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What would be the best way to determine if a piece of property served as a Lebensborn during World War II? Does a source exist that lists the locations of these institutions? During my research on the LDS Church during the Nazi era, I discovered that immediately after the war, the Mormons acquired a large residence in Eibenstock, one that "had belonged to a millionaire" prior to the war and which served as a "convalescent home for mothers" during the war. The church used the property, called "Wolfsgruen" by the locals, to relocate faithful members who had been left homeless by the war. It remained an important site for LDS Church activities in Soviet-occupied post-war Germany. The souse of my information is a report written for the LDS Church leadership by an American army officer who filled an influential billet in the post-war occupation command. A missionary to Germany during the pre-war period, he helped the local Mormon leaders receive favorable treatment from the occupation authorities. In the case of Wolfsgruen, the Russian commandant for Eibenstock granted the LDS Church gratuitous use of the property. I remember reading that the Nazis sometimes obtained Lebensborn buildings by Aryanization of Jewish property. It would be presumptuous to conclude that the mentioned "millionaire" was Jewish and that the mothers' home was a Lebensborn. Nevertheless, as my research reveals that the Mormons have been consistently skillful in their dealings with totalitarian governments, it's a possibility that beckons investigation. If you wanted to determine if a particular property was a Lebensborn, how would you do it?
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