From 1940 to 1941 around 70,000 adults with mental and physical disabilities living in institutions across Germany and Austria were systematically killed under a Nazi state-led programme called Aktion-T4. The victims were deemed to have ‘lives unworthy of life’.
This exhibition tells the previously unknown story of the 13 British-born victims of this murderous assault on disabled people. Most of them were from the families of German and Austrian immigrants who moved to Britain to work in the early twentieth century before fatefully returning to Germany before the Second World War. Others were from mixed marriages between British and German or Austrian nationals.
An international team of researchers led by Dr Helen Atherton from the University of Leeds have meticulously and painstakingly reconstructed the lives of these people, as well as telling the story of the T4 programme in which they were caught up and its aftermath.