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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 31

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  His relations with women have come to a similar impasse. Visiting Anka in January

  1930 he has failed to detect that she is four months pregnant by yet another man.

  Returning to Weimar in June he checks into the ‘Elephant’ and sends her tulips and

  a card: ‘Can I call round?’ it reads.77 Meanwhile he has his eye on the neat daughter of

  188 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  Hitler’s photographer, Henrietta Hoffmann; but she is already stepping out with a

  handsome Nazi student leader.78 A half-cocked but still platonic episode begins in

  June when Lucie Kammer, a young shorthand secretary (‘still a pure child’) with a

  much older, unloved, and now mortally ill husband comes to the gauleiter with her

  marital problems; he rapidly grasps that she loves him.79 A few days later he decides

  that Princess zu Wied loves him too; at the Görings he meets the Baroness Erika von

  Paleske and records that ‘Ika’ (because there is already another Erika in his ménage)

  also loves him. His phone jangles all day—Charlotte, Xenia, L.K.—‘Always the same,’

  he whimpers in his diary, ‘I am a victim.’ Women are a plague upon him. ‘But they are

  an incredible stimulation to work,’ he confesses. What he fears is losing his liberty.

  He writes about Ika that August, ‘She comes on too strong… Thank goodness we

  were sitting out in the open.’80

  He is vacationing—or hiding—at Erika’s house in the forest when word comes on

  July 18, 1930 that Brüning’s government is in difficulties. Tonak rushes him back to

  the Reichstag building in the Mercedes Supercharger. Goebbels romanticizes that his

  one vote may seal Brüning’s fate. In fact Brüning dissolves the Reichstag. As the communist

  deputies roar the Internationale, Goebbels slips out of the building, naked to

  the law, even his residual parliamentary immunity annulled.

  1 They were Hans Kütemeyer, Nov 17, 1928; Gerhard Weber, Nov 4; Walter Fischer, Dec

  14; Werner Dölle, 16, stabbed to death by a Jewish opponent in Kurfürstendamm, and Fritz

  Radloff, Dec 24, 1929.

  2 Diary, Oct 2, 6; Dec 23, 1929.

  3 Ibid., Oct 30, 1929.

  4 Ibid., Dec 23, 1929.

  5 Ibid., Sep 29, 1929.

  6 Stennes, Jul 29, 1968 (IfZ; ZS.1147).

  7 Report by Berlin police section IA.III.1, Berlin, Jun 9, 1931 in Wessel’s file in NSDAP

  Hauptarchiv (BA file NS.26/1370a).

  8 The case files against ‘Ali’ Höhler, Else Cohn, Rückert, Kandulski, Junek, Mrs Salm and

  the brothers Max, Walter and Willi Jambrowski (Landesarchiv Berlin, Rep.58, item 11)

  were marked for historical preservation but released to the Soviet sector in 1947 and not

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 189

  returned. Höhler, Willi Jambrowski and seven others were tried on Sep 26, 1930 for manslaughter

  and given sentences ranging from one to six years. ‘There these creatures sit in the

  dock,’ wrote JG (Sep 24, 1930), ‘real criminals with an air of injured innocence... Poor

  Horst. To die at the hands of [illegible word] pimps like these!’ In a subsequent trial from Jun

  15, 1934 against the defendants Peter Stoll (seaman), ‘Sally’ Epstein (Jewish painter), and

  Hans Ziegler (barber), Epstein and Ziegler were sentenced to death, Stoll to seven and a half

  years; Höhler (who was kidnapped from his prison cell and lynched by S.A. men in 1933)

  was stated to have ‘deceased in the interim’ (Landesarchiv Berlin, Rep.58, item 22; Stoll

  case files courtesy of R G Reuth).—Report on trial in Vossische Zeitung,Ê Sep 23, 24, 1930.

  9 Diary, Jan 19, 1930.

  10 Ibid., Jan 27, 1930.

  11 Angriff, Feb 6, 1930.

  12 Rote Fahne, Jan 15, 1930.

  13 Diary, Feb 24, 1930.

  14 Vossische Zeitung, Mar 2, 1930.

  15 Angriff, Feb 27, 1930.

  16 Diary, Mar 2, 1930; Dokumente, 311f.

  17 Ibid., Jan 13, 1930.

  18 Ibid., Jan 20, 31, 1930.

  19 Ibid., Jun 10, 20-22, 1928.

  20 Ibid., Jun 22, 1928; Oct 18, 1929.

  21 Ibid., Jan 16, 17, 1930.

  22 Ibid., Jan 24, 1930.

  23 Ibid., Jan 29, 1930.

  24 Ibid., Jan 30, 1930.

  25 Ibid., Jan 31, 1930.

  26 VB, Feb 5, 1930. On Feb 6 Angriff published a statement by JG on the newspaper question

  designed to reassure his gau members.

  27 Diary, Feb 8, 9, 11, 15, 16, 1930.

  28 Ibid., Feb 20, 21, 1930.

  29 Ibid., Mar 2, 4, 1930.

  30 Ibid., Mar 5, 1930.

  31 E.g., Mar 12, 1930.

  32 Diary, Mar 1, 1930; Grzesinski MS

  33 Diary, Feb 11, 1930.

  34 Ibid., Feb 21, 1930; Goltz memoirs, MS (BA file Kl.Erw., 653/2) and interrogations,

  NA : RG.319, IRR case file XE 1026, esp. U.S. Seventh Army interrogation SAIC/X/10, Jul

  5, 1945. Born Jul 10, 1894, father of ten children, Goltz had been a lawyer in the Stettin

  county court since 1926.

  35 Reichstag, 141. Sitzung, Mar 13,, 4442ff; diary, Mar 14, 1930.

  36 In the Sport Palace on Feb 7, 1930 he attributed the remark to August Bebel. ‘Attacking

  the present system of government,’ the police reported, ‘he wound himself up into ever

  greater ecstasies ... [saying] the opponents of the NSDAP were now laughing on the other

  190 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  side of their face.’ (Justice ministry file,‘Libel actions against Joseph Goebbels Nov 1929—

  Aug 1931’ in Deutsches Zentralarchiv; IfZ film MA.118).

  37 Police file, 20f. He was accused of libelling Weiss in issues of Angriff dated Oct 29, Nov

  26, Dec 10, 1928; Sep 9, 1929; Apr 8, May 1, 1930: seven volumes of court files are in

  Landesarchiv Berlin, Rep.58, item 47; of libelling him at a speech in the Victoria Park on

  Mar 23, 1929 (item 39); and at a speech on Sep 20, 1929 at the Veterans Building printed as

  Der Kampf gegen Young. Eine Sache des deutschen Arbeiters (item 2); for further libel cases resulting

  from articles in Angriff, see item 39.

  38 Angriff, No.65, Dec 29, 1929.

  39 Police file, NA film T581, roll 52, BA file NS.26/1224.

  40 Summons dated May 17, 1930 (ZStA Potsdam, Rep 90, Go 1, Bd.1); for the resulting

  court case see Landesarchiv Berlin, Rep.58, item 48.

  41 Diary, May 8, 26, 27, 1930.

  42 Ibid., Jan 1, 4, 24, 1930; and see Zezschwitz to (unknown), Apr 20, 1930 on the background

  to the Hindenburg case (IfZ film MA.744).

  43 Diary, May 15, 16, 28, 1930.

  44 Angriff, Jun 5, 1930.

  45 NYT, Jun 1, 1930.

  46 Diary Jan 23, 30, Feb 2, 3, 1930.

  47 Ibid., Jan 6, 8; Mar 7, 1930.

  48 Ibid., Mar 13, 21, 1930.

  49 Ibid., Feb 19, Mar 6, 1930.

  50 Ibid., Apr 18, 20, 1930.

  51 Ibid., Apr 24, 1930.

  52 Ibid., Mar 16, 1930.

  53 Ibid., Mar 20, 1930.

  54 Ibid.Mar 22, 23, 1930.

  55 Ibid., Mar 28; on Mar 29, depressed, he noted, ‘No word from Munich.’ And the next

  day, ‘All thanks to this stupid Munichery. We’re faced by the gravest decisions. And Munich’s

  fast asleep.’

  56 Ibid., Apr 1, 2, 5, 1930.

  57 Ibid., Apr 13, 1930.

  58 Reichspropagandaleiter. As late as 1930 the Nazi Jahrbuch which had gone to press in Sep

  1929 listed Hitler as chairman of the RPL with Himmler as deputy; the last RPL decree

  cou
ntersigned by Himmler was published in VB on Apr 5, 1930; the first by JG (as Reichsleiter

  I ) on May 23, 1930.—Diary, Apr 28, 1930.

  59 Diary, Oct 13, 1929; Apr 9, 1930.—Re Muchow: Oct 2, 4, 1929; Jan 21, 1930; and see

  his article, ‘Die Strassenzellen-Organisation des Gaues Berlin,’ in VB, Mar 11, 1930.

  60 Ibid.Aug 27, Oct 6, 1929; Apr 10, 30; May 2, 1930.

  61 Ibid., Apr 30, 1930.

  62 Ibid., Apr 16, 1930. Hans Johann Friedrich Goebbels, b.Jan 25, 1895, had joined the

  NSDAP on Nov 1, 1929 (party number 160,449). JG scraped together 100 marks a month

  for his mother (diary, May 14, 1930.) On Jun 10, 1946 the New York Times would report that

  JG’s sister Maria had said, ‘We did not see Joseph often, although we lived in Berlin, and I

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 191

  know he never gave mother any money or helped support her.’ This seems unjustified. The

  diaries contain many other references to JG’s financial help for his mother, e.g. on Jul 13,

  1930.

  63 Diary, May 18, 1930. The killers of the communist Heimburger claimed self-defence,

  but there were many arrests.—Grzesinski MS.

  64 Ibid., May 4, 14, 1930.

  65 Ibid., May 3, 1930.

  66 Ibid., May 22, 1930. Much later Otto Strasser published in Hitler und ich (Konstanz,

  1948) his own fanciful record of his two talks with Hitler. Postwar American authorities

  termed him a wastrel, debt-incurrer, rabid anti-semite, and anarchist (NA: RG.319, IRR,

  file G8172121: about 3,000 pages of Otto Strasser papers, 1946–59.) This file also contains

  a 1948 description by Otto Strasser of his May 1930 clash with Hitler. On Otto Strasser see

  also Donovan to FDR, Jan 20, 1942 (FDR Libr. PFS box 163)

  67 Diary, May 24, 1930.

  68 Ibid., Jun 11, 12, 15, 17, 1930.

  69 Ibid., Jun 12, 1930.

  70 Ibid., Jun 14, 17, 1930.

  71 Ibid., Jun 18, 21, 1930.

  72 Ibid., Jun 25, 1930.

  73 Ibid., Jun 29; and Strasser’s Der Nationale Sozialist, Jul 1, 1930.

  74 Diary, Jun 28–30, Jul 1, 2, 5; Angriff, Jul 3, 1930. After Der Nationale Sozialist reported

  on Jul 3 that he was still its publisher and director, Gregor Strasser issued a statement through

  the Telegraphen Union agency sharply disowning the ‘circle around Kampf Verlag led by my

  brother Dr Otto Strasser’ and announcing that he had severed ties with the publishing house

  on Jun 30. ‘I still stand loyally behind Adolf Hitler and the NSDAP led by him.’—Hinrich

  Lohse MS, ‘The Strasser Case’ (IfZ: ZS-265, 8f); and see Günter Bartsch, Zwischen drei Stühlen.

  Otto Strasser, Eine Biographie (Koblenz, 1990). Otto Strasser later accused JG of ordering ‘SA

  Standarte 208’ to assassinate him; he was beaten up by several S.A. men in Aug 1930, and

  claims to have shot two of them (NA file RG.319, IRR, G8172121).

  75 Landesarchiv Berlin, Rep.58, item 24, vol.iii, 4.

  76 Diary, Jun 15, Jul 3, 16, 1930; Moabit criminal court summons to JG, endorsed by

  postman on Jul 24, 1930 (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.90, Go 1, Goebbels, Bd.1).

  77 Diary, Jan 10–13; JG’s visiting card is in Anka’s papers, endorsed in her hand on Jun 3,

  1930.

  78 Diary, Jun 9, 1930.

  79 Ibid., Jun 21, 25, Jul 6, 7, Aug 7, 17, 24. Interrogated on Feb 3, 1948 Lucie Kammer

  née Zimpel testified that her husband died in 1930; she had joined the NSDAP in 1927 (StA

  Nuremberg, Rep.502, K.19; NA: RG.260, OMGUS files, box 15).

  80 Diary, Jul 12–15, Aug 3, 7, 1930.

  192 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  13: His Week in Court

  SO FAR Dr Goebbels had had to face no real challenge as gauleiter. But as the new

  Reichstag election of September 14, 1930 approached the rift between his gau’s

  officers and the impoverished and disgruntled fist-fighters of the Berlin S.A. came to

  a head. They saw no signs that Hitler intended to allow them any real reward for

  their bravery. The result would be the first full-scale S.A. mutiny during the heat of

  the summer in Berlin.

  Captain Walter Stennes, the ex-army officer who as supreme S.A. commander

  (Osaf) ‘Ost’ commanded twenty-five thousand of these disaffected men east of the

  river Elbe, shared many of Dr Goebbels’ political views. He had dubbed the gauleiter

  the Nazis’ Joseph Stalin, responsible for preserving the purity of the movement’s

  ideals.1 Both deprecated Hitler’s legalistic approach to power. Though not as radically

  leftwing as the gauleiter, Stennes was like him an activist and revolutionary.

  Most of the S.A. men were unemployed. Recognizing this, Hitler had ordered the

  gauleiters to enforce a twenty-pfennig monthly levy on each Party member to support

  their local S.A.; Goebbels had ordered an additional ten pfennig levy in Berlin

  —the ‘S.A. Groschen’ as it was known.2

  Battered and bruised, the S.A. watched bitterly as the Party squandered considerable

  sums on the Brown House, its national HQ.3 In short, the S.A. wanted to get at

  the pork-barrel and they were not prepared to wait.

  Goebbels sympathised with them. ‘We shall reach our goals only on the basis of the

  S.A.,’ he asserted at one confidential meeting.4 He was torn between instinct and

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 193

  logic. Captain Stennes and the S.A. represented manpower and muscle—but Hitler

  and Munich held promise of power, office, and even bigger automobiles. Late in July

  Hitler called a secret conference to decide the official list of Nazi candidates. Goebbels

  was amused to see how tame Strasser and the other fractious big-shots suddenly

  became. They finally agreed a list of one hundred names (though not in their wildest

  dreams did they expect to win so many seats.)5

  The list brought the problems with the S.A. to a head. Stennes sent to the Supreme

  S.A. Commander, Franz von Pfeffer, a letter asking for safe Reichstag seats for three

  S.A. men.6 But Hitler was opposed to allowing the S.A. any more political clout than

  it already had. On August 1 Stennes mentioned in his diary reports from all his subordinate

  commanders that relations between the S.A. and Munich were becoming

  intolerable. He invited his boss, Pfeffer, to Berlin at once. Meanwhile on the second

  his S.A. commanders reiterated their demands for Reichstag seats. The next day

  Pfeffer revealed that Hitler was on the contrary talking of cutting the S.A. back to

  what they could afford.

  Monetarism did not commend itself to the Brownshirt rednecks. ‘This shows,’

  reported Stennes’ chief of staff, ‘that the objectives of the Reich director [i.e. Pfeffer

  in Munich] are no longer those of old.’ This was true. Hitler intended to attain power

  strictly legally. In Munich Goebbels, now Reich propaganda director, briefed his

  deputy Himmler on the broad outlines of the election campaign, then returned to

  Berlin. Nationwide over the next two months the glaring red hues of his posters

 

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