Did the Nazis who killed the Jews ever express regret or remorse?
It is a heavy realization that the most men who were responsible for the mass killers during the war, were the only ones who were never came out and told the world they were sorry about the killing they had done. We often think that they would be crushed by the weight of their doings, but on the contrary, most went to their graves making excuses. They typically asserted that they were merely small cogs in a big machine or they usually just followed orders. However, there are a few noteworthy instances in which that silence was eventually broken.
Hans Frank, who was in charge of occupied Poland, was one example. In his trial, he had said that the guilt of his country will last for a thousand years. While in prison, he was converted to religion and said remorse before his execution.
Then there was Oskar Groning. He did not say a word about his past until 2015 when he was ninety three years old. He made the decision to speak up because he wanted to make a point against those who stated that the genocide never occurred. He told a horrible story of how he watched one of the guards kill an infant and confessed that he was morally guilty just for his part in this system.
The lead architect Albert Speer, was the only high ranking official to take responsibility at the trials at Nuremberg. While later evidence showed he may have been covering the full extent of his knowledge, he was the one to admit fault while his fellow top leadership did not.

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