t even know the name that had been given to him. I didn’t know which city, which country he had been sent to. Then in 1953, something changed. I received a letter, a plain envelope with no return address, posted from Munich. Inside, a single sentence handwritten in German.
If you want to know what happened to your child, come to the following address on March 12 at 2 p.m. My heart stopped. My hands were shaking so much that I had to put the letter down on the table to reread it. Who sent me this? How did this person know who I was? Was it a trap? But I knew I would go. No matter the danger, no matter the blow.
On March 12, 1953, I took the train to Munich. It was the first time I had left France since my return. Each kilometer traveled revived memories I had tried to bury. The uniforms, the orders shouted in German, the smell of the camp. The address given was a grey building in a working-class area of Munich.
I climbed the stairs to the third floor, my heart beating so hard I was afraid it would explode. I knocked on the door. A woman in her fifties opened the door, with grey hair pulled back in a bun, a stern face but gentle eyes. She looked at me for a long time before saying, “My rock ‘n’ roll propeller!” I nodded.
She let me in . The apartment was modest but clean. Photos of children were covered on the walls. She invited me to sit down and served me tea. Then she started to talk. My name is Greta Hoffman. During the war, I worked as a nurse for Vermarthe. Not by choice, but because I had no other options. I was assigned to the camp where you and your sisters were being held.
My senses went cold. “I did not participate in what happened to you,” she continued quickly, “but I saw it and I hated myself every day for not doing anything .” She got up and took a box out of a cupboard. Inside the documents, registers, lists of names. Von Steiner kept meticulous records. He recorded everything.
The names of the mothers, the dates of birth of the children, the German families to whom they were entrusted. After the war, these documents were supposed to be destroyed. But I saved some of them. She placed a sheet of paper in front of me. My name was there, and just below it another line. Male child, born on June 18, 1943, transferred on June 20, 1943.

Foster family, Adler family. I read and reread that line until the letters became blurry. “He’s alive,” I whispered. “I don’t know, ” she replied softly. “But now you have a starting point.” I returned to France with this folded sheet of paper in my bag and I made a decision. I was going to find him. No matter how long it took, no matter how many doors I had to knock on.
My son existed somewhere, and I wouldn’t die without trying. The search lasted almost twenty years. Twenty years of writing letters that went unanswered, twenty years of knocking on the doors of administrative offices that looked at me as if I were crazy. Twenty years of saving every penny so I could take the train to Germany once or twice a year.
The Adler family had moved from Hamburg in 1950. No one knew where, or at least no one wanted to tell me. The 1950s were the hardest. Europe was rebuilding, forgetting, burying its dead and its secrets with equal efficiency. Archives had been destroyed, scattered, hidden. Witnesses refused to speak out of fear, shame, cowardice.
I contacted war victims’ aid organizations. I consulted lawyers who looked at me with pity before explaining that my case was unprecedentedly complicated, probably hopeless. I even wrote to the The International Red Cross’s response was polite, professional, and utterly useless. The archives were incomplete.
Witnesses were either dead or refused to speak. Post-war Germany wanted to forget too. And I was just one voice among thousands, one mother among so many others searching for children lost in the chaos of war. But I couldn’t forget. Every night, I saw his face, his eyes closed, his tiny hands, the way he had clung to my finger.
I would wake with a start, drenched in sweat, convinced I had heard a baby cry. But there was only the silence of my empty room. I worked by day as a seamstress, sewing hems and buttonholes with mechanical movements. By night, I wrote letters, requests, pleas. I wore out dozens of pens, filling entire notebooks with names, addresses, and leads that led nowhere.
The 1960s arrived, then the 1970s. My body was aging, my hair was turning gray, but my determination remained intact. I refused to die without knowing. I refused to let my son fade into oblivion as if his existence had never mattered. In 1972, I finally had a promising lead. A former administrator of VerreMarthe had agreed to meet me.
He was living in a nursing home in Strasbourg, ravaged by illness and guilt. When I entered his room, I saw an emaciated old man, sunken eyes, trembling hands. He looked at me for a long time before speaking. “Are you Maéise du Roc?” “Yes.” “Have a seat.” I sat down. My heart was pounding so hard I was afraid he would hear it.
” I remember the Adler family,” he said slowly. “They were privileged, close to the regime. They received several children during the war, children from special programs.” I clenched my fists to to stop me from trembling. Where are they now? They left for Austria after the war, Salzburg, I think, but I don’t know if they’re still there.
He gave me a street name, a neighborhood. It was more than I’d had in 29 years. I thanked him. He looked away , unable to meet my gaze. I left for Salzburg the following month. I was 18. My hair was almost entirely gray. My hands trembled constantly from arthritis. My knees ached with every step, but I went .
The train journey lasted for hours. I watched the scenery go by the window, the mountains, the forests, the villages. I thought about all those lost years, all that time my son was growing up without me somewhere, perhaps only a few hundred kilometers away. Did he look like me? Had he inherited my eyes, my mouth? Did he know he was Adopted? Had anyone told him about me? I found an Adler in the Salzburg phone book.
Hans Adler. I jotted down the address in my worn notebook, the one where I’d written hundreds of names over the years. Then I walked to the house as one walks toward a precipice, knowing one is going to jump anyway. It was a well-kept bourgeois house with a flower garden. Roses climbed the facade. A children’s swing hung under a large chain.
Everything exuded normality. Peaceful life, quiet happiness. I rang the bell. The next few seconds were the longest of my life. Then the door opened. A man in his thirties stood there. Brown hair, dark eyes, very lined. My heart stopped. It was him. I knew it. Every cell in my body knew it. I recognized something in his face.
A resemblance to my mother, to Séverine, with myself perhaps. “Yes,” he said in German with a hint of impatience. I couldn’t speak. The words remained stuck in my throat. I stared at him, unable to look away . I searched for traces of myself in him, of my sisters, of my vanished family. “Are you all right?” he asked, his voice shifting, becoming worried.
” I’m looking for someone,” I finally managed to say in my halting German, “a man born in June 1943, adopted by the Adler family.” His face changed instantly. All color left him. A shadow passed through his eyes. He took a step back . “Why?” I took a deep breath. I mustered all my courage because I am his mother.
The silence that followed was unbearable. He looked at me as if I were a ghost from his past, come out to haunt him. His hands tightened on the doorframe. His breath It sped up. Then slowly, without a word, he stepped back and closed the door. I stood there on the doorstep, my legs trembling, my heart shattered.
I could hear voices inside. A woman asking what was going on, him replying with something I couldn’t understand. I waited maybe ten minutes, maybe an hour. Time had lost all meaning, but the door didn’t open. Finally, I left a letter in the mailbox. A letter explaining everything: who I was, what had happened, why I had come.
I gave him my hotel address. Then I went home and cried for three days. He didn’t want me. He didn’t want to know. I had traveled for almost 30 years, crossed borders, saved every penny, followed every lead, and now that I had finally found him, he was rejecting me. But I couldn’t Give up. Not now, not after all this.
I came back the next day. I rang the bell, no one answered. I came back the day after that. Same result. I left more letters, photos of myself as a young man, a photo of Séverine and Aurore, documents from the camp, everything I had kept all these years. The fifth time, he opened the door. He looked exhausted, with deep dark circles under his eyes. His face was gaunt.
“What do you want from me?” he asked. His voice was broken, almost pleading. “Nothing,” I replied softly. “I don’t want anything from you.” I just want you to know that you were wanted, that I didn’t abandon you, that I was torn from you, that not a single day of my life have I stopped thinking about you.” He closed his eyes.
A tear rolled down his cheek. They told me my mother died in the war, that I was an orphan, that my biological parents perished in a bombing. “I know,” I whispered. ” I know what they told you.” They lied to me. His voice trembled with anger and mingled pain. “Yes, he opened his eyes and looked at me, really looked at me for the first time.
” “What’s your name, Maéis?” He nodded slowly as if registering each syllable. Mine is Mathias, and for the first time in 29 years, I heard my son’s name. Mathias and I never became close. Not really. How could we have? I was a stranger wearing his face. He was a man built on a lie that I came to destroy. We saw each other a few times after that first encounter.
Polite coffees, cautious conversations. He asked me questions about Aurore and Séverine, about the camp, about Von Steiner. I answered honestly, even when it hurt. One day, he asked me, “Did you love me?” “Even a little.” I looked at this 30-year-old man, this stranger who was my son, and I told the truth. I loved you from the first second I felt you move inside me, and when they tore you from my arms, a part of me died.
I’ve spent my life trying to find you. So yes, Mathias, I loved you. I still love you. He cried, and so did I. But love is not always enough to heal what has been broken. Mathias had his own family, a wife, two children, a life built far away from me. I couldn’t demand a place in this life. I didn’t want to . I just wanted him to know.
We wrote to each other for a few years. Then the letters became spaced out, then they stopped. In 2005, I learned from an obituary that he had died of cancer. He was sixty years old. I wasn’t invited to the funeral, though. I stood at the back of the church, discreet, invisible. I watched his children cry, his wife collapse, and I realized something.
My son had had a life, a real life despite everything, despite Funsteiner, despite the camp, despite me. And perhaps that was enough. In 2010, when I gave this interview for the historical memory project, I was six years old. My body was worn out, my voice fragile, but my mind remained clear. I was asked if I regretted anything. I answered no.
Not for having looked for Mathias, not for having knocked on his door, not for having told the truth, because silence also kills and because some stories cannot die buried. Von Steiner was never brought to trial. Children born in this camp have never been officially registered. Women like me have never received recognition, apologies, or reparations.
We were simply erased. But as long as there is someone left to tell the story, we still exist. I died 5 years after that interview, in 2015. I was 91 years old. I was alone, as I had been for most of my life. But my words remained. And today, decades later, thousands of people are hearing my story.
Perhaps among them, there is a woman who recognizes something, a familiar pain, a silence she carries within her. If that’s the case, I want her to know this. Your story matters. Your pain is real and you are not alone. The world has tried to erase us, but we are still there in every testimony, in every preserved memory, in every person who refuses to forget.
This was my story, the story of Maéis du Rock, the story of three sisters who survived the unthinkable. And now it’s yours too, because as long as you remember, we will live on. This story is not just about Maise Duroc, it is about thousands of women whose names have been erased from history books. Women who carried in their wombs the scars of a war they did not choose.
Mothers whose children were taken from them before they could even memorize their scent. Survivors who had to learn to live with an impossible-to-fill void. While Mis searched for her son for twenty years, the world kept turning. War memorials were unveiled, official speeches delivered, heroes celebrated, but she, like so many others, remained in the shadows because her story was uncomfortable, because it reminded us that war does not stop when the guns fall silent .
It continues in bodies, in memories, in the silences that cross generations. Today, years after the end of the Second World War, we have a duty to remember not only the battles and treaties, but also women like Maéis, Aurore and Séverine. Children like Mathias, torn from their history, truths that were buried because they disturbed the established order.
If this story has touched you, if it has awakened something within you, if you believe that these voices deserve to be heard, then don’t let this story end here. Subscribe to this channel so that more stories like this one can continue to be told. Activate the bell so you don’t miss any testimonials.
Share this video with those who, like you, believe as an act of resistance against oblivion. In the comments, tell us what struck you most about Maéis’ story? Were you aware of this little-known aspect of the war? Do you have stories in your own family that have never been told? Your voice matters, your testimony matters.
Together, we are building a collective memory that refuses to let its women disappear into silence. But she passed away in 2015 at the age of 91 , but her words remained. Her courage to break the silence after so many years has opened the way for other testimonies, for other truths long suppressed.
She proved that it is never too late to tell the story, never too late to search, never too late to refuse to be forgotten. So today, in her honor, in honor of all these forgotten women, ask yourself this question: what story do you carry within you that deserves to be heard? And who around you is perhaps simply waiting for someone to finally listen?