AC. Nazi General: He Impregnated Three Prisoner Sisters – Then the Unimaginable!

I was only ten years old when I learned that a person’s physical being can be transformed into a literal battlefield. It was a lesson taught not through text, and not as some grand literary metaphor, but etched directly onto the skin, carried deep within the body, and felt in the heavy, suffocating silence that follows. My name is Mélis Durock. I was born in 1932 in a village named Saint-Rémy sur Loire—a place so small and inconsequential that it did not even register on regional transit maps.

My early childhood unfolded between rolling vineyards and expansive wheat fields, punctuated by the simple joy of Sunday gatherings and the rhythmic cadence of choral masses. My mother baked fresh bread every morning, filling our home with warmth, while my father meticulously repaired clocks in his small workshop. My older sisters, Aurore and Séverine, represented everything I understood about unconditional love. Aurore was nineteen and held a quiet ambition to become a local schoolteacher. Séverine, at twenty-one, spent her afternoons embroidering elegant white dresses for ceremonies she would never personally experience.

During those peaceful days, I wished for nothing more than for time to stand still, hoping that the international conflict consuming the continent would bypass our quiet valley. But the reality of the occupation finally breached our sanctuary in June of 1942. They arrived to detain us without warning. We were not political dissidents, and we had committed no administrative infractions; we were simply young citizens residing in the wrong place at an incredibly volatile moment in history. A uniformed regional officer knocked aggressively on our wooden door at the break of dawn.

My mother collapsed to her knees in despair, while my father attempted to reason with the personnel, only to be forcefully shoved against the plaster wall. Three soldiers dragged my sisters and me into the open air while the morning sun was just beginning to rise over the agricultural fields—fields we would never view the same way again. They threw us roughly into the back of a transport truck covered by a weathered, grease-stained tarpaulin. Several other local women were already confined inside the vehicle; all of them were young, and all of them were paralyzed by fear. No one spoke a word.

No photo description available.

The Descent into the Unmarked Facility

The only sound during that initial journey was the muffled, collective weeping of the captives. I held Aurore’s hand with such intensity that I could feel the rapid pulse of her blood against my palm, while Séverine softly recited a continuous prayer under her breath. The transport lurched violently along the unpaved rural roads, while the oppressive odors of anxiety, stale sweat, and exhaust fumes filled the enclosed space. We possessed no knowledge of our destination, nor did we know if we would ever return to the valley. All we understood with absolute certainty was that a fundamental chapter of our lives had been shattered that morning, never to be recovered.

We arrived at our destination in the late afternoon. The facility was not one of the large, notorious state concentration camps that would later populate history textbooks. It featured no mass specialized execution chambers or industrial disposal facilities. Instead, it was an entirely different type of institution—a clandestine administrative labor camp that mainstream history rarely addresses.

The installation was operated under the direct, absolute authority of a high-ranking regional military commander, Oberst Friedrich Von Steiner. He was forty-two years old, with neat grey hair combed back, a rigid posture, and a consistently calm speaking voice. He never raised his voice in anger, nor did he personally resort to physical violence. He issued his daily directives in a polite, measured tone, as if making a routine social request.

That complete lack of emotion was the most terrifying aspect of his demeanor. Von Steiner managed the labor camp with the cold efficiency of a private commercial estate. The facility operated on strict internal hierarchies and severe disciplinary measures that required no verbal explanation; every captive understood the implicit consequences of failing to comply with an order. He personally designated the specific labor assignments for each new arrival, choosing who would work in the kitchens, who would maintain the officers’ quarters, who would mend military attire, and who would be reserved for private administrative placement.

The Weight of Absolute Control

No official ever explained the exact nature of those private placements, but an underlying sense of dread permeated the barracks. For the first few weeks, my sisters and I attempted to blend into the background. We performed our physical tasks in complete silence, kept our eyes fixed on the ground, and actively avoided crossing paths with the camp staff. Yet, Von Steiner maintained a continuous, observant presence. He regularly walked through the rows of workers during the mandatory morning roll calls, his gaze lingering deliberately on specific individuals. It was not a look of standard human emotion; it was a look of complete, unyielding ownership.

One evening, the reality of our vulnerability manifested. Two guards materialized at the entrance of our wooden barracks and called out Séverine’s name. She stood up from her wooden cot with extreme slowness, her limbs trembling visibly, and cast a final, lingering look back at Aurore and me before stepping across the threshold. I will never forget the expression in her eyes—it was a silent farewell, a profound plea for strength, and an expression of pure terror. She returned to the quarters at dawn, completely silent. She refused to speak of the encounter, simply laying down on the bare wooden planks and turning her back to the room. When Aurore attempted to comfort her, Séverine recoiled instinctively, as if anticipating a physical blow. I sat on the cold earthen floor, feeling a vital piece of my youth disintegrate.

Three weeks later, the guards returned for Aurore, and eventually, my own name was called. I choose not to describe the explicit details of those nocturnal encounters—not out of an dynamic sense of shame, but because certain violations are so profoundly heavy that even the passage of decades cannot render them fit for casual description. It is sufficient to state that Von Steiner had no need for overt physical coercion; the absolute, asymmetric power dynamic of the facility was more than enough to enforce compliance.

By the time the winter chill settled over the camp, I discovered I was pregnant. My physical frame had become skeletal from malnutrition, and my hair was thinning rapidly, yet my body was undeniably changing. Soon, the terrifying reality became clear: Aurore and Séverine were experiencing the exact same development. Three sisters, three simultaneous pregnancies, all originating from the same source of authority.

The atmosphere within the camp turned profoundly silent as the news spread among the barracks. The other captives looked upon us with a mixture of deep pity, underlying horror, and a sense of relief that they had escaped our specific fate. Even the typically harsh camp guards appeared visibly uncomfortable in our presence, avoiding direct eye contact during the daily details. Von Steiner, however, remained entirely unaffected by the situation. He summoned the three of us to his main administrative office during a cold afternoon in February. We stood before his polished wooden desk while he methodically reviewed and signed official documents without initially acknowledging our presence.

Finally, he raised his eyes and addressed us in fluent French.

“You will remain at this facility to give birth,” he stated calmly. “The resulting offspring will be officially registered as non-parental wards of the state and transferred immediately to designated domestic families within the interior. You will return to your assigned labor duties as soon as you are deemed physically capable.”

There was no mechanism for protest, and no avenue for legal appeal. We were entirely subject to his administrative will.

Sunderings and Losses

Séverine was the first to enter labor, in April of 1943. She gave birth to a daughter. The attending staff removed the infant from her arms before the umbilical cord could even be properly severed. Séverine wept and screamed continuously for three days, until her voice failed her entirely. Afterward, she withdrew into a state of absolute catatonia—refusing sustenance, declining communication, and failing to respond to any external stimuli. She passed away six weeks later. The official camp log attributed her demise to typhus, but those of us within the barracks understood that she had simply succumbed to a broken spirit.

Aurore gave birth to a son the following month, in May. Through sheer persistence, she managed to hold the infant against her chest for a few brief hours before the administrative staff arrived to claim him. I was positioned directly beside her cot when the separation occurred, and I witnessed her emotional collapse—a fracturing of her persona so profound that it could never be fully restored. My own labor occurred in June, resulting in the birth of a baby boy with dark hair and tiny hands that instinctively clamped onto my finger with surprising strength. I experienced a conflicting rush of profound maternal affection and deep resentment—love for the innocent life, yet an inescapable reminder of the source of our torment. The staff removed him from my care the very next morning.

The occupation forces began to retreat in the spring of 1945 as allied units advanced across the region. Von Steiner vanished from the installation entirely before the arrival of the liberating forces. Some regional rumors suggested he had utilized clandestine escape networks to flee to South America, while others claimed he was executed by his own personnel during the chaotic final days of the collapse. We never received a definitive answer.

I eventually walked back to Saint-Rémy sur Loire alongside Aurore. Our mother had passed away from failing health and grief during our absence, and our father’s cognitive health had deteriorated to the point where he failed to recognize me when I knocked on the door. I stood on the threshold, watching the aging watchmaker look directly through me as if I were a literal apparition. In many ways, I suppose I was.

I survived for another sixty-five years following the conclusion of the war. I lived a deeply solitary life, establishing a small livelihood as an independent seamstress. I never entered into a marriage, and I never sought to have additional children. For multiple decades, I maintained an absolute silence regarding the events inside that camp—not because of a simple desire to forget, but because the post-war society showed no willingness to confront such uncomfortable truths. It was only when I reached an advanced age that I finally consented to participate in a comprehensive historical oral history project dedicated to documenting the experiences of marginalized women during the Second World War.

That interview marked the first and only instance where I disclosed the entirety of my experiences. The revelations I shared extended far beyond the immediate events of the war, because the consequences of what transpired within that facility did not simply conclude with the armistice of 1945. In reality, the long-term repercussions were only just beginning to unfold.