Heinz Hitler
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Heinrich Hitler (nickname Heinz) (born 1923, died 1942) was the son of Alois Hitler, Jr. and his second wife Hedwig Heidemann and the nephew of German dictator Adolf Hitler. When World War II started he joined the Wehrmacht and served on the eastern front, where he was captured and died in prison in 1942.
Unlike his half-brothers son William Patrick Hitler, whom the dictator called "my loathsome nephew", Heinz was a strong Nazi and his uncle's favorite. He attended an elite Nazi military academy, the National Political Institutes of Education. Aspiring to be an officer, Hitler joined the Wehrmacht as a signals NCO with the 23rd Artillery Regiment in 1941, and he participated in the invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa. On January 10, 1942, he was sent to recover communications equipment from a forward position. This was one of the things that worried Adolf Hitler, who did not want his nephew to serve on the front line because of the risk of death. Heinz never returned. He was captured and sent to a Moscow military prison, where he died in captivity after several months of interrogation. [1]