The churches to a large extent withdrew support with the end of the main Nuremberg Trials and the release of the time-serving Nazi war criminals from Landsberg in 1958. In the following decades Stille Hilfe worked somewhat in secret with
revisionist organizations and prominent protagonists of the "Auschwitzlüge" (Auschwitz lie) like
Thies Christophersen and
Manfred Roeder and co-operated with relevant foreign organizations and personalities e.g. (
Florentine Rost van Tonningen,
Léon Degrelle). By a not insignificant number of inheritances and by regular donations, the organization controls considerable funds. Since Stille Hilfe does not publish end-of-year figures, one can only estimate the influx of capital; however, perhaps donations (not including inheritances) were annually circa €60,000 to €80,000, at least to the end of the 1990s. Stille Hilfe supported the condemned in the Düsseldorfer
Majdanek trials, the former
concentration camp guard Hildegard Lächert ("bloody Brygida") and later
Klaus Barbie,
Erich Priebke and
Josef Schwammberger, who from 1942 to 1944 was commander of German labour camps in occupied Poland, involved in the massacres of
Przemyśl and
Rozwadów. Whether they were involved in the release of
Herbert Kappler from a prison in Rome in 1977 is not clarified. Chairmen after Princess Isenburg (until 1959) were to 1992 the former
Bund Deutscher Mädel leaders Gertrude Herr and Adelheid Klug. They have been led since 1992 by Horst Janzen. The organisation today has approximately 40 members with decreasing numbers. At the same time however contacts were reinforced with "Hilfsorganisation für nationale politische Gefangene und deren Angehörige" (relief organization for national political prisoners) (HNG), so continuity may be secured. Based until 1976 in Bremen Osterholz, since 1989 in
Rotenburg an der Wümme, since 1992 in
Wuppertal. In 1993–94 it caused a political debate in the
Bundestag over its
non-profit status as a revisionistic right-wing extremist association and was submitted to an examination by the fiscal authorities. In the
Federal Fiscal Court () it was decided in November 1999 to deny Stille Hilfe charitable status. (
right), daughter of top Nazi official
Heinrich Himmler, with her mother at the International Military Tribunal trial of war criminals at Nuremberg, 1945 For years they had a prominent symbol:
Gudrun Burwitz, the daughter of
Heinrich Himmler. Known to her father as "Püppi", she was an idol to Stille Hilfe and their affiliates. At meetings such as Ulrichsbergtreffen in
Austria she appeared at the same time as a star and an authority. Burwitz campaigned intensively in the last few years for accused Nazis. This particularly showed up in the case of
Anton Malloth, who had lived undisturbed for about 40 years in
Meran. He was proven guilty for his acts as a supervisor in the Gestapo-prison "Kleine Festung Theresienstadt", which was part of the larger
Theresienstadt concentration camp. In 2001 Malloth was convicted by the district court of Munich for murder and attempted murder and sentenced to life imprisonment after the public prosecutor's office in Munich had taken over the procedure of the public prosecutor's office in
Dortmund, which for many years had hijacked the procedure. From 1988 to 2000, Malloth lived in
Pullach near Munich. Gudrun Burwitz was instructed by Stille Hilfe to rent a comfortable room for him in a home for the aged, which was built on a lot formerly owned by
Rudolf Hess. In common with the secretive nature of the organisation, Burwitz did not give press interviews. In 1991, a Stille Hilfe representative attended the graveside ceremony in
Kassel of
Michael Kühnen, the prominent Neo-Nazi leader who died of
HIV-related complications. Stille Hilfe laid a wreath that bore the SS motto "Michael Kühnen – his honour is loyalty." It also supports a
Protestant old people's home in
Pullach, near
Munich. ==References==