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Front cover of a brochure advertising the Lebensborn program. The brochure describes the program's maternity homes and requirements that expectant mothers must meet to be accepted. The Lebensborn program was heavily influenced by Nazi racial ideology and theories of eugenics. The SS screened individuals' personal medical histories as well as their family records. They could also be denied if they had a family history of physical, mental, or psychiatric disabilities.
Nazi theories of eugenics advanced the idea that personal character traits like loyalty and bravery were inheritable and could be promoted through the process of selective breeding. SS leader Heinrich Himmler believed that the men of the SS were the biological and racial elite of Nazi Germany , and he urged them to have large families. He encouraged SS men to marry early and have at least four children.
Lebensborn provided financial assistance to SS men with large families, but relatively few received this aid. At the time, there were strong pressures against single motherhood in German society. The program offered the mothers financial support and adoption services. It also provided a series of private maternity homes away from the judgemental eyes of family members, friends, and acquaintances.
In this way, Himmler hoped to discourage abortions. The Nazi regime strengthened existing German laws that prohibited most abortions. The Lebensborn homes were designed to be pleasant spaces where women could live comfortably as they received prenatal care, delivered their babies, and recovered from labor.