Ernst Kaltenbrunner, the chief of the RSHA (Reich Security Main Office) from 1943-1945, was the only Nazi security chief who actually walked into concentration camps and witnessed the killings, unlike his predecessors Himmler, Heydrich, and Eichmann who maintained psychological distance through bureaucracy and abstraction. This inversion reveals that the Nazi terror apparatus did not require fanatics or true believers at its head to function—it only needed an instrument willing to absorb the close-range work and produce the daily output, demonstrating how bureaucratic systems of mass murder can operate effectively without ideological commitment.
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Why Ernst Kaltenbrunner is the Opposite of Every Other Nazi LeaderAdded:
When you picture the men who ran the Third Reich's terror apparatus, you probably see the same template. The cold, immaculate fanatic in a black tunic. The pale technocrat with rimless glasses. The disgraced young aristocrat with a violin in one hand and a deportation list in the other. The early party member who joined Hitler when the movement still met in beer cellars. The man who built the machine, ran the machine, [music] and never personally went anywhere near the people the machine was destroying.
Heinrich Himmler in his pince-nez.
Reinhard Heydrich with the cheekbones.
Adolf Eichmann at his desk in Berlin.
That is what the chief of Nazi security is supposed to look like. And then there was Ernst Kaltenbrunner.
6'7". 250 lbs. Three deep dueling scars hacked across the right side of his face from his student years in Graz. A jaw broken by a car accident at the age of 30 that never properly healed. Stained teeth. Cigarette-yellow fingers. A reputation among visiting SS officers for arriving at his own headquarters drunk in the morning. An Austrian lawyer with a doctorate in jurisprudence from a provincial university who took over the most lethal bureaucracy in human history because the man who had built it was already in the ground. He was the opposite of every other Nazi leader at the top of the SS. He looked nothing like the propaganda. He came from nowhere the regime's mythology wanted him to come from. He ran the apparatus after it had already been designed by smarter men. And of all the chiefs of Nazi terror, he was the one who actually walked into the camps and watched what the camps did. That single inversion is the master key to almost everything people get wrong about how the security state of the Third Reich actually worked. And why it worked. And why the face it eventually presented to the world at Nuremberg was not the face the SS had spent 12 years trying to project.
So how did a hard-drinking Austrian provincial lawyer end up signing the death warrants for hundreds of thousands of people and end up the only SS chief the Allies got to hang.
Ernst Kaltenbrunner was born on the 4th of October, 1903, in Ried im Innkreis, a small Upper Austrian town close to the Bavarian border.
His father was a lawyer. His grandfather had been a lawyer.
The Kaltenbrunners were small-town professional gentry, the kind of family that produced notaries and magistrates and parish council members.
The family moved to Linz when Ernst was a child, and he grew up there in a household that was already politically pan-German, anti-Catholic in its outlook, and openly anti-Semitic in the casual late Habsburg way that ran through Austrian small-town professional life in the years before the First World War. He studied chemistry briefly at Graz, then switched to law and earned his doctorate in jurisprudence from the University of Graz in 1926.
While there, he joined a dueling fraternity, a Burschenschaft of the pan-German nationalist type that still practiced ritualized saber combat, the Mensur, in which young men stood face-to-face at fixed range and accepted controlled cuts to the head and face as a mark of honor.
The deep scars across the right side of Kaltenbrunner's face for the rest of his life were not, as some later observers assumed, the result of a war wound or a fight. They were the deliberate badges of a student culture that valorized physical disfigurement as a sign of character. By the late '20s, he was practicing as a junior advocate in Linz, the same Austrian city where the young Adolf Hitler had been a failed schoolboy two decades earlier. This is not the biography of a fanatic. It is the biography of a careerist. Kaltenbrunner joined the Austrian Nazi Party in October 1930 and the SS in August 1931, at a time when both organizations were politically marginal and would shortly become illegal in Austria, association with them carrying real professional risk for a young lawyer trying to build a practice.
He took the relatively low membership number 13,039 in the SS, putting him among the early Austrian recruits without making him a Reich German old fighter in the sense the Berlin party hierarchy recognized.
He was arrested twice by Austrian authorities in the mid-1930s, once on suspicion of high treason in connection with the failed July Putsch of 1934, the SS-led coup attempt that killed Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss in his own office in Vienna, and again in May 1935 for conspiracy. The treason charge collapsed for lack of evidence. The second arrest cost him a 6-month prison sentence and the temporary suspension of his right to practice law.
By the time of the Anschluss in March 1938, he was the senior SS officer in Austria with a rank of Brigadeführer and the Linz lawyer with the dueling scars had positioned himself as the man on the ground. When Heinrich Himmler's organization arrived to take over the country he had been born in. Within days of the Anschluss, he had been promoted to the higher SS and police leader for the Austrian region, the senior security position in his home country, which he held from 1938 until his appointment to the RSHA 5 years later. This origin matters because it sets up the first and biggest inversion. Every other man who ran the Reich Security Main Office, the RSHA, was a Reich German pulled from the cultural and bureaucratic core of the Nazi movement.
Kaltenbrunner was not. He was Austrian, provincial, and trained as a lawyer in a system the Reich had only just absorbed.
And the moment he stepped into the office his predecessor had built, the entire profile of the SS leadership changed.
Here is where the contrast becomes impossible to ignore.
Every other chief of Nazi security was made out of a very particular kind of material.
Heinrich Himmler had built the SS from a few hundred bodyguards into a state within a state by personally embodying the regime's racial mysticism, the pseudo-medieval rituals at Wewelsburg Castle, the obsession with breeding registries, the runic insignia.
Himmler was a vegetarian fanatic who agonized about the moral cost of mass shootings on the men doing the shooting, and who famously almost fainted when he visited a single execution at Minsk in August 1941.
Reinhard Heydrich, the man Kaltenbrunner would replace, was a former naval officer cashiered for breaking a marriage promise, a competitive fencer, an amateur violinist, a man so aligned with the racial ideal the SS was selling that Hitler reportedly called him the man with the iron heart.
Heydrich designed the architecture of the Holocaust at the Wannsee Conference on the 20th of January 1942, and gave his name to the operation that murdered roughly 1.7 million Polish Jews. Adolf Eichmann, the desk officer who would run the deportation timetables, was a meticulous mid-level bureaucrat who never personally pulled a trigger, and who, as Hannah Arendt famously argued in her contested 1963 study of his trial, made his career out of the sheer thoughtless efficiency of paperwork.
Each of those men fit a recognizable type. The mystic fanatic, the polished predator, the gray functionary.
Each of them had been there from the beginning, each of them had built the machine they ran, and each of them had a relationship to the killing that was either ideological, technical, or theoretical. None of them looked like Ernst Kaltenbrunner.
Heydrich was assassinated by Czech and Slovak commandos in Operation Anthropoid in Prague on the 27th of May 1942, dying of his wounds on the 4th of June.
The RSHA, the most powerful single security apparatus on Earth at that moment, sat without a permanent chief for almost 7 months.
Himmler ran it himself in the interim and quickly discovered that he had neither the time nor the temperament to keep doing so. He needed a replacement.
The job description was unambiguous.
[music] It required a man who would not threaten Himmler personally, who would not be too clever or too charismatic, who would not develop a power base of his own inside Berlin, and who would do what he was told.
On the 30th of January 1943, on the 10th anniversary of Hitler's appointment as Chancellor, Himmler named Ernst Kaltenbrunner the new chief of the RSHA.
The Austrian provincial lawyer with the broken jaw and the dueling scars now controlled the Gestapo, the criminal police, the security service, the foreign intelligence service, and the entire administrative spine of Nazi [clears throat] mass murder. He was 39 years old. He had built none of it. He inherited all of it. Now, look at what he actually looked like. This is the inversion most people miss when they study the SS, because the SS spent 12 years marketing an aesthetic so successfully that it survived the regime itself. The poster SS man was tall, blond, Nordic, athletically built, his uniform tailored, his bearing rigid.
Heydrich was that man almost on purpose.
Photographs from his lifetime were used as recruitment material. Kaltenbrunner was the precise opposite. He was unusually tall, yes, but enormous rather than elegant, with a heavy frame, narrow shoulders for his height, and a face that contemporary witnesses described as menacing in a way that had nothing to do with intelligence.
The dueling scars from his student fraternity days in Graz, where saber dueling was still practiced by certain Austrian student corps in the 1920s, ran across his right cheek and over part of his mouth. American journalists who saw him in custody after the war described his face as brutal, sinister, the kind of face that did not need to be photographed for the propaganda machinery, because the propaganda machinery would never have used it.
Robert Jackson, the chief American prosecutor at Nuremberg, would later describe Kaltenbrunner in court as the man who looked the part of an executioner.
The poster boys of the SS had been selected and groomed precisely so the world would not associate the organization with that face.
Then, in 1943, that face became the SS.
The drinking is the next contradiction.
Himmler was a notorious Puritan about alcohol within the senior SS, a teetotaler who promoted abstinence and physical discipline as part [music] of the order's pseudo-monastic self-image.
Heydrich had been a controlled, calculating drinker who used alcohol socially and never sloppily.
Kaltenbrunner drank like a man trying to fall down. Multiple post-war testimonies from junior officers and visitors to the RSHA building on Prinz Albrecht Straße described him arriving at work already drunk, conducting meetings with cognac on his desk, and being physically supported by aides at official functions.
After the war, his own American interrogators noted that he reeked of alcohol at his initial questioning and continued to consume it whenever it was made available. For the chief of the most important security apparatus, in the most ideologically self-disciplined regime in modern Europe, to be a visible alcoholic was a structural absurdity. It only made sense if you understood that Himmler had appointed him precisely because he was not going to outshine anyone.
And the reason that is true, rather than some sign of cynicism or weakness on Himmler's part, only gets stranger the deeper you look.
If you are following this deep dive into one of the Third Reich's strangest paradoxes, hit subscribe. The darkest part of this story is still ahead.
Here is where the picture stops being merely strange and becomes actively damning.
Every previous chief of the SS terror apparatus had built himself a layer of professional and physical distance from the killing.
Himmler issued the orders, but after that single fainting incident at Minsk, almost never returned to a site of mass murder if he could avoid it. He preferred maps, reports, and statistics.
Heydrich coordinated the Wannsee Conference, drew up the timetables, divided occupied Europe into operational zones, but the actual physical work of extermination was done by Einsatzgruppen commanders and camp commandants he never personally supervised in the killing rooms.
Eichmann's distance was even more elaborate. He arranged the trains, calculated the throughput, and could later argue with a straight face at his trial in Jerusalem that he had never personally murdered anyone, [music] an argument that was technically defensible and morally void.
Kaltenbrunner did not construct that distance. He traveled to the camps. He went to Mauthausen in his native Upper Austria [music] on multiple documented occasions during his tenure as RSHA chief. Mauthausen and its subcamp Gusen were classified by the SS itself as the harshest in the entire concentration camp system, the only camps assigned to stage three, reserved for prisoners deemed beyond rehabilitation, and they killed roughly half of the more than 190,000 prisoners who passed through them, somewhere between 90,000 and 120,000 deaths, according to the most rigorous post-war estimates produced by the Mauthausen Memorial Archive and historians such as Hans Marsalek.
Witness testimony introduced at Nuremberg, including statements from survivor Alois Holleriegel, and from Mauthausen prisoner functionaries, placed [music] Kaltenbrunner inside the camp watching executions.
The most disturbing of these accounts described him personally observing demonstrations of three different methods of killing in the same visit, a hanging, as a shooting, and gassing in the camp's gas chamber.
Whether the demonstration was for his benefit, or whether he simply chose to be present, the fact of his physical attendance was confirmed by multiple sources at the trial and is accepted by historians who have studied the Mauthausen apparatus, including Bertrand Perretz and Florian Freund in their work on the camp's command structure.
Stop and consider what that means in the context of the SS as an institution.
The chief of Reich Security, the man who sat above Eichmann in the chain of command, who issued the orders that filled the deportation trains, who controlled the Gestapo and the Security Service, was not the kind of remote bureaucrat the SS had carefully cultivated as a self-image.
He was the kind of man who showed up at the killing site. Even Himmler, who had built the system, had not been able to stomach what Kaltenbrunner watched as part of his job description. That difference is not a footnote. It is the inversion.
The previous chiefs of Nazi terror had survived their own work psychologically by keeping the work at arms length, by translating it into paper and abstraction.
Kaltenbrunner did not need that buffer.
He could absorb the killing at close range and then go back to his office and drink. That was, from Himmler's point of view, the entire point of appointing him.
The man was an instrument. The instrument did not need to be insulated from what it was being used for and the consequences of that instrumentation were measured in the tail end of the Holocaust, the period that fell almost entirely under Kaltenbrunner's RSHA tenure.
The deportation of Hungarian Jewry, organized under Eichmann's operational command in 1944, sent roughly 440,000 people to Auschwitz between mid-May and early July of that year. Eichmann reported to Kaltenbrunner. The acceleration of the death marches in the winter of 1944 and 1945, when the SS evacuated camp populations westward as the Red Army advanced and tens of thousands of prisoners died in the open during forced columns through the snow, happened under his administrative authority.
The killing of resistance fighters, downed Allied airmen, captured commandos under the commando order, and the murder of prisoners under the bullet decree, which routed escaped officer prisoners of war to Mauthausen for execution, rather than back to military custody, all sat on his desk. The historian Peter Black, whose 1984 study of Kaltenbrunner remains the standard scholarly biography, concluded that the Austrian was directly responsible through signature, instruction, or knowing oversight for the murder of hundreds of thousands of people during his 2 years and 4 months as chief of the RSHA.
2 years and 4 months, the shortest tenure of any of the men who ran the inner apparatus of Nazi terror, and one of the deadliest. Here is the second hinge in the story, the part that turns Kaltenbrunner from an oddity into a piece of evidence about how the entire regime functioned. Every other senior Nazi who was vetted for a job at the top of the SS came with some claim to internal legitimacy.
They had been old fighters, Alter Kämpfer, in the movement before 1933.
They had been seen at Nuremberg rallies in the early years. They had built personal followings inside the party.
Kaltenbrunner had almost none of that.
His pre-1938 work had been confined to Austria, where the Nazi party was an illegal organization that mainstream Reich figures regarded as provincial and slightly disreputable. He had no Berlin power base. He had no patrons inside the old guard. He owed his entire career to Himmler, and Himmler knew it. That is why Hitler himself did not entirely trust him at first.
Hitler had viewed Heydrich as a rising figure, perhaps even a future challenger, and Heydrich's death had removed an internal rival before any conflict had to be resolved. When Himmler proposed Kaltenbrunner as a replacement, Hitler agreed in part because the man was a nonentity in Reich politics and posed [music] no threat.
The historian Richard Breitman, in his work on Himmler and the architecture of the Final Solution, has noted that Kaltenbrunner's appointment was less a promotion than a containment, a way for Himmler to retain real control of the RSHA through a chief who lacked the standing to challenge him. The provincial lawyer with the broken jaw was useful precisely because he could not become Heydrich.
Except that within a year of his appointment, Kaltenbrunner had developed a direct line to Hitler that Himmler had not anticipated. From 1943 onward, he was authorized to deliver intelligence briefings personally to the Führer at the Wolfsschanze, the Eastern Field Headquarters in Rastenburg. Those briefings, drawn from the RSHA's foreign intelligence reports and from the situation summaries produced by the Sicherheitsdienst, gave Kaltenbrunner a privileged channel into Hitler's daily decision-making that bypassed Himmler entirely. The careerist who had been chosen for his harmlessness was quietly accumulating influence by being the person who walked into the bunker with the latest cables. This is the part of his story that complicates the picture of a mere instrument. Kaltenbrunner was not Heydrich, and he never became Heydrich. But he was not a passive cipher, either. After the failed bomb plot of the 20th of July 1944, when Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg's attempt on Hitler's life nearly succeeded and the Reich's internal repression apparatus turned on its own conservative officer class, it was the RSHA under Kaltenbrunner that ran the investigation.
Roughly 7,000 people were arrested.
Almost 5,000 were executed. The interrogations, including the recorded use of torture in cells under Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse, were conducted by Gestapo officers reporting up his chain of command.
Kaltenbrunner personally interrogated several of the conspirators and wrote daily reports to Hitler summarizing what was being extracted. Those reports, recovered by the Allies after the war, and known to historians as the Kaltenbrunner reports, are one of the primary documentary sources for what the Reich Security Apparatus did to [music] the families and associates of the men who tried to kill Hitler. The drunken provincial lawyer was no longer just signing what other people put in front of him. He was producing the documents himself. There is one further dimension to his last 18 months in office that deserves its own examination, because it cuts against the image of Kaltenbrunner as a pure instrument of Himmler's will.
From late 1944 onward, as the Eastern Front collapsed and the Red Army moved into East Prussia, and the Allies broke into Germany from the west, Kaltenbrunner ran his own quiet back channel attempts at negotiation with the Western powers, in parallel with and largely independent of Himmler's similar efforts.
He used Wilhelm Höttl, the SD officer who headed Austrian foreign intelligence within Section 6 of the RSHA, as an intermediary to American intelligence contacts in Switzerland.
Höttl, who would later become an important Allied informant and the source of the contested early estimate that nearly 6 million Jews had been killed in the Holocaust, an estimate he attributed to a 1944 conversation with Adolf Eichmann, was sent to make discreet approaches to the American Office of Strategic Services station in Bern under Allen Dulles. Separately, Kaltenbrunner's people probed the Hungarian channel through which Eichmann's deputy Kurt Becher had been negotiating the so-called blood for goods proposal with Jewish organizations, an episode the historian Yehuda Bauer reconstructed in detail in his 1994 book Jews for sale. And they trailed behind the Italian negotiations that SS General Karl Wolff was running with Dulles under what became known as Operation Sunrise, hoping to graft onto Wolff's progress.
None of these approaches succeeded. The Western Allies had already committed at Casablanca in January 1943 to a policy of unconditional surrender, and there was never any real prospect that a man with Kaltenbrunner's record would be received as a negotiating partner.
But, the fact that he tried and that he did so behind Himmler's back as well as in parallel with him is its own piece of evidence about what kind of man he had become by the final winter of the war.
The careerist who had been chosen for his pliability was, by the end, attempting to engineer his own personal survival outside the chain of command he had been appointed to enforce.
The instrument had developed independent motion. It did him no good. The Allies were not buying. There is one more inversion before the synthesis, and it goes in the direction nobody expects because of how he conducted himself when the regime collapsed and the trial began.
The intuition, watching what the other senior Nazis did in 1945, is that men like Kaltenbrunner would have run or killed themselves.
Most of them did one or the other.
Himmler tried to negotiate a separate peace with the Western Allies in the final weeks, was arrested by a British patrol on the 23rd of May, 1945, disguised as a sergeant in the Army's Field Police, and bit a cyanide capsule in his cheek before he could be properly interrogated.
Hermann Göring poisoned himself in his Nuremberg cell hours before his scheduled execution on the 15th of October, 1946.
Joseph Goebbels and his wife, Magda, murdered their six children and then themselves in the Berlin bunker on the 1st of May, 1945.
Adolf Hitler had shot himself the previous day.
Heinrich Müller, the head of the Gestapo and Kaltenbrunner's direct subordinate, walked out of the Reich Chancellery on the 1st of May, 1945, and was never reliably seen again, with his fate still officially unresolved more than 80 years later.
Kaltenbrunner did not kill himself. He did not negotiate. He fled to the Austrian Alps, where he had spent his childhood, and was captured on the 12th of May, 1945 by an American patrol from the 80th Infantry Division at a remote hut on the Wildensee, high in the Totesgebirge range above Altaussee. He was carrying false papers identifying him as a doctor. He was thoroughly drunk at the time of capture, and he denied his own identity until a former concierge from Vienna walked into the room and recognized him on sight. What he did next is the inversion that historians have wrestled with ever since.
At Nuremberg, where he was the highest-ranking surviving member of the SS, he denied everything. Not the existence of the camp, not the death tolls, not the broad outlines of the Holocaust. Those were established by the prosecution and documentation he could not contest.
What he denied was his own personal authority. He claimed that the RSHA had been a foreign intelligence operation, that the camps had been under Himmler's personal command and outside his jurisdiction, that the deportations had been Eichmann's responsibility, that the Bullet Decree had not crossed his desk, that the visits to Mauthausen had been routine inspections and [music] not anything more. He claimed not to remember signing documents that bore his unmistakable signature. He claimed to have been a peripheral figure in his own organization. Compare that to Göring who had used the courtroom as a stage to rebuild his identity as the leader of the surviving Nazi defendants. Compare it to Speer who had built an elaborate confession out of partial responsibility and earned 20 years in Spandau instead of a noose. Kaltenbrunner did neither.
He denied. Repetitively, blandly, drunkenly when he could get alcohol smuggled to him, soberly and unconvincingly when he could not. He was the only major defendant who attempted [music] a flat denial of his own role, and he attempted it on a record that included his own signed correspondence with Eichmann, with the camp inspectorate, and with Himmler himself.
The American psychiatrist Leon Goldensohn, who interviewed the Nuremberg defendants at length during the trial and whose notes were posthumously published in 2004, recorded Kaltenbrunner as evasive, [music] hostile, and physically unwell.
The defendant had suffered a brain hemorrhage during the early stages of the trial, which delayed proceedings for several weeks, and never fully recovered.
Goldensohn described a man who alternated between aggressive denial and physical collapse, who refused to engage with the documentary evidence on its merits, and who clung to a defense that the tribunal openly disbelieved.
On the 1st of October, 1946, the International Military Tribunal found Kaltenbrunner guilty on two war crimes and crimes against He was acquitted on the conspiracy and crimes against peace charges on the technical grounds that he had taken office too late to be part of the original planning.
The sentence was death by hanging.
He was the only chief of the entire Nazi security apparatus across the 12 years of the regime to receive that verdict from a court. Himmler was dead.
Heydrich was dead. Müller was missing.
Eichmann was still hiding in Austria and would not be brought to trial in Jerusalem until 1961.
Kaltenbrunner, the late arrival, the careerist, the provincial Austrian who had never been the symbol of anything, was the face the world finally got to convict.
He was hanged at Nuremberg in the early hours of the 16th of October, 1946, alongside nine other defendants. His last recorded words, according to the American master sergeant who supervised the executions, were a complaint that he had served his people loyally.
He was the eighth man on the gallows that night. The trapdoor dropped at 12 minutes past 1:00 in the morning.
He was 43 years old. His body, like those of the other executed defendants, was cremated at the cemetery in East Munich on the morning of the same day, and the ashes scattered in the Isar river to prevent the creation of any memorial.
Now, put the whole thing together.
He was Austrian, not Reich German.
He was a provincial lawyer, not a fanatic or a party intellectual.
He looked like the kind of man the SS posters had been engineered never to show, with the dueling scars and the broken jaw, and the bulk that no tailor could make elegant. He drank in an organization that prized abstinence.
[music] He inherited an apparatus designed by men more talented than himself, ran it for less than 2 and 1/2 years, and presided over some of its most lethal final operations. He went physically into the camps that his predecessors had been careful to administer from a distance. He produced the reports on the conspirators of the 20th of July with his own hand. He was the only chief of Nazi terror that the Allies actually managed to hang. And at the trial, he denied everything, including the documents in his own writing, and gave the worst received defense of any major defendant in the dock. That combination is not a contradiction of the SS. It is a clarification of it. The propaganda image of the SS, the tall blond knight in black, the disciplined ascetic, the priestly fanatic, had been a marketing exercise from the beginning. The actual machinery of Nazi terror did not need a fanatic at its head to keep functioning.
It did not need a polished aristocrat.
It did not need a true believer at all.
What it needed, by 1943, was someone willing to absorb the close-range work and produce the daily output. The historians who have spent their careers reconstructing the inner workings of the RSHA, including Peter Black, Michael Wildt in his definitive 2002 study of the leadership core of the RSHA, and George Browder in his work on the Gestapo and SD, converge on the same uncomfortable point. The organization did not collapse when Heydrich was killed. It did not lose efficiency when his replacement turned out to be a drunken provincial lawyer with a face the posters would not have used.
It kept killing at scale until it was physically dismantled by the armies of three other countries.
Kaltenbrunner is the proof of that. He was not the architect. He was not the visionary. He was not the iron heart. He was the man Himmler picked precisely because none of those things were necessary for the work to continue and the work did continue and the work killed somewhere between two and 300,000 additional people during his short tenure at the top [music] of it. So, here is the question to leave on. If the most lethal security apparatus in modern history did not require a believer at its head to keep operating but only an instrument willing to walk into the rooms the believers preferred to look away from, then what does it actually take to build a system like that? And what does it actually take to stop one?
If Ernst Kaltenbrunner is the SS without the [music] mask, the SS as it really was rather than as advertised itself, does that change how the entire institution should be remembered?
Leave your answer in the comments.
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