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Lutz Heck

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Heck horse in Haselünne, Germany (2004)
Heck cattle: an attempt from the 1920s to breed a look-alike aurochs from modern cattle

Ludwig Georg Heinrich Heck, called Lutz Heck (23 April 1892 in Berlin – 6 April 1983 in Wiesbaden) was a German zoologist, animal researcher, animal book author and director of the Berlin Zoological Garden where he succeeded his father in 1932. A member of the Nazi party from 1937, and a close friend of Hermann Hermann Göring he also served an SS Hauptsturmführer.[1]

Life and work

Lutz was the third child of Margarete and Ludwig Heck (1860-1951) director of Berlin zoo from 1888 to 1931. He grew up with his brother on the grounds of the Berlin zoo and became very interested in animals and zoology from an early age. He was also influenced by German colonial explorer friends of his father and their tales from Africa. Lutz studied natural sciences the natural sciences at the University of Berlin. In 1925, Lutz went on a collection expedition to Ethiopia to obtain animals for the Berlin zoo. As a student he joined volunteer forces fighting protesting socialists on the streets of Berlin. After receiving his doctorate in 1922 he worked at Halle and became an assistant director at Berlin zoo in 1927. In 1935 he went to Canada to obtain bison and moose specimens for the zoo. The trip supported by Hermann Göring was also a public relations exercise. He spoke to German expatriates on the benefits of National Socialism.[2] Lutz took over as director of Berlin zoo in 1932 but before that he worked with his brother Heinz Heck who became director (in 1928) of the largest zoological garden in southern Germany, Tierpark Hellabrunn in Munich. Along with his brother he started from the 1920s, a selective breeding program, which attempted – based on the knowledge of animal genetics of the time – to "recreate" wild animal species such as the aurochs that are extinct, from various forms of the domestic animals whose ancestors they were (see "breeding back").[3] They examined cave paintings and breeds across Europe for their idea of what the auroch ancestors may have been. By their work they created breeds of cattle and horse - later named "Heck cattle" and "Heck horse" respectively, after their creators - that are not sufficiently similar to their ancestors to be called a successful resurrection, although Heinz and Lutz Heck believed they had "resurrected" the breeds by their efforts.[4][5] Lutz was interested in hunting and he chose fierce fighting breeds of cattle for his breeding experiments. He saw a plan to release his reconstituted aurochs into Hermann Goering’s private hunting reserves planned (as part of Generalplan Ost) in the Bialowieza forest between Poland and Belarus. Most of these were killed in the war.[6]

In June 1933 Heck joined the SS as supporting member. He joined the NSDAP in 1937 (member number 3.934.018). On occasion of Adolf Hitler’s birthday the zoologist was appointed professor. In April 1941 he was appointed chief of the Oberste Naturschütz Behörde im Reichsforstamt (highest nature preservation agency in the state department of forestry) by his hunting friend Hermann Göring to whom he directly reported. In this capacity he was the senior responsible person for the entire nature management.[7] In 1938, Heck passed a rule that prohibited Jews from visiting the zoo.[8]

During World War II, Heck took part in the pillaging of Warsaw Zoo, stealing the most valuable animals and taking them to German zoos. After the Battle of Berlin he fled with his wife to Bavaria, occupied by the Germans, to escape from Soviet prosecution. He was replaced by Dr. Katharina Heinroth as scientific director of the Berlin Zoo.

After death

In 1984, a year after his death, a bust of Heck was placed in the zoo.[9] In 2015, a petition was submitted to remove this bust because of Heck’s active involvement in National Socialism. In order to meet this request half way an information tablet on Heck’s past was added. In 2016, an exposition about the zoo during the Nazi era was opened in the antelope shelter.[10]

The work of Lutz Heck features in a BBC Radio 4 documentary The Quest for the Aryan Cow, presented by the broadcaster and journalist Jon Ronson and produced by Beth O'Dea.[11] The documentary “Hitler's Jurassic Monsters” presented by the National Geographic Channel deals with his work in the Bialowieza Forest.[12]

Heck is played by Daniel Brühl in the film The Zookeeper's Wife, which is based on Diane Ackerman's novel of the same name.

Publications in English

  • Heck, Lutz (1954). Animals: My Adventure. London: Methuen.

References

  1. ^ Milmo, Cahal. "Descendants of Hitler's fantasy 'Aryan cows' found in Devon". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
  2. ^ Bruce, Gary (2017). Through the Lion Gate. A History of Berlin Zoo. Oxford University Press. pp. 145, 154–156, 159.
  3. ^ Morris, Steven (22 April 2009). "Nazi-bred super cows roam farm in Devon". The Guardian. London.
  4. ^ Van Vuure (2005).
  5. ^ The Scotsman. Edinburgh http://news.scotsman.com/scotland/39Nazi39-cattle-invading-zoo.5772259.jp. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. ^ Lorimer, Jamie; Driessen, Clemens (2016-05-03). "From "Nazi Cows" to Cosmopolitan "Ecological Engineers": Specifying Rewilding Through a History of Heck Cattle". Annals of the American Association of Geographers. 106 (3): 631–652. doi:10.1080/00045608.2015.1115332. ISSN 2469-4452.
  7. ^ Prenger, Kevin, War Zone Zoo, 2018
  8. ^ Bruce, 2017:175.
  9. ^ Bruce, 2017:177.
  10. ^ Prenger, Kevin, War Zone Zoo, 2018
  11. ^ Jon Ronson and the Quest for the Aryan Cow – BBC Radio 4, 10 February 2009 (producer Beth O'Dea)
  12. ^ Hitler's Jurassic Monsters

Sources

  • Van Vuure, Cis (2005). Retracing the Aurochs: History, Morphology and Ecology of an Extinct Wild Ox. Sofia, Bulgaria: Pensoft Publishers. ISBN 978-954-642-235-4.
  • Prenger, Kevin (2018). War Zone Zoo - The Berlin Zoo & World War 2. ISBN 9781980352785.