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Edda Göring

Edda Göring

Female 1938 -    Has more than 100 ancestors but no descendants in this family tree.

Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All

  • Name Edda Göring 
    Birth 2 Jun 1938 
    Gender Female 
    Person ID I480452  Geneagraphie
    Last Modified 27 Feb 2012 

    Father Hermann Wilhelm Göring,   b. 12 Jan 1893, Marienbad, Rosenheim Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 Oct 1946, Nuernberg Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 53 years) 
    Mother Emmy Sonnemann,   b. 24 Mar 1893, Hamburg, Deutschland Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 8 Jun 1973, München, Bayern, Deutschland Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 80 years) 
    Marriage 10 Apr 1935  Berlin, Brandenburg, Deutschland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F191990  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Medizinisch Technische Assistentin

      Although no meeting with her could be arranged, her close friend, Florrie Rost van Tonningen (see separate entry) confirmed that Goering remained a strong supporter of the neo-Nazi movement. Edda Goering takes part in memorials for Nazi war criminals and is highly respected within the movement because her father cheated the hangman by taking his own life.

      Florrie Rost van Tonningen is the widow of notorious Dutch Nazi collaborator, Meinoud Rost van Tonningen. A leader of Holland's Nazi party and personal favorite of Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler (the former attended the van Tonningen wedding), Meinoud R.v. Tonningen was handpicked to run Holland's national bank during the German occupation. He committed suicide in 1945, before he could face trial as a traitor to his homeland. Now in her late seventies, Florrie Rost van Tonningen remains a committed Nazi and has in fact been twice convicted of inciting racial hatred by distributing antisemitic/Holocaust denial literature. Known as the "Black Widow," Florrie R.v.Tonningen caused an outcry in 1986 when it was discovered that she was using part of her state pension to finance a neo-Nazi party in the Netherlands. She has been a guest lecturer at conventions of the Institute for Historical Review and claims a close frienship with its founder, Willis Carto
      Ron Furey and Richard Eaton drove to Florrie R. v. Tonningen's home in the Netherlands, accompanied by Roy Godenau. Rost van Tonningen, a major icon of the neo-Nazi movement, expressed strong support for Wolfgang Juchem as Germany's next fuehrer, admitted a role in the attempted overthrow of Surinam's government, and told of a secret neo-Nazi meeting to take place on March 22 in a Cologne suburb (sounding like "Eschenstein") at which she was to deliver an apparently illegal lecture.
    • Wikipedia



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