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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 71

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  Magda has inspected a tempting neighbouring lot at Schwanenwerder, Nos.12/14

  Insel Strasse. It is owned by a Jew, Samuel Goldschmidt, director of the Goldschmidt-

  Rothschild bank.22 Goebbels’ friend Dr Lippert, erstwhile editor of Angriff and now

  mayor of Berlin, forces Goldschmidt to sell it to the city for only 117,500 marks;

  after the sale, Goebbels emerges as the real purchaser.23 He will rebuild this art deco

  building, converting its stables into a private cinema and the house into what he calls

  his Burg (citadel)—another refuge from Magda and her tantrums. Sometimes he will

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 431

  withdraw to his citadel with a guest, explaining to Magda with a heartless wink that

  he wants to play the latest records to her.24 Thus all seems set in December 1937 for

  a ménage à trois—as soon as Lida is ready. On the eleventh he drives out to

  Schwanenwerder, talks things over with Magda, and decides to move next door ‘to

  get some peace.’25 They have been married for six years. ‘We are all so happy,’ he

  hypocritically informs his diary. ‘The children are playing all around us. I am sitting

  in my new home in the next door house. Deep snow lies round about. Slept in.’26

  Often that January of 1938 he drives out to Lanke where his villa is embedded in

  snow so deep that his new Maybach barely gets through. Is Lida out there? We don’t

  know. Occasionally he drives into Berlin to see his family, to play some music and

  deliberately lose a few hands of Black Peter to Helga before driving back to spend

  the night at Lanke or his ministry.27 In his ministry too he is installing a little boudoir,

  so that he can devote more time to his work there; it is a tastefully furnished bachelor

  apartment with a bedroom, a bathroom, and an array of bell-pushes to inform

  his staff when he does not wish to be disturbed.28

  Simultaneously work will begin on the reconstruction of his official residence. On

  January 16 Hitler gives the go-ahead. The Goebbels’ spend hours more or less happily

  poring over Professor Baumgarten’s plaster model and blueprints; the funds are

  requisitioned, and on April 27 the wreckers and bricklayers move in. ‘I say my farewells

  to these rooms I have loved so much,’ writes Goebbels with false pathos: ‘It

  really hurts. I clear things out and pack, and find manuscripts from my childhood

  that seem pretty ridiculous today… So adieu dear home! Now let the pick-axes

  swing.’29

  There is one snag. Lida Baarova wants to be no part of his planned ménage. Fearing

  that she is trapped, she momentarily goes to England to talk with the talent scouts

  that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer have sent from Hollywood. Gustav Fröhlich persuades

  her to show them his photos too. Robert Taylor and Maureen O’Sullivan plead with

  her to leave Berlin. Nothing comes it, but at the next gala gathering of the film world

  in the Kroll opera house in Berlin Goebbels will warn darkly that the German film

  industry is not a haven for Hollywood’s cast-offs. ‘If anybody else leaves for Holly-

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  wood,’ he declares, ‘they’ll find they can’t get back into Germany when they fail.’30

  Miss Baarova interprets this threat as directed against her. But Goebbels has others in

  his sights too, like Luise Ullrich, another popular star who has designs on Hollywood.

  31

  Bulky with her new unborn child, Magda is stuck out at Schwanenwerder. She is

  hoping for another boy, to call Hartmann or Harder.32 She seldom has enough funds

  for the household running costs and property taxes.33 The purchase of the second

  property has strained their resources; early in 1938 Goebbels moves his mother in

  with Magda and there are always shoals of other house-guests. His visits to

  Schwanenwerder are punctuated by acrimonious scenes The more he promotes his

  family-man image in the media however, the less time he actually seems to spend

  with them.34

  HIS real close family was one man now, Adolf Hitler. More than once in January 1938

  Hitler had prolonged private consultations with him, on affairs well outside his fief—

  asking for example whom he should now appoint to the German embassies in Rome,

  Paris, and Bucharest (Goebbels portentously started a card index for key future appointments.)

  35 When Hitler decided to replace his foreign minister he informed

  Goebbels two weeks before breaking it to the victim, von Neurath.36 Goebbels frankly

  warned him that Ribbentrop, the suggested successor, was a ‘zero.’37 When it came to

  naming their latest new battleship (the Bismarck) Hitler again consulted Goebbels.38

  During the major scandal now almost upon them, the Blomberg–Fritsch scandal,

  Hitler and Goebbels would be closeted together for hours on end. Surprisingly,

  Goebbels would recommend the ultra-conservative chief of general staff, General

  Ludwick Beck, against the radical Nazi Walther von Reichenau to succeed Fritsch as

  the army’s commander-in-chief.39

  THE broad outlines of the Field-Marshal Blomberg scandal are now well known. On

  December 14 the war minister, nearly sixty, had unblushingly revealed to Goebbels

  his intention of marrying a young girl of common stock. Seemingly not appreciating

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 433

  quite how common this twenty-four year old’s stock had been, Goebbels wished

  him luck.40 Both Hitler and Göring officiated as witnesses at Blomberg’s hasty wedding

  on January 12 (the girl had told him she was pregnant).

  The crisis burst upon them soon after. At Hitler’s lunch table on the twenty-fifth

  Goebbels detected a certain tension in the air. Aided by an unusually jovial Göring he

  tried to cheer Hitler up, but it was already too late.41 Helldorff, now police chief of

  Berlin, told his friend Goebbels that Blomberg’s bride had a criminal record for

  peddling pornographic photographs featuring herself. He showed Goebbels the police

  dossier—it was ‘hair raising.’ Obviously Blomberg had landed Hitler and Göring

  in a hideous position. Goebbels was speechless with rage at the injury the field marshal

  had done to his idol. Twice he hinted that any honourable officer should shoot

  himself.42 But Blomberg merely resigned as war minister on the pretext of ill health,

  and left on a world tour with his bride instead (who turned out not to be pregnant

  after all.)

  This was just the start of Hitler’s problems. Who should succeed Blomberg? Göring?

  General von Fritsch? Himmler now charged that the latter, though the obvious candidate,

  had once been blackmailed as a closet homosexual. This scandalized Hitler.

  Since the Röhm affair, his eyes glazed at the slightest mention of homsosexuality.

  Goebbels suggested that Hitler himself take over Blomberg’s position, thus becoming

  supreme commander in one step.43 Fritsch did not however stand aside without a

  fight. He denied the allegation of homosexuality, on his word as an officer, and he did

  not even crack under the Gestapo’s grilling.44 ‘It’s one man’s word against another,’

  perceived Goebbels, fascinated by Hitler’s dilemma: ‘That of a homosexual blackmailer

  against that of the army’s commander-in-chief.’ But Hitler no longer trusted

  Fritsch, and there was the rub.
Innocent or guilty, the general was doomed even

  though he refused, to Himmler’s dismay, to confess.45 ‘Heydrich has conducted several

  all-night interrogations,’ recorded Goebbels equally perplexed. ‘Fritsch is taking

  it all on the chin, but standing up to him.’46

  Goebbels’ problems as propaganda minister were also beginning as juicy rumours

  washed around Berlin. He spent sleepless nights, he even saw Hitler in tears with

  434 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  worry.47 He promised to keep the lid firmly on things. He suggested that it would

  help if Hitler chose now to carry out a reshuffle of both his cabinet and armed forces.

  ‘The damage that one woman can do!’ gasped Goebbels, as the hit lists were drawn

  up. ‘And that kindÊ of woman too!’48

  Hitler announced his reshuffle to his ministers at eight P.M. on February 5, 1938.

  Goebbels’ diary provides the only detailed record of this, the last formal Cabinet

  meeting ever held.49 Struggling to do justice to both Blomberg and Fritsch and choking

  with emotion, Hitler spoke of the personal tragedies that had obliged them to

  resign. He announced that he himself would take over as supreme commander (as

  Goebbels had suggested).

  For a few days the world’s press seethed with fierce but ill-informed speculation—

  what Goebbels called ‘horror stories.’50 He directed his rough-and-ready lieutenant

  Berndt to scatter dust in the eyes of the press corps in Berlin.51 ‘He had the nerve to

  tell us,’ recorded an American journalist, ‘that Blomberg’s resignation was due solely

  to reasons of health (yet he was healthy enough to marry!)’52 To an equally sceptical

  Dutch pressman Berndt tactlessly flared, ‘What would you say if our newspapers

  were to state that the baby just born to your Royal family isn’t really [Crown Princess]

  Juliana’s baby!’53 Unimpressed, the foreign journalists still churned out ‘horror

  stories’. So Goebbels told Berndt to go the whole hog and plant rumours that Hitler

  intended invading France. The newshounds went yelping off after that scent instead.

  It all provided an interesting example of news-management. ‘Anything is better than

  the truth,’ reflected the propaganda minister, in a departure from his norm.54

  LAYING a second smokescreen Hitler briefly55—as he imagined— and unexpectedly

  turned to Austria. He summoned Austria’s pettifogging chancellor Dr Kurt

  Schuschnigg to the Berghof on February 12. No formal record was taken of Hitler’s

  blustering, ranting threats but he boasted with some relish to Goebbels afterwards

  ofhow he had talked ’pretty tough’ with Schuschnigg on a list of demands, and had

  threatened to get satisfaction by force (‘guns speak louder than words’56). ‘It was not

  just an ultimatum,’ summarized Goebbels. ‘It was a threat of war. Schuschnigg was

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 435

  shattered.’57 Under a secret protocol agreed between them Austria guaranteed to

  model her foreign and military policy on Germany’s, and to call a truce in their press

  war; Schuschnigg was also to appoint the Austrian lawyer Arthur Seyss-Inquart (described

  by Goebbels as ‘our man’) as minister of the interior. In return Hitler agreed

  to refrain from interfering in Austria’s domestic affairs.58

  Four days after the Berghof meeting, Schuschnigg’s Cabinet agreed to Hitler’s dictates.

  ‘The world’s press rages,’ observed Goebbels, ‘and speaks—not entirely unjustly

  —of rape.’59 Hitler formally thanked Schuschnigg in the Reichstag on the twentieth.

  In private he added that he envisaged cutting a similar deal with Prague when

  the time came, although he warned Goebbels that the Czech president Edouard

  Beneoar(s,ˇ) was a far more deadly opponent, ‘a crafty, squinny-eyed little rat.’60

  For all his other sins, Hitler did adhere to the Berghof agreement. When two Austrian

  Nazi leaders visiting Munich on February 25 still talked of staging a coup, he

  forbade them to return.61 Schuschnigg was less scrupulous. After the newly re-emancipated

  Nazis staged big demonstrations in Graz and Vienna he called out the army

  against them, in violation of the agreement. Goebbels directed the German press to

  hold its tongue.62

  He had other things on his mind—principally the trial of Pastor Niemöller, arrested

  seven months earlier on sedition charges.63 As the still overly conservative

  ministry of justice set aside a full two weeks for a public trial, all Goebbels’ hatreds

  boiled over. ‘Lawyers are all mentally defective,’ he had written the year before.64 He

  pleaded for a two- or three-day trial in camera, followed by Niemöller’s swift and

  permanent removal from public view. Hitler himself had ruled that Niemöller was

  never to be turned loose again.65 Was that not an edict simple enough for even the

  most pettifogging lawyer to understand? When the trial began on February 7, however,

  the court refused to impose reporting restrictions and allowed the pastor an

  entire day to reminisce about his career.66 Goebbels persuaded the court to go into

  closed session. At this Niemöller’s lawyers walked out.67

  These were the kind of tactics that Goebbels himself had used against the catspaw

  courts of the Weimar regime, and now, used against him, they stung. When a brave

  436 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  civil servant, Ernst Brandenburg, testified for the pastor, Goebbels had him dismissed

  from the party.68 On March 2 the judges handed down a derisory sentence on

  Niemöller, allowing his immediate discharge. Exploding with wrath, Goebbels released

  only the briefest press notice.69 Hitler directed Himmler to have the pastor

  removed by a back door from the courthouse and taken straight to Oranienburg

  concentration camp. ‘He won’t be set free again,’ triumphed Goebbels.70

  HIMMLER’S organs did have their uses. Mostly however Goebbels gave a wide berth to

  the Reichsführer now. ‘His entire being breathes sterility,’ he decided. ‘He is a little

  man without an ounce of style. Ignore.’71 When Reinhard Heydrich, Himmler’s executive

  chief, started sniping at Taubert, the minister fired off a terse rebuke. The

  police, he noted, might poke their nose in elsewhere, ‘but not here!’72 Once, Helldorff

  warned him against his personal assistant Fritz Ehrhardt, pointing out that he also

  held the rank of Hauptsturmführer (captain) in Himmler’s security service, the S.D.

  ‘When I became police chief of Berlin,’ explained Helldorff, ‘I removed from my

  staff every S.S. officer who was working for the S.D. I advise you to do the same.’73

  If Goebbels had any doubt as to Himmler’s code of ethics it soon became apparent.

  After Helldorff revealed something of the Gestapo’s spying techniques, Goebbels

  exclaimed in his diary, ‘We’re heading toward a world of informers and sneaks.’74

  Helldorff, Hanke, and Lutze told Goebbels that everybody was now surrounded by a

  vast network of Gestapo informers. All this informing—which seemed his particular

  worry—was not only stupid but despicable. ‘It just begets cowardice, terror, and

 

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