May 2003
Hitler's
Forgotten Library: The Man, His Books, and
His Search for God YOU
can tell a lot about a person from what
he reads. The surviving -- and largely
ignored -- remnants of Adolf Hitler's
personal library reveal a deep but
erratic interest in religion and
theology by Timothy W.
Ryback "Did you know that
today is Hitler's birthday?" the attendant
said as he handed me Adolf Hitler's
personal copy of Mein Kampf, a
tattered red-leather volume (a special
second edition issued in 1926) with the
title and author's name embossed in gold
on the spine. The young man, clean-cut and
dressed in a sweatshirt bearing the skull
and crossbones of the Curry College Rugby
Football Club, explained that he knew this
fact only because his sister shared a
birthday with the Nazi leader. "You
remember something like that," he
said. On this particular Friday (April 20,
2001, Adolf Hitler's 112th birthday) the
rare-book reading room of the Library of
Congress -- a high-ceilinged space
elegantly appointed with brass lamps,
heavy wooden tables, and thick carpet --
hummed with subdued activity. At one table
a heavy-set woman in a bright paisley
blouse wore white gauze gloves to leaf
through a fragile tome titled Histoire
Aéronautique, a collection of
quaint eighteenth-century lithographs
depicting aeronauts in powdered wigs
transported aloft by fanciful pneumatic
contraptions. A smartly dressed black
woman with cropped hair and large hoop
earrings studied a book on slavery in
Barbados. Across from her a stocky man
with a laptop clattered away as he typed
extracts from a book cradled in a
velvet-lined wooden stand. At another
table a young man in a suit stared into an
oversized volume of black-and-white
photographs of graphic sex -- leather,
chains, sprawled limbs -- with
SEX embossed on the
silver-metal cover. The rare-book collection is home to
more than 800,000 volumes. It contains the
personal libraries of Thomas Jefferson,
Theodore Roosevelt, and Woodrow
Wilson, and first editions of
contemporary "authors" such as Andy
Warhol and Madonna. It is also
home to the remnants of the private
library of Adolf Hitler, a man better
known for burning books than for
collecting them. The books that constitute the Hitler
Library were discovered in a salt mine
near Berchtesgaden -- haphazardly stashed
in schnapps crates with the Reich
Chancellery address on them -- by soldiers
of the 101st Airborne Division in the
spring of 1945. After a lengthy initial
evaluation at the U.S. military
"collecting point" in Munich the books,
numbering 3,000, were shipped to the
United States and transferred in January
of 1952 to the Library of Congress, where
an intern was assigned to uncrate the
collection. "The intern did what we call
'duping out,'" says David Moore, a
German-acquisition assistant at the
Library of Congress. "If a book was not
one hundred percent sure, if there was no
bookplate, no inscription to the
Führer, he didn't keep it." According
to Moore, duplicate copies were sent to
the exchange-and-gift division and then
either went to other libraries or found
their way onto the open market; the
non-duplicate books that could not be
fully authenticated were absorbed into the
Library of Congress's general
collection. The 1,200
volumes that survived the "duping out"
joined the rare-book collection on the
third floor of the Jefferson Building,
where they were unceremoniously
identified by a large cardboard sign --
dangling on a string from a ceiling
pipe -- that read, "Hitler Library.
This bay only. Please replace books to
proper location." The sign has since been removed, the
books relocated several times, and the
collection euphemistically renamed the
Third Reich Collection. The books can be
ordered, five at a time, from the main
desk in the rare-book reading room. When I
first visited the collection, in April of
2001, fewer than half of the 1,200 books
had Library of Congress numbers, and only
200 of those were listed in the online
catalogue; the remaining thousand titles
were listed alphabetically by author on
yellowing cards in an old-fashioned wooden
card catalogue, many still identified by
the provisional numbers assigned them in
the early 1950s. Jerry Wager, the
head of the rare-book reading room, told
me at the time, "Processing this
collection has not been a high priority
for us"; he also said that the books had
been relocated yet again in recent months.
"We routinely move collections to make
better use of existing space and to
accommodate new acquisitions," he said. A
genteel man in his mid-fifties with a
flawlessly manicured white beard, Wager is
a master of discretion. When I asked about
the Hitler collection's new location, he
replied, "For security reasons we don't
reveal where collections are located in
the vault." He is equally circumspect
about scholars who have previously studied
the collection, simply noting that the
books are requested only a few times each
year, and generally by people looking for
specific volumes rather than for an
opportunity to study the collection as a
whole. Why, with hundreds of Hitler
biographies, had not more scholars visited
the Third Reich Collection? It is
referenced by none of the leading Hitler
biographers -- not Alan Bullock,
not John Toland, not Joachim
Fest. Ian Kershaw, whose recent
two-volume Hitler biography has won
international acclaim, told me in the
summer of 2001 that he visited the
collection once, in the early 1990s, but
"decided against any consultation of the
volumes in it, and in the event did not
refer directly, so far as I recall, to the
collection in my biography." In
retrospect, Kershaw concedes, he should
probably have at least mentioned the
collection in a footnote. Scholarly neglect of the Hitler Library
derives in good part from an early
misperception that its historical or
biographical importance was limited. "Spotchecks revealed little in the way
of marginal notes, autographs, or other
similar features of interest," an internal
Library of Congress review determined in
January of 1952. "Indeed, it seems that
most of the books have never been perused
by their owner." Gerhard Weinberg, a leading
authority on the Nazi era and one of the
first scholars to explore the collection,
confirms this initial assessment. "I was a
newly minted Ph.D., and this was my first
job beyond graduate school," Weinberg told
me not long ago. "I was compiling
information for the Guide to Captured
German War Documents. The books had
only recently been uncrated, and I was
intrigued by what I would find there." To
Weinberg's disappointment, the Hitler
Library appeared to consist mostly of
presentation copies from authors or
publishers. "There were few clues that
many of these books had been part of his
personal library, and even less evidence
that he had read any of them," Weinberg
says. In 2000 Philipp Gassert and
Daniel Mattern reached a similar
conclusion. Beginning in 1995 Gassert, an
assistant professor of history at the
University of Heidelberg, and Mattern, the
senior editor at the German Historical
Institute, in Washington, D.C.,
systematically reviewed every volume in
the collection. In the spring of 2001
Greenwood Press published the results of
their research, The Hitler Library,
a 550-page bibliography that lists each
book alphabetically, with its author, page
count, and call number. Also included are
transcriptions of all handwritten
dedications, some brief descriptions of
marginalia, and an indication of which
books contain the Führer's bookplate
-- an eagle, a swastika, and oak branches
between the words EX
LIBRIS and ADOLF
HITLER. The Hitler
Library provides the first
comprehensive road map through the
collection, but at times it leads
readers astray. Most significant is
[sic] overlooked
marginalia. In one reference Mattern and
Gassert note correctly that the Hitler
Library contains two identical copies of
Paul de Lagarde's German Essays,
but they don't mention marginalia, despite
the fact that in one volume fifty-eight
pages have penciled intrusions -- the
first on page 16, the last on page 370.
Given that Lagarde belongs to a circle of
nineteenth-century German nationalist
writers who are believed to have had a
formative influence on Hitler's
anti-Semitism, the marked passages are
certainly worth noting. In an essay called "The Current Tasks
of German Politics," Lagarde anticipates
the emergence of a
"singular man with
the abilities and energy" to unite
the German peoples, and calls for the
"relocation of the
Polish and Austrian Jews to
Palestine." This latter phrase has
been underlined and flagged with two bold
strikes in the margin. Sometimes writing along the side of a
page is recognizably in Hitler's jagged
cursive hand. For the most part, though,
the marginalia are restricted to simple
markings whose common "authorship" is
suggested by an intense vertical line in
the margin and double or triple
underlining in the text, always in pencil;
I found such markings repeatedly both in
the Library of Congress collection and in
a cache of eighty Hitler books at Brown
University. Hitler's handwritten speeches,
preserved in the Federal German Archives,
show an identical pattern of markings. In
one anti-Semitic rant Hitler drew three
lines under the words Klassenkampf
("class struggle"), Weltherrschaft
("world domination"), and Der Jude als
Diktator ("the Jew as dictator"); one
can almost hear his fevered tones. Hitler's habit of highlighting key
concepts and passages is consonant with
his theory on the "art of reading." In
Chapter Two of Mein Kampf he
observed, A man who possesses the art of
correct reading will, in studying any
book, magazine, or pamphlet,
instinctively and immediately perceive
everything which in his opinion is
worth permanently remembering, either
because it is suited to his purpose or
generally worth knowing ... Then, if
life suddenly sets some question before
us for examination or answer, the
memory, if this method of reading is
observed ... will derive all the
individual items regarding these
questions, assembled in the course of
decades, [and] submit them to
the mind for examination and
reconsideration, until the question is
clarified or answered. In these marginalia one sees a man (who
famously seemed never to listen to anyone,
for whom "conversation" was little more
than a torrent of monologues) reading
passages, reflecting on them, and
responding with penciled dashes, dots,
question marks, exclamation points, and
underscorings -- intellectual footprints
across the page. Here is one of history's
most complex figures reduced merely to a
reader with a book and a pencil.
BOOKS, books, always books!" August
Kubizek once wrote. "I just can't
imagine Adolf without books. He had them
piled up around him at home. He always had
a book with him wherever he went."
Kubizek, Hitler's only real friend in his
teenage years, recalled after the war that
Hitler had been registered with three
libraries in Linz, where he attended
school, and had passed endless days in the
baroque splendor of the Hofbibliothek, the
former court library of the Hapsburgs,
during his time in Vienna. "Bücher
waren seine Welt," Kubizek wrote. "Books
were his world." Though Kubizek's reminiscences, first
published in the 1950s, are in many ways
suspect, his
depiction of the future Führer as a
bibliophile has been amply corroborated.
One of Hitler's first cousins, Johann
Schmidt, recounted for a Nazi Party
history of the Führer that when
Hitler spent summers with relatives in the
tiny Waldviertel hamlet of Spital, he
invariably arrived with "lots of books in
which he was constantly busy reading and
working." Hans Frank, Hitler's
personal lawyer and the "governor" of
Nazi-occupied Poland, recalled before his
1946 execution at Nuremberg that Hitler
carried a copy of Schopenhauer's
The World as Will and
Representation with him throughout
World War I. During his incarceration after the
failed 1923 Munich putsch, Hitler was
regularly supplied with reading materials
by friends and associates. He once
referred to his time in Landsberg Prison
as his "university paid for by the state."
During a bout of prison blues in December
of 1924 he received a package from
Winifred Wagner, the
daughter-in-law of the composer Richard
Wagner and one of the few people who
addressed Hitler with the familiar
du. It contained a book of
Goethe's poetry from the Wagner
family library. The 358-page volume, now
at the Library of Congress, contains
meditative classics such as "Across All
Peaks" and "Evening Song," accompanied by
handsome full-page pen-and-ink drawings.
The inside cover bears a handwritten
inscription: "Adolf Hitler, this picture
book taken from the book garden of Eva
Chamberlain, for your enjoyment in
serious lonely hours! Bayreuth, Christmas 1924." Books seem to have been the gift of
choice for Hitler on virtually every
occasion. The Hitler Library contains
scores of books bearing inscriptions for
Christmas, his birthday, and other festive
occasions. A book titled Death and
Immortality in the World View of
Indo-Germanic Thinkers is inscribed
for Hitler by the SS chief Heinrich
Himmler on the occasion of "Julfest
1938" -- Nazi circumlocution for
Christmas. I also discovered books from
the controversial filmmaker Leni
Riefenstahl -- two on the Berlin
Olympics and an eight-volume set of the
complete works of the nineteenth-century
German philosopher Johann Gottlieb
Fichte in a rare first edition. Given
that Hitler had charged Riefenstahl with
filming the Olympic Games, the presence of
the first two volumes was understandable;
the Fichte was more puzzling. When I called on Riefenstahl, who lives
outside Munich and had just marked her
hundredth birthday, she referred me to her
published memoirs, in which she devotes a
chapter to the Fichte volumes. According
to that account, in the spring of 1933 the
thirty-year-old filmmaker approached
Hitler about the plight of several Jewish
friends. "I have great esteem for you as
an artist, you have a rare talent," Hitler
replied, according to Riefenstahl. "But I
cannot discuss the Jewish problem with
you." Mortified by his rebuke (Riefenstahl
says she felt herself go faint), she later
sought to make amends by sending Hitler
the Fichte. Bound in white leather with
gold embossing, the books bear the
inscription "Meinem lieben Führer
in tiefster Verehrung ['To my
dear Führer with deepest
admiration'], Leni
Riefenstahl." Fed by gifts and his own acquisitions,
Hitler's library swelled dramatically in
the late 1920s and early 1930s. In his
1925 tax declaration Hitler listed his
total personal assets at a paltry 1,000
marks, and claimed "no property" other
than "a writing table and two bookcases
with books." By 1930, however, as sales of
Mein Kampf bolstered his income,
book buying represented his third largest
tax deduction (after general travel and
transportation): 1,692 marks in 1930, with
similar deductions in the two years
following. More telling still is the
five-year insurance policy Hitler took out
in October of 1934, with the Gladbacher
Fire Insurance Company, on his six-room
apartment on the Prinzregentenplatz, in
downtown Munich. In the letter of
agreement accompanying the policy Hitler
valued his book collection, said to
consist of 6,000 volumes, at 150,000 marks
-- half the value of the entire policy.
The other half represented his art
holdings.
BY the late 1930s Hitler had three
separate libraries for his ever-expanding
collection. At his apartment he removed a
wall between two rooms and installed
bookshelves. For the Berghof, his Alpine
retreat near Berchtesgaden, Hitler built a
second-floor study with handmade
bookcases; color photographs of the
finished space show an elegant setting
with Oriental carpets, two globes, and
bookcases fitted with glass doors and
brass locks. Herbert Döhring,
who managed the Berghof from 1936 to 1943,
told me that the library could accommodate
no more than 500 or 600 volumes. "He
reserved this space for the books he
really cared about," says Döhring,
who helped Hitler to sort the books.
"He
used to have me send the rest to a storage
facility in Munich or to the new Reich
Chancellery in Berlin." For his official Berlin residence
Hitler had his architect, Albert
Speer, design a vast library that
occupied the entire west wing. "Inventory
records of the Reich Chancellery that we
found at the Hoover Institution at
Stanford suggest that by the early 1940s
Hitler was receiving as many as four
thousand books annually," Daniel Mattern
told me. In Munich, Gassert and Mattern
also discovered architectural sketches for
a library annex to the Berghof that was
intended to accommodate more than 60,000
volumes. "This was a man with a lot of
books," Mattern says. Unfortunately, Hitler never inventoried
his books, and the only detailed
accounting of his libraries comes courtesy
of the former United Press correspondent
Frederick Oechsner, who met Hitler
repeatedly and was evidently able to
acquaint himself intimately with the
Führer's book collections. "I found
that his personal library, which is
divided between his residence in the
Chancellery in Berlin and his country home
on the Obersalzberg at Berchtesgaden,
contains roughly 16,300 books," Oechsner
wrote in his best-selling book This Is
the Enemy (1942). According to Oechsner, the biggest
single share of Hitler's library, some
7,000 books, was devoted to military
matters, in particular "the campaigns of
Napoleon, the Prussian kings; the lives of
all German and Prussian potentates who
ever played a military role; and books on
virtually all the well-known military
campaigns in recorded history." Another
1,500 volumes concerned architecture,
theater, painting, and sculpture. "One
book on the Spanish theater has
pornographic drawings and photographs, but
there is no section on pornography, as
such, in Hitler's Library," Oechsner
wrote. The balance of the collection
consisted of clusters of books on diverse
themes ranging from nutrition and health
to religion and geography, with "eight
hundred to a thousand books" of "simple,
popular fiction, many of them pure trash
in anybody's language." By his own admission, Hitler was not a
big fan of novels, though he once ranked
Gulliver's Travels, Robinson Crusoe,
Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Don
Quixote (he had a special affection
for the edition illustrated by Gustave
Doré) among the world's
greatest works of literature. The one
novelist we know Hitler loved and read was
Karl May, a German writer of cheap
American-style westerns. In the spring of
1933, just months after the Nazis seized
power, Oskar Achenbach, a
Munich-based journalist, toured the
Berghof -- in the Führer's absence --
and discovered a shelf of Karl May novels
at Hitler's bedside. "The bedroom of the
Führer is of spartan simplicity,"
Achenbach reported in the Sonntag
Morgenpost. "Brass bed, closet,
toiletries, a few chairs, those are all
the furnishings. On a bookshelf are works
on politics and diplomacy, a few brochures
and books on the care of German shepherds,
and then -- pay attention you German boys!
Then comes an entire row of books by --
Karl May! Winnetou, Old Surehand, Bad Guy,
all our dear old friends." During the war
Hitler reportedly admonished his generals
for their lack of imagination and
recommended that they all read Karl May.
Albert Speer recounted in his Spandau
diaries, Hitler was wont to say that he
had always been deeply impressed by the
tactical finesse and circumspection
that Karl May conferred upon his
character Winnetou ... And he would add
that during his reading hours at night,
when faced by seemingly hopeless
situations, he would still reach for
those stories, that they gave him
courage like works of philosophy for
others or the Bible for elderly people. No one knows the exact extent of
Hitler's library. Though Oechsner
estimated the original collection at
16,000 volumes, Gassert and Mattern assert
that it is impossible to determine the
actual dimensions, especially since the
majority of the books were either burned
or plundered in the final weeks of the war
-- an assumption confirmed in part by
Florian Beierl, the head of the
Archive for the Contemporary History of
the Obersalzberg, in Berchtesgaden.
According to Beierl, Hitler's Berghof
experienced successive waves of looters:
first local residents, then French and
American soldiers, and eventually members
of the U.S. Senate. Beierl showed me
archival film footage (taken by the
legendary World War II photographer
Walter Rosenblum) of a delegation
of American senators -- Burton Wheeler,
Homer Capehart, and Ernest
McFarland -- emerging from the Berghof
ruins with books under their arms. "I
doubt if they were taking them to the
Library of Congress," Beierl said. I have also been told that a portion of
the Hitler Library may have been seized by
the Red Army. "Stalin was so paranoid
about Hitler that he sent trophy brigades
to search for anything connected with
him," says Konstantin Akinsha, a
former researcher for the Presidential
Advisory Commission on
Holocaust
Assets in the United States. "His
skull, his uniforms, Eva Braun's dresses,
her underwear -- they are all in Moscow."
Akinsha told me recently that in the early
1990s he heard rumors about a depository
in an abandoned church in Uzkoe, a suburb
of Moscow, that allegedly contained a huge
quantity of "trophy books," including some
that had belonged to Hitler. Grigory Kozlov, another "trophy"
sleuth, confirms that a "secret
depository" did indeed exist in Uzkoe for
more than four decades, with tens of
thousands of books stacked from floor to
ceiling. "At the beginning of 1995 there
was a big discussion about trophy books,"
Kozlov told me. "They decided to remove
these books from Uzkoe and destroy all
traces that showed there had been some
sort of secret depository there." Now, he
says, the books have been dispersed
anonymously in libraries and archives
across Russia. "I don't know what's true
or not," Kozlov told me. "Books were
evacuated without records, confiscated
without records. I don't know if anyone is
ready to talk."
THE 1,200 of Hitler's books in the Library
of Congress most likely represent less
than 10 percent of the original
collection. Nevertheless, when I first
visited the Hitler Library, in April of
2001, I was surprised to discover that
despite the incompleteness of the
collection, I could easily discern the
collector preserved within his books. In
more than 200 World War I memoirs,
including Ernst Jünger's
Fire and Blood, with a personal
inscription to "the Führer" I
encountered Hitler the "Austrian
corporal," with his bushy moustache, his
somber demeanor, and his battlefield
service, during which he was twice wounded
and for which he was twice decorated, once
with the Iron Cross first class. In two olive-drab paperbacks,
guidebooks to the cultural monuments of
Brussels and Berlin, published by Seemann
Verlag and costing three marks each, I
glimpsed Hitler the aspiring
Frontsoldat-cum-artist. The Berlin guide
has Hitler's signature in faded purple ink
on the inside front cover, with the place
and month of purchase: "Fournes, 22
November 1915." In the Brussels guide
Hitler simply scrawled "A. Hitler" in
pencil; the last three letters trail
downward like unspooling ribbon. A chapter
on Frederick the Great is
especially worn, its pages tattered,
marked with fingerprints, and smeared with
red candle wax. Tucked in the crease
between pages 162 and 163 I found a
three-quarter-inch strand of stiff black
hair. In dozens of books, with salutations
from the likes of Prince August
Wilhelm -- son of the last German
Kaiser -- and the heirs of the Bechstein
piano dynasty, I saw Hitler the
protégé of Germany's
financial, social, and cultural elite. One
book on Führertum --
"leadership" -- was presented to Hitler by
the industrialist Fritz Thyssen,
who had introduced him to some of
Germany's leading businessmen at a
decisive meeting in Düsseldorf in
January of 1932. "To the Führer, Adolf
Hitler, in memory of his presentation
to the Düsseldorf Industrial
Club," Thyssen wrote on the inside cover.
Several books are inscribed to Hitler from
Richard Wagner's youngest daughter,
Eva, who had married Houston
Stewart Chamberlain. Chamberlain was
an anti-Semitic Englishman best known for
his book The Foundations of the 19th
Century, in which he advanced the
thesis that Jesus was of Aryan rather than
Semitic blood. Hitler read Chamberlain
during his Vienna period, and had a brief
audience with the aging anti-Semite at the
Wagner estate shortly before being sent to
Landsberg Prison. "You know Goethe's
differentiation between force and force,"
Chamberlain wrote Hitler in October of
1923. "There is force which comes from
chaos and leads to chaos, and there is
force which is destined to create a new
world." Chamberlain credited Hitler with
the latter. In a French vegetarian cookbook with an
inscription from its author, Maïa
Charpentier, I encountered Monsieur
Hitler végétarien. And I
found hints of Hitler the future mass
murderer in a 1932 technical treatise on
chemical warfare that explores the varying
qualities of poison gas, from chlorine to
prussic acid (Blausäure). The latter
was produced commercially as Zyklon B,
which would be notorious for its use in
the Nazi extermination camps. I also found, however, a Hitler I had
not anticipated: a man with a sustained
interest in spirituality. Among the piles
of Nazi tripe (much of it printed on
high-acid paper that is rapidly
deteriorating) are more than 130 books on
religious and spiritual subjects, ranging
from Occidental occultism to Eastern
mysticism to the teachings of Jesus Christ
-- books with titles such as Sunday
Meditations; On Prayer; A Primer for
Religious Questions, Large and Small;
Large Truths About Mankind, the World and
God. Also included were a German
translation of E. Stanley Jones's
1931 best seller, The Christ of the
Mount; and a 500-page work on the life
and teachings of Jesus, published in 1935
under the title The Son: The
Evangelical Sources and Pronouncements of
Jesus of Nazareth in Their Original Form
and With the Jewish Influences. Some
volumes date from the early 1920s, when
Hitler was an obscure rabble-rouser on the
fringe of Munich political life; others
from his last years, when he dominated
Europe. One leather-bound tome -- with
WORTE CHRISTI, or
"Words of Christ," embossed in gold on the
cover -- was well worn, the silky, supple
leather peeling upward in gentle curls
along the edges. Human hands had obviously
spent a lot of time with this book. The
inside cover bore a dedication: "To our beloved Führer
with gratitude and profound respect,
Clara von Behl, born von Jansen von den
Osten. Christmas 1935." Worte Christi was so fragile
that when the attendant brought it to me,
he placed it on a red-velvet pad in a
wooden reading stand, a beautifully
finished oak contraption with two supports
that could be adjusted with small brass
pegs to fit the dimensions of the book. No
more than a foot wide and eighteen inches
long, the stand had a sacred air, as if it
belonged on an altar. I reviewed the table of contents --
"Belief and Prayer," "God and the Kingdom
of God," "Priests and Their Religious
Practices," "The World and Its People" --
and skimmed the introduction; then I
scanned the book for marginalia that might
suggest a close study of the text. A
white-silk bookmark, preserved in its
original perfection between pages 22 and
23 (only the portion exposed to the air
had deteriorated), lay across a
description of the Last Supper as related
by Saint John. A series of pages that
followed contained only a single aphorism
each: "Believe in God" (page 31), "Have no
fear, just believe" (page 52), "If you
believe, anything is possible" (page 53),
and so on, all the way to page 95, which
offers the solemn wisdom "Many are called
but few are chosen." On page 241 appears the passage "You
should love God, your Lord, with all your
heart, with all your soul, with all your
spirit: this is the foremost and greatest
commandment. Another is equally important:
Love your neighbor as you would love
yourself." Beside this passage is one
brief penciled line, the only mark in the
entire book. Given Hitler's legendary disdain for
organized religion in general and
Christianity in particular, I didn't
expect him to have devoted much time to
the teachings of Christ, let alone to have
marked this quintessential Christian
virtue. Had this in fact been made by the
pencil of Hitler's younger sister,
Paula, who occasionally visited her
brother at the Berghof and remained a
devout Catholic until her dying day? Might
some other Berghof guest have responded to
this holy Scripture? Possibly -- but though most of the
spiritually oriented books in the Hitler
Library were gifts sent to the Führer
by distant admirers, several, like
Worte Christi, were obviously well
read, and some contained marginalia in
Hitler's hand that suggested a serious
exploration of spiritual matters. If
Hitler was as deeply engaged with
spiritual issues as his books and their
marginalia suggest, then what was the
purpose of this pursuit? In the spring of 1943, while the
outcome of World War II hung in the
balance, the U.S. Office of Strategic
Services -- forerunner to the CIA --
commissioned Walter Langer, a
Boston-based psychoanalyst, to develop a
"psychological profile" of Adolf Hitler.
As Langer later recalled, this was the
first time the U.S. government had
attempted to psychoanalyze a world leader
in order to determine "the things that
make him tick." Over the course of eight months,
assisted by three field researchers and
advised by three other experts in
psychology, Langer compiled more than a
thousand typewritten, single-spaced pages
of material on his "patient": texts from
speeches, excerpts from Mein Kampf,
interviews with former Hitler associates,
and virtually every printed source
available. Langer wrote, A survey of all the evidence
forces us to conclude that Hitler
believes himself destined to become an
Immortal Hitler, chosen by God to be
the New Deliverer of Germany and the
Founder of a new social order for the
world. He firmly believes this and is
certain that in spite of all the trials
and tribulations through which he must
pass he will finally attain that goal.
The one condition is that he follow the
dictates of the inner voice that have
guided and protected him in the past. In his summary Langer outlined eight
possible scenarios for Hitler's course of
action in the face of defeat. The most
likely scenario, he suggested in a
prescient moment, was that Hitler's belief
in divine protection would compel him to
fight to the bitter end,
"drag[ging] a world with us -- a
world in flames," and that ultimately he
would take his own life. Langer based his assessment not only on
Hitler's repeated references to "divine
providence," both in speeches and in
private conversations, but also on reports
from some of Hitler's most intimate
associates that Hitler truly believed he
was "predestined" for greatness and
inspired by "divine powers." After the war
Field Marshal Albert Kesselring,
one of Hitler's chief military advisers,
seemed to confirm the Langer thesis.
"Looking back," he said, "I am inclined to
think he was literally obsessed with the
idea of some miraculous salvation, that he
clung to it like a drowning man to a
straw."
EXPERTS since then have been of two minds
on the matter of Hitler's spiritual
beliefs. Ian Kershaw argues that Hitler
consciously constructed an image of
himself as a messianic figure, and
eventually came to believe the very myth
he had helped to fashion. "The more he
succumbed to the allure of his own
Führer cult and came to believe in
his own myth, the more his judgment became
impaired by faith in his own
infallibility," Kershaw writes in The
Hitler Myth (1987). But believing in a
messianic myth is not the same as
believing in God. When I asked Kershaw in
2001 whether he thought Hitler actually
believed in divine providence, he
dismissed the notion. "I don't think that
he had any real belief in a deity of any
sort, only in himself as a 'man of
destiny' who would bring about Germany's
'salvation,'" he declared. Gerhard
Weinberg, who helped sort through the
Hitler Library back in the 1950s, likewise
dismisses the notion of Hitler as a
religious believer, insisting that he was
driven by the twin passions of Blut und
Boden -- racial purity and territorial
expansion. "He didn't believe in anything
but himself," Weinberg told me last
summer. Most historians tend to agree. Some non-historians, however, have
different views. In the 1960s Friedrich
Heer, a prominent and controversial
Viennese theologian, identified Hitler as
a misguided "Austrian Catholic," a man
whose faith was disastrously misplaced but
nevertheless sincere. In a dense, 750-page
treatise Heer saw Hitler the Austrian
Catholic at every turn: the nine-year-old
choirboy catching his first glimpse of a
swastika in the coat of arms at the
Lambach Monastery; the beer-hall orator
whose speeches resound with biblical
allusions; the Führer of the Reich
who re-created the splendor of the
Catholic mass at the annual Nuremberg
rally. Even his virulent hatred of Jewry
found sustenance in those roots. Fritz
Redlich, an eminent Yale psychiatrist,
asserts in his book, Hitler: Diagnosis
of a Destructive Prophet, that Hitler
acted from a profound belief in God.
Noting Hitler's own words "Man kommt um
den Gottesbegriff nicht um" ("You cannot
get around the concept of God"), Redlich
told me last summer that he was certain
Hitler believed in a "divine creature." He
rejected suggestions that Hitler's
invocations of the divine were little more
than cynical public posturing and insisted
that we ought to take Hitler at his word:
"In a way, Hitler was a terrible liar, but
he was a tactical liar. In his essential
line of thinking he was honest." Traudl
Junge, Hitler's former secretary,
would not go so far as to say that Hitler
believed in God, but she did believe that
Hitler's repeated references to the divine
were more than just for show. Junge -- who
died of cancer in February of last year
[2002] -- told me the previous
summer that Hitler spoke of such things in
private as well as in public. After two
and a half years of daily contact with
Hitler, she was convinced that he believed
in some form of divine protection,
especially after surviving a dramatic
assassination attempt in 1944. "After the
July 1944 attack," she told me, "I believe
he felt himself to be an instrument of
providence, and believed he had a mission
to fulfill." In my hands I hold a book about
Nostradamus, the sixteenth-century French
mystic whose predictions of epic
calamities have fascinated generations,
and whose stanza "From poor people a child
will be born/ who with his tongue will
seduce many people" has been interpreted
as prophesying the rise of Adolf Hitler.
Printed on high-acid paper, this volume,
with its 137 brittle, crumbling pages,
bears a publication date of 1921 but feels
centuries older. The book promises to
"decypher and reveal for the first time
the prophesies on the future of Europe and
the rise and fall of France from 1555 to
2200." Its final pages offer additional
mystical edification in a series of
advertisements for related texts: Memoirs
of a Spiritualist, The Wandering Soul, How
Can I Protect Myself From Suggestion and
Hypnosis?, Soul and Cosmos, The Realm of
the Invisible, and Human Destiny and the
Course of the Stars. Pasted inside this
moldering volume is one of Adolf Hitler's
bookplates. The Predictions of Nostradamus
belongs to a cache of occult books
that Hitler acquired in the early 1920s
and that were discovered in the private
quarters of his Berlin bunker by
Colonel Albert Aronson in May of
1945. As part of the Allied occupation
forces, Aronson was among the first
Americans to enter Berlin after the
collapse of the Nazi resistance. "When my
uncle arrived, the Russians took him on a
tour of Hitler's bunker," one of Aronson's
nephews recalls. "He said that the
Russians had pretty much picked the place
clean, but there were some pictures and a
pile of books they let him take."
According to the nephew, the books
remained in Aronson's attic until his
death, at which point they were bequeathed
to his nephew, who donated them to Brown
University in 1979. Today the eighty volumes are housed in
the basement vault of Brown's rare-book
collection at the John Hay Library, where
they share shelf space with Walt
Whitman's personal copy of a first
edition of Leaves of Grass and
John James Audubon's original
folios of Birds of America.
According to Samuel Streit, the
associate librarian for special
collections, the Hitler books have
attracted virtually no attention from
scholars. Streit himself has examined the
collection only once, and his most vivid
recollection was the Hitler bookplate. "I
know this sounds strange," says Streit, an
amiable man in his mid-fifties, "but from
the standpoint of bookplate design, it is
quite tastefully done." Like the Library of Congress
collection, Brown's eighty Hitler books
constitute a hodgepodge: picture books,
art journals, an Italian libretto of
Wagner's Walküre, a 1937
edition of Mein Kampf, and two
editions of Alfred Rosenberg's The
Myth of the Twentieth Century. The more
than a dozen books on the occult include
several devoted to Nordic runes, among
them a 1922 history of the swastika,
richly illustrated with nearly 500 diverse
renderings -- in Egyptian hieroglyphics,
Greek pottery, Mayan temples, and
Christian crosses. The Dead Are
Alive delivers "incontrovertible
evidence on occultism, somnambulism,
spiritualism, with sixteen photographs of
ghosts." Among the photographic images
that fill the final pages of the volume is
one of five people levitating a table at
an 1892 séance in Genoa and another
allegedly showing the ghost of a
fifteen-year-old Polish girl, Stasia,
being consumed by a "luminous, misty
substance." A picture of a rather
stately-looking Englishman is captioned
"The Phantom of the English writer
Charles Dickens who died in 1871
and is buried in Westminster Abbey. He
appeared in 1873 and was
photographed." The canon of Hitler historiography
declares that Hitler flirted with
occultism in the early 1920s, and that he
recruited some of his closest ideological
lieutenants -- Rudolf Hess, Martin
Bormann, Alfred Rosenberg, and
Heinrich Himmler -- from the Thule Society
and similar Nordic cults. "When I first
knew Adolf Hitler in Munich, in 1921 and
1922, he was in touch with a circle that
believed firmly in the portents of the
stars," Karl Wiegand, a former
Hitler associate, recalled in an article
for Cosmopolitan in 1939. "There was much whispering
about the coming of 'another
Charlemagne and a new Reich.'
How far Hitler believed in these
astrological forecasts and prophesies
in those days I never could get out of
the Führer. He neither denied nor
affirmed belief. He was not averse,
however, to making use of the forecasts
to advance popular faith in himself and
his then young and struggling
movement." Most scholars dismiss the notion that
Hitler seriously entertained the ideas of
these cults, but the marginalia in several
of his books confirm at least an
intellectual engagement in the substance
of Weimar-era occultism. The Brown
collection contains books by such figures
as Adamant Rohm, a "magnetopathic
doctor" from Wiesbaden; Carl Ludwig
Schleich, a Berlin physician who
pioneered the use of local anesthesia; and
Joseph Anton Schneiderfranken, who
wrote numerous books on reincarnation and
otherworldly phenomena under the pseudonym
Bô Yin Râ. One of the most heavily marked books is
Magic: History, Theory and Practice
(1923), by Ernst Schertel. When I
typed the author's name into one Internet
search engine, I scored eight hits,
including sites on Satanism, eroticism,
sadomasochism, and flagellation. When I
typed his name into Google, I scored
twenty-six hits, including sites on
parapsychology, astrology, and diverse
sexual practices. According to a Web site
for Germany's sadomasochistic community,
Schertel wrote numerous books on
flagellation and eroticism, and was "a
central figure" in the German nudist
movement of the 1920s and 1930s. Hitler's copy of Magic bears a
handwritten dedication from Schertel,
scrawled on the title page in pencil. A
170-page softcover in large format, the
book has been thoroughly read, and its
margins scored repeatedly. I found a
particularly thick pencil line beside the
passage "He who does not carry demonic
seeds within him will never give birth to
a new world." One of the oldest volumes of literature
still in the Hitler Library is a 1917
German edition of Peer Gynt,
Henrik Ibsen's epic of a "Nordic
Faust" who cuts a swath of human suffering
-- betraying friends, abandoning women,
trading in slaves, and committing
cold-blooded murder -- on his way to
becoming "emperor of the whole world."
When challenged to account for his sundry
trespasses, Gynt declares that he would
rather burn in hell for excessive sins
than simmer in obscurity with the rest of
humanity. Edvard Grieg set this
cruel play to beautiful music. Hitler's
copy of Peer Gynt -- handsomely
illustrated by Otto Sager -- bears
a simple inscription by its German
translator: "Intended for his dear
friend Adolf Hitler. Dietrich Eckart.
Munich, October 22, 1921." Few people could call Hitler "Freund,"
and fewer still "lieber Freund." For
Hitler, Eckart was both friend and family,
a mentor and a father figure. When the two
men first met, late in 1919, Hitler was a
thirty-year-old political upstart a little
more than a year out of the trenches,
without a penny to his name. Eckart was a
fifty-one-year-old playwright with a
runaway hit (his adaptation of Peer
Gynt), a paintbrush moustache, a
morphine addiction, and a legendary hatred
of Jews; one Munich newspaper described
him as a "raging anti-Semite" who would
"ideally like to consume a half dozen Jews
daily with his sauerkraut." After working with Hitler at an early
Nazi Party event, Eckart began grooming
him for political life. He bought Hitler
his first trench coat, gave him
instruction in public speaking, and
introduced him to members of Munich
society, often with the icebreaker "This
is the man who will one day liberate
Germany." Hitler once called Eckart the
"polar star" of the Nazi movement, and
dedicated the first volume of Mein
Kampf to him. "Follow Hitler!" Eckart
allegedly exhorted on his deathbed, in
1923. "He will dance, but the music to
which he dances was composed by me." For all the vitriol Hitler spewed upon
Judaism, he came to hold Christianity in
equal disdain. "Christianity is the worst
thing that ever happened to mankind," he
declared during an after-dinner rant in
July of 1941. "Bolshevism is the
illegitimate child of Christianity. Both
are an outgrowth of the Jew." Hitler was the classic apostate. He
rebelled against the established theology
in which he was born and bred, all the
while seeking to fill the resulting
spiritual void. As the Hitler Library
suggests, he found no shortage of
latter-day prophets peddling alternative
theologies. Mathilde von Kemnitz,
the wife of Erich Ludendorff, the
venerated World War I general who joined
Hitler in the Munich putsch, promoted a
neo-Teutonic pagan cult that called for
the destruction of churches and the
creation of forest temples and places of
sacrifice. A 1922 volume of her writings,
Triumph of the Will to Immortality,
bears a bizarre and cryptic inscription to
Hitler. Now don't forget you young,
blessed soul, If you never leave the
afterlife You will thus be a perfect
God For as long as you live. Hitler tolerated Kemnitz's neo-pagan
looniness until Ludendorff's death, in
December of 1937. In the autumn of 1939
the Nazi government, invoking wartime
rationing, terminated paper supplies for
Kemnitz's publication At the Holy
Well (Am Heiligen Quell), effectively
silencing her movement. Kemnitz, who
survived the war, never forgave Hitler the
betrayal. Guida Diehl, a prolific Weimar
writer who fancied herself the "female
Führer," showered Hitler with titles,
including Burn! Holy Flame! and
The Will of the German Woman. In a
handbook on how to conduct a German
Christmas in "times of need and struggle,"
Diehl wrote to Hitler, "We struggle for
the German soul, which fashioned the
German Christmas from Christ himself! Sieg
heil!" There is no indication that Hitler
ever opened, let alone read, any of
Diehl's books. Unquestionably
the most significant unread volume in the
Hitler collection is a 1940 edition of
Alfred Rosenberg's The Myth of
the Twentieth Century, the Nazi
classic that, with more than a million
copies in print at the time, was second
only to Mein Kampf for the Nazi movement.
In the course of its 800 pages Rosenberg
delivered the theological framework for a
National German Church intended to subsume
"the best of the protestant and catholic
churches" and eliminate the "Jew-infested
Old Testament." Denouncing the Gospels of
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John as a
"counterfeit of the great image of
Christ," Rosenberg envisioned a "fifth
gospel" depicting Jesus as an Aryan
superman -- "The powerful preacher and the
raging prophet in the temple, the man who
inspired, and whom everyone followed, not
the sacrificial lamb of the Jewish
prophets, not the man on the cross." This particular edition of Rosenberg's
legendary anti-Semitic screed has a
handsome dark-blue linen cover and
contains a full-page black-and-white
photograph of Rosenberg standing before a
shelf of leather-bound books. Dressed in a
three-piece suit, he looks more like a
Boston banker than the ideological fanatic
who wrote some of the most offensive and
impenetrable prose of the Nazi era before
being hanged in Nuremberg in 1946. The
book bears the Hitler bookplate but is in
mint condition; the binding cracked when I
opened the cover. Despite Rosenberg's repeated attempts
to establish his Myth as official party
doctrine, Hitler insisted that the book
was a "private publication" that
represented Rosenberg's personal opinions.
In conversations Hitler admitted that he
had read only "small portions" of it and
described it as unreadable. Joseph
Goebbels concurred, calling The Myth
an "intellectual belch." Hitler's selective reading -- or
nonreading -- of the pseudo-theological
texts in his library makes those books he
did read, and especially those in which he
left marginalia, all the more significant.
Here is where the Hitler Library is most
useful. In the Fichte volumes given to him
by Riefenstahl, I encountered a veritable
blizzard of underlines, question marks,
exclamation points, and marginal strikes
that sweeps across a hundred printed pages
of dense theological prose. Where Fichte
peeled away the spiritual trappings of the
Holy Trinity, positing the Father as "a
natural universal force," the Son as the
"physical embodiment of this force," and
the Holy Ghost as an expression of the
"light of reason," Hitler not only
underlined the entire passage but placed a
thick vertical line in the margin, and
added an exclamation point for good
measure. As I traced the penciled notations, I
realized that Hitler was seeking a path to
the divine that led to just one place.
Fichte asked, "Where did Jesus derive the
power that has held his followers for all
eternity?" Hitler drew a dense line
beneath the answer: "Through his absolute
identification with God." At another point
Hitler highlighted a brief but revealing
paragraph: "God and I are One. Expressed
simply in two identical sentences -- His
life is mine; my life is his. My work is
his work, and his work my work." Among the numerous volumes dealing with
the spiritual, the mystical, and the
occult I found a typewritten manuscript
that could well have served as a blueprint
for Hitler's theology. This bound 230-page
treatise is titled The Law of the
World: The Coming Religion and was
written by a Munich resident named
Maximilian Riedel. During the first
week of August 1939 the manuscript was
hand-delivered to Anni Winter,
Hitler's longtime Munich housekeeper, with
the request that it be passed to Hitler
personally. An accompanying letter
read, Mein Führer!Based on a new discovery I have been
able to prove, with incontrovertible
scientific evidence, the concept of the
trinity of God as a natural law. One of
the results of this discovery is, among
other things, the seamless relationship
between the terms:
Truth-Law-Duty-Honor. In essence, the
origins of all science, philosophy and
religion. The significance of this
discovery has led me to ask Frau Winter
to hand to you personally the enclosed
manuscript. Heil mein Führer! Max Riedel Grünwald Oberhachingerweg 1 Riedel made a smart tactical move in
delivering his manuscript to Hitler's
Munich residence. Whereas at the Berghof,
Hitler received hundreds of books, and at
the Reich Chancellery all such
correspondence went through secretaries'
hands, in Munich the only filter was
Hitler's housekeeper. Based on the
marginalia, it seems that Hitler not only
received the Riedel manuscript but also
read it carefully with pencil in hand.
Individual sentences and entire paragraphs
are underlined, sometimes twice or even
three times. In this densely written treatise Riedel
established the groundwork for his "new
religion," replacing the Trinity of the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost with a new
tripartite unity, the "Körper, Geist
und Seele" -- "body, mind, and soul."
Riedel argued that traditionally mankind
has recognized five senses, which relate
only to the physical aspects of our
existence, and that this hinders our
ability to perceive the true nature of our
relationship to God and the universe. He
offered seven additional "senses" that
every human being possesses, which are
related to the subjective perception of
the world; among them Riedel included our
inherent sense of what is right and wrong,
our emotional sense of another person, our
sense of self-preservation. On a two-page
centerfold he illustrated his theory with
a circular diagram in which various
concepts -- "soul," "space," "reality,"
"present," "past," "possibility,"
"transformation," "culture," "afterlife,"
"humanity," "infinity" -- are connected by
a spider web of lines. "The body, mind and
soul do not belong to the individual, they
belong to the universe," the author
explained. Riedel's "trinity" seems to have
attracted Hitler's particular attention. A
dense penciled line parallels the
following passage: "The problem with being
objective is that we use objective
criteria as the basis for human
understanding in general, which means that
the objective criteria, that is, the
rational criteria, end up serving as the
basis for all human understanding,
perception and decision-making." By using
the five traditional senses to achieve
this "objectivity," Riedel declared, human
beings exclude the possibility of
perceiving -- through the additional seven
senses he identified -- the deeper forces
of the world, and are thus unable to
achieve that unity of body, mind, and
soul. "The human mind never decides things
on its own, it is the result of a
discourse between the body and the soul,"
he claimed. The sentence not only caught Hitler's
attention -- beneath it is a thick line,
and beside it in the margin are three
parallel pencil marks -- but was echoed
two years later in one of his monologues.
"Mind and soul ultimately return to the
collective being of the world," Hitler
told some guests in December of 1941. "If
there is a God, then he gives us not only
life but also consciousness and awareness.
If I live my life according to my
God-given insights, then I cannot go
wrong, and even if I do, I know I have
acted in good faith." As I sat in the rarefied seclusion of
the Jefferson Building's second-floor
reading room one day, listening to the
muffled roar of traffic and the distant
wail of police sirens in late-summer
Washington, I attempted to comprehend the
full significance of this sentence to
which Hitler seems to have responded so
emphatically. Back in 1943 Walter Langer
had concluded -- correctly, to my mind --
that in order to understand Hitler one had
to understand his profound belief in
divine powers. But Hitler believed that
the mortal and the divine were one and the
same: that the God he was seeking was in
fact himself.
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