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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 59

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  lost control when he heard but was forced to cover up for Goebbels.’ Hitler ordered the

  widow paid 500 marks per month from police compensation funds. (Memo by CIV Corps

  region III, Frankfurt, Mar 25, 1948: NA RG.319, IRR, file G8172121, Otto Strasser). The

  death was listed as ‘suicide’ on the Nazi death roll (NA film T81, roll 90). However, the

  Reich student-Führer Gustav Scheel told Karl-Heinrich Hederich once when drunk that

  Franz A Six (a student friend since Heidelberg who had however married Scheel’s fiancée)

  had murdered Strasser. Hederich repeated this claim to Dr Werner Hagert (Interrog of

  Hagert, Sep 5, 1947: NA film M.1019, roll 23); unfortunately Hederich, interrogated Oct

  23 and Dec.16, 1947 (ibid., roll 25) was not asked about this.

  13 Unpubl. diary, Jul 1, 1934. See the documentation on Schleicher’s murder (with proof

  that his phone was bugged), in VfZ, 1953, 71ff.

  358 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  14 Author’s interview of Christa Schroeder, Jun 6, 1976.

  15 Unpubl. diary, Jul 1, and 4: ‘The public is right with us. A huge wave of enthusiasm goes

  through the land. The rebels got public opinion quite wrong.’

  16 Broadcast, Jul 1; Phipps to Simon, Jul 2, 1934 (PRO file FO.371/17707).

  17 Unpubl. diary, Jul 4, 1934.

  18 Ibid., Jul 6: ‘S.A. question with Lutze. S.A.’s reputation needs a lift. I send a telegram

  along these lines to Lutze. The S.A. is to be retained. It’s very downcast today;‘ and see Jul 7,

  1934.

  19 Schaumburg-Lippe, War Hitler ein Diktator? 46f; JG, unpubl. diary, Jul 4, 1934.

  20 BA file R43I/1469. ‘One can now see clearly again,’ wrote JG (unpubl. diary, Jul 4).

  ‘Events came dramatically to a head. The Reich was on the edge of an abyss. The Führer

  saved it.’

  21 Ibid., Jul 4, 1934.

  22 Ibid. Jul 6, 1934.

  23 Ibid., Jul 14, 1934.

  24 Bella Fromm diary, Jul 15, 1934 (loc. cit.); she identified her source as a ministry employee,

  ‘Max K.,’ who described JG as being shrewd, unscrupulous, perverse, cynical, moody,

  and lascivious, driven by hatred of Schacht and the American journalist Dorothy Thompson

  (the feeling was mutual); and as being involved in desultory love affairs with Maria Stahl and

  Edith von Coler, subsequently the mistress of Hanns Johst and Darré.

  25 Heydrich to JG, Nov 30, 1936 (ZStA Potsdam, Rep. 50.01, Diewerge papers, vol.994).

  26 Unpubl. diary, Jul 7, 1934.

  27 JG broadcast, Jul 10, publ. in Berliner Börsenzeitung and The Times, Jul 11; see JG unpubl.

  diary, Jul 11, 1934.

  28 Lochner to Bety, Jul 22 (loc. cit.); JG diary, Jul 13, 1934.

  29 Renzetti to Mussolini, Jul 14, 1934 (Mussolini papers, NA film T586, roll 419, 9433).

  30 Diary, Jul 18, 1934. Lutze deduced that Röhm had been set up by his enemies, and

  Hitler bamboozled. See Lutze’s diary, the testimony of Wilhelm Brückner (IfZ: Irving collection),

  and an SS officer’s report to Himmler on Lutze’s later remarks (NA film T175, roll

  3, 1892ff).

  31 But at Bayreuth on Jul 21, a relaxed Hitler told JG more details about Röhm. ‘Terrible!

  I am horrified,’ noted JG in unpubl. diary, Jul 22, 1934.

  32 Ibid., Jul 9, 1934.

  33 Ibid., Jul 14, 1934.

  34 Ibid.—Ernst Hanfstaengl, ‘I was Hitler’s Closest Friend,’ in Cosmopolitan, Mar 1943.—

  Revue, No.19, May 10, 1952.

  35 Unpubl. diary, Jul 11, 1934.

  36 Ibid., Mar 17, Apr 11, 1934.—See too Der 25. Juli 1934 im Bundeskanzleramt in Wien.

  Forschungsergebnisse und Dokumente (Vienbna, 1965).

  37 Ibid., Apr 28, 1934.

  38 Ibid., Jul 24, 1934.

  39 Ibid., Jul 26: ‘Mountains out of molehills.’ He was seeing Hela Strehl quite often (ibid.,

  Aug 2, 8) and, in Magda’s absence, Ello Quandt (‘Long parlaver with Ello. Talks about her

  [crumbling] marriage’—Aug 20, 1934)

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 359

  40 Adam MS (IfZ file ED.109/2); on the Dollfuss murder see Helmuth Auerbach’s paper in

  VfZ, 1964, 201ff.

  41 Unpubl. diary, Jul 26, 1934.

  42 Ibid., Jul 28, 30, 1934. On Jul 28 Hitler told JG he had broken it off with Mussolini, and

  was going to deal with Yugoslavia instead. On Jul 31 JG noted, after seeing Hitler: ‘Italy still

  mean. We’ll repay her later.’ And on Aug 31: ‘Discussed Italy question with [Prince] Philipp

  of Hesse. Mussolini’s a puzzle to me.’

  43 Ibid., Jul 28, 1934.

  44 Ibid., Jul 31, 1934.

  45 Cabinet, Aug 1, 1934; unpubl. diary, Aug 2; RGBl., 1934, I, 747; Lammers papers, NA

  film T580, roll 266.

  46 Unpubl. diary, Aug 2, 1934.

  47 Ibid.; rumours of a Hindenburg ‘testament’ dictated in his own favour by the wily Papen

  proved at first unfounded, ‘so Papen loses out’ (ibid., Jul 31, Aug 4). A few days later the

  rumours caused Hitler and JG fresh alarm (ibid., Aug 8). The document, published on Aug

  15, betrayed Papen’s authorship but was innocuous (ibid., Aug 16, 1934).

  48 Ibid., Aug 8, 1934.

  49 Diary, Aug 22, 1934.

  50 Unpubl. diary, Aug 20, 1934.

  51 Berliner Morgenpost, Sep 9, 1934.

  52 Berliner Volkszeitung, Nov 11, 1934.

  53 Verbiestert. Unpubl. diary, Jul 4, 1934.

  54 Hamburger Tageblatt, Aug 26, 1934.

  55 Berliner Lokalanzeiger, Sep 17, 1934.

  56 Ibid.

  57 Ernst Hanfstaengl, report on JG for President Roosevelt, Jul 16, 1943 (FDR Libr. PSF

  box 126)

  58 Dr Carl von Eicken’s consultation notes, Aug 1934 (NA film ML.131).

  59 JG to Bormann, Aug 17, 1934 (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.90, Go 1, vol.3).

  60 Daimler Benz to JG, Nov 7, 1934 (ibid.)

  61 RMVP budget files (ZStA Potsdam, Rep. 50.01, vol.1059).

  62 Farmers: Rheinisch-Westfälische Zeitung, Oct 1; labour service, 12 Uhr Blatt, Oct 24;

  youth, ibid., Nov 2, 1934.

  63 Deutsche Zeitung, Nov 20, 1934.

  64 US interrogation of Weiss, Aug 31, 1945 (NA file RG.332, Mis–Y sect., box 116).

  65 Note by Bitterfeld NSDAP Kreisleitung, Sep 14, 1934 (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.50.01,

  vol.1175).

  66 Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, Dec 1, 1934.

  67 Ibid., Dec 12, 1934. On Jul 2, 1934 (unpubl. diary, Jul 4) he gave Erich Hilgenfeldt,

  chief of the NSV, directions for the coming Winter Relief: ‘It’s got to be really big.’

  68 Borresholm, 101f.

  69 Figures announced by JG, Berliner Lokalanzeiger, Oct 9, 1934.

  70 12 Uhr Blatt, Oct 15, 1934.

  71 Ibid., Nov 8, 1934.

  360 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  72 Berliner Volkszeitung, Dec 24, 1934.

  73 Magda Goebbels correspondence with Martha Hillig (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.90, Go 2,

  Magda Goebbels, vol.2).

  74 Cabinet meeting, Dec 13, 1934, 4:15 P.M. (Lammers papers; NA film T580, roll 266).

  75 Unpubl. diary, Dec 15, 1934 (Moscow archives, Goebbels papers, box 5); in January

  (unpubl. diary Jan 4) he found Hitler still poorly. ‘Got to find a good doctor.’

  76 Ibid., Feb 4, 1935.

  77 Diary, Dec 25, 1934.

  78 Ibid., Sep 17, 21, 24, 1934.

  79 Behrend, loc. cit., No.18, May 3, 1952; Ebermayer and Meissner, Revue, No.23, Jun 7,

  1952.

  80 Wilhelm Fürthwängler on Hindemith’s opera ‘Mathis der Maler,’ in DAZ, Nov 25, 1934;

&nbs
p; cf. Joseph Wulf, Musik im Dritten Reich (Frankfurt, 1983), 373ff. A scene in this opera portraying

  the public burning of heretical writings was evidently the cause of the Nazis’ discontent.

  —As recently as Jun 25, 1934 JG had publicly praised Hindemith as one of Germany’s

  up and coming musical talents.

  81 Described in a 50pp MS by Detig for Dr Karl Silex, Feb 1970 (in Fritz Tobias archives);

  and see Detig’s affidavit, Jul 3, 1948 (StA Nuremberg).—JG diary, Jan 2, 1935.

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 361

  Goebbels

  24: While Crowds Exult below.

  WHEN you drive through Germany today,’ Goebbels had said at the end of

  November 1934, ‘you hear the hammering of the machinery and the singing

  of the sirens, you see the cargo ships once more majestically gliding down the

  rivers and the heavy laden freight trains, and you notice how the country lanes are

  being widened and the new autobahns laid down… These are great times that we

  have created.’1 Before a different audience he emphasized Germany’s ‘absolute desire

  for peace’, a theme to which he returned in his New Year’s broadcast—the coming

  international plebiscite on the disputed Saar territory would allow Germany to

  arrive at a lasting peace with ‘the great French people.’2

  Hitler had faced the New Year with a collapse of self-confidence. Recalling Goebbels

  back from his Black Forest vacation, he demanded he do something. Foreign newspaper

  were full of lies about fresh plots against him. Hitler ordered the entire German

  leadership to hear him speak in the State opera house on the third. Together, Goebbels

  and Göring—now thick as thieves again—drafted a declaration of loyalty for Göring

  to read out to Hitler. Goebbels felt that Hitler’s voice was still not up to the task. But

  it went down well.3 At one point Hitler threatened to put a bullet in his own brains

  if his subjects refused to work in harmony. 4 Goebbels was worried by all this. He felt

  that Hitler was still unwell, and decided to find a doctor for him. ‘I think he needs me

  now,’ he told his unpublished diary.

  362 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  With Magda staying down in the Black Forest, he stayed up until two A.M. after the

  Hitler speech entertaining Ello Quandt; on the following day, January 4, he took

  Hitler out to Babelsberg to tour the Ufa studios. For a while he, Hitler, and Streicher

  strayed around the lavish set built for ‘Barcarole’, a romantic film set in Venice at the

  turn of the century, the story of the frenzied love of a young man for the wife of a

  cruel older man. The top Nazis were all eyes—not for Germany’s leading heartthrob

  Gustav Fröhlich, but for the actress playing opposite him, a Czech girl of twenty,

  Lida Baarova.5

  Hitler takes an immediate shine to her; he persuades himself that she looks like

  Geli Raubal and invites her to tea at the chancellery.6 She arrives with tear-streaked

  cheeks. Gustav Fröhlich, her lover in real life as well as on the screen, a jealous and

  possessive thirty-two year-old, has instructed her to phone him every fifteen minutes

  from the Führer’s chancellery, and that puts paid to that. Hitler asks Lida why

  she does not take up German citizenship. Her reply is simply, ‘Why should I?’7 Up in

  his private quarters a few days later, Hitler mopes until three A.M. about how lonely

  and joyless his life now is—‘Without women,’ observes Goebbels, ‘without love,

  still filled with memories of Geli.’8

  DISCUSSING foreign policy after that visit to the film studio on January 4, 1935, Hitler

  predicted to Goebbels that France would start turning the screw on Germany if and

  when she lost the Saar. They had a tough year ahead.9 Goebbels adopted honeyed

  language. ‘In rapprochement lies order,’ he lectured, opening the Saar exhibition in

  Berlin on the sixth. ‘In war lies only ruin and destruction. For Europe there can be

  no third way.’10

  The historic plebiscite on the future of the Saar would be held one week later. His

  opponents, a clamouring ragbag of communists, Jews, freemasons, and disgruntled

  emigrés, were no match for him. His propaganda line was clear—the Saar was tied

  by blood to the German fatherland. To abide by the international rules, a local ad hoc

  ‘German front’ had to fight the campaign. Goebbels provided a weekly illustrated

  magazine, telling the catholic Saar electorate that the bolsheviks were the sworn

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 363

  enemy of God. In neutral Geneva his ministry’s anti-Comintern unit set up a religious

  front, Pro Deo, which formally received the anti-bolshevik exhibition that he

  had prepared in Berlin and sent it on to the Saar camouflaged with Swiss certificates

  of origin.11 In the Saar, the catholic clergy publicized the exhibition from their pulpits.

  ‘The Saarbrücken clerics never guessed whose errands they were running,’ wrote

  Eberhard Taubert.

  His opponents warned the Saar, ‘A vote for Germany is a vote for Hitler!’ This

  slogan backfired badly, because over 90·5 percent did just that. Hitler telephoned

  Goebbels from Berchtesgaden, saying he sincerely hoped this meant peace with France.

  Goebbels had all Germany decked out with flags in an instant. That evening, January

  15, he took Generals Blomberg and Fritsch back to his villa, and they all phoned

  Hitler again. Afterwards, they all discussed Germany’s long-range foreign policy.12

  Word reached London a few days later that Goebbels had said on this occasion that

  the overwhelming Saar vote virtually obligated Hitler to bring back all the scattered

  German peoples into the Reich. Goebbels had particularly indicated Memel and

  Austria. ‘We’ve got everything ready in the propaganda ministry,’ he was quoted as

  saying.13

  The Saar plebiscite was proof of what could be achieved bloodlessly, by propaganda

  alone. On Sunday January 20 Hitler again had lengthy confidential discussions

  with Goebbels, mapping out his next moves: ‘First project concerns Britain,’ recorded

  the diarist Goebbels. ‘Guard their Empire, in return for thirty years alliance.’

  14

  At the time such a deal was not impossible. There was a mutual fascination between

  Britain’s old, and Germany’s new, rulers. In December 1934 Goebbels and

  Hitler met Lord Rothermere at the Ribbentrop’s. The British newspaper baron was

  already a convinced admirer of Hitler. “A real Englishman,” Goebbels described him.

  “John Bull. Really wonderful opinions. If only all the English thought the same way.”

  Rothermere criticised Versailles, he applauded Hitler’s rearmament and demand for

  colonies, and he criticised Versailles and diplomats. Britain’s ambassador in Berlin,

  the hard-drinking Sir Eric Phipps, almost swooned with rage. After Goebbels got to

  364 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  work on him, Rothermere pronounced him “the greatest propagandist in the world.”

 

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