Nazi graveyard left behind by a Third Reich expedition to the amazon
On a small island on a tributary of the River Jary in Brazil stands a nine-foot high wooden cross with what seems a very odd decoration: a swastika.
Even stranger is that on the cross it reads 'Joseph Greiner died here on 2.1.1936 " which was three years before WWII officially started in 1939 (a year before the Japanese invasion of China in 1937, sometimes considered the start of the war) and over a decade before Nazi's began making their way to Brazil, in hopes of hiding out in the South American country. So, what was a Nazi doing in Brazil halfway around the world in 1936? As the cross states it was "a death from fever in the service of German Research Work."
Known as the "Guayana Project, it was a mission of exploration and a testament to just how grand the Nazi's imagined their empire would be. As the report brought back to the Third Reich explained 'The two largest scantly populated, but rich in resources, areas on earth are in Siberia and South America. 'They alone offer spacious immigration and settlement possibilities for the Nordic peoples...
For the more advanced white race it offers outstanding possibilities for exploitation.'
In 1935, under the cover of collecting biological specimens, Schulz Kampfhenkel (the expedition leader), Joseph Greiner, and another Nazi soldier, as well as many hired locals - described in a letter back to the Third Reich as not being able to be 'measured in civilized terms as we known them in Germany' - explored the region bordering French Guyana and sent back details about how the Nazi's might infiltrate and begin colonizing the country for themselves. It was suggested that the countries already existing Germans, roughly a million at the time, might become the start of what would be the the great South American Third Reich Empire.
Of course, this did not happen. Greiner died of malaria while on the expedition, and Kampfhenkel brought his report to the Reich. In the end it wasn't the malaria, or the jungle, that put a stop to the plans to expand into Brazil but bureaucracy, and a lack of interest.'Given time, the plan may be submitted again" wrote Heinrich Himmler who was in charge of approving the plans.
Today all that remains of this monomaniacal plan is the graves of the Nazi's who perished in pursuit of it, known to locals as "the Nazi Graveyard."
From: http://atlasobscura.com/places/nazi-cemetery-cachoeira-de-santo-ant-nio
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