Authors: Nicholas Best
INTRODUCTION
FEW EPISODES IN HISTORY
can have shocked the world more than the five days at the end of April 1945 that began with the murder of Mussolini and ended with the news that Hitler had killed himself at his bunker in Berlin. The departure of both dictators had long been expected, but the manner of their going was no less awful for that: Mussolini and his mistress dangling upside down in front of a jeering mob, Hitler’s body reduced to a Wagnerian pile of ashes while Magda Göbbels poisoned her children and demented staff at the Chancellery enjoyed group sex before going to their own deaths. Not even the most operatic of novelists could have made it up.
Equally horrifying were the atrocities being committed by the Russians at the same time as they stormed across Germany. The atrocities were at their worst in Berlin, where mass rape on an unprecedented scale was taking place as the Russians surrounded the capital. That their own menfolk had behaved just as badly in Russia was no consolation to the German women of all ages who fled in terror, often committing suicide to avoid gang rape by troops from the Soviet republics with little experience of such Western niceties as electricity or indoor plumbing. Horrifying, too, were the revelations from the concentration camps that were beginning to emerge with the deaths of Hitler and Mussolini. Dachau was captured by the Americans on the same day as Il Duce was strung up in Milan. Ravensbrück fell a day later, just as Hitler was taking his own life. The first photographs from Belsen and Buchenwald had been released that week and were being shown to an incredulous public. Most were too awful to be published in newspapers. They were being exhibited in towns and cities instead, so that people across the free world could see the evidence with their own eyes and understand exactly what had been going on in Nazi Germany.
It was important that people should see the photographs with their own eyes. They had all read the newspapers and heard the rumors about the camps, but they didn’t necessarily believe them. Radio reporter Richard Dimbleby, a man of unimpeachable integrity, had had great difficulty persuading a dubious BBC to broadcast his first eyewitness report from Belsen. Others, too, had been disbelieved when they spelled out what they had seen. During World War I, it had been widely rumored that the Germans on the Western Front were melting down human bodies for fat. The rumors had later turned out to be false, almost certainly the work of British propaganda. Now the rumors had surfaced again, with additional tales of mass gassings, living skeletons, shrunken heads, and lampshades made of tattooed skin. Small wonder that people were skeptical.
Indeed, the London cinema showing the first film from the camps was picketed that week by an angry crowd, outraged that their own government was lying to them again. Their anger was shared by millions of Germans, well aware that bad things had happened in the camps, yet convinced that the atrocities had been grossly exaggerated by Allied propaganda in order to justify the war.
But the photographs didn’t lie. “Seeing Is Believing” was the title of the exhibition sponsored by the
Daily Express
in London that week. People queued in thousands to see the Buchenwald pictures, and came away speechless. Later, they saw the Belsen film in the cinema: skeletons bulldozed into burial pits, and German civilians standing beside the SS at the graveside, all of it filmed in one take, so that there could be no accusations of trick photography. The photos didn’t lie. There were too many of them, from too many different places, supported by too many eyewitness accounts for the stories to be lies. It simply wasn’t possible.
Is there any need for another book on an already well documented week, no matter how shocking it was? The answer has to be yes if the material is new or pleasingly unfamiliar. Everyone knows, for instance, that Hitler was in Berlin when he died, but how many know that his sister was at Berchtesgaden, living anonymously as Frau Wolff and keeping her own counsel as the other guests in her boarding house discussed her brother’s death? Or that Leni Riefenstahl, Hitler’s favorite film director, was in an Austrian ski resort, unable to find a bed for the night when people learned who she was? Or that the future Pope Benedict had deserted from the Wehrmacht and was walking home, terrified that he might still be shot or hanged from a tree for dereliction of duty?
Audrey Hepburn was in Holland, delighted to avoid conscription into a Wehrmacht brothel, but so malnourished that her ambition to become a ballet dancer was looking increasingly unrealistic. Eleven-year-old Roman Polanski was living virtually feral on the streets of Krakow. Bob Dole, badly wounded by a German shell, was lying paralyzed in an Italian hospital, listening to the cheers for the end of the war in Italy and wondering if he would ever be able to move his toes again. All sorts of people, some famous at the time, others to become famous later, remembered exactly where they were and what they were doing as the events of those extraordinary five days unfolded around them.
As in my previous book,
The Greatest Day in History
, about the Armistice of 1918, I have set out to tell the story through the eyes of the people who were there, preferably well known or interesting people, but ones not normally associated with the events being described. Using their own words wherever possible, I have covered all the core events of that week as Hitler killed himself and the Nazis scattered, but I have also wondered where Marlene Dietrich was at the time, and Günter Grass, Henry Kissinger, Jack Kennedy, and a host of others. The technique worked well for the Armistice, providing a snapshot of the whole world at the end of one of the most astonishing weeks in history. I hope it works again here.
A word of warning. The definitive truth has not always been easy to discover. Quite a few eyewitnesses, particularly in Hitler’s bunker, changed their stories in later years and gave differing and often contradictory accounts of the same events. Others kept silent for decades and then had trouble remembering dates and facts correctly. I have always envied authors who feel able to state with certainty that a particular eyewitness was either wrong or lying. For myself, I prefer to report what the witnesses said, putting it in context where necessary, and then leave it to readers to make up their own minds. But I can say with certainty that what follows, or something very like it, definitely happened.
* * *
WARM THANKS
to Senator Bob Dole and Lord Carrington for their contributions to this book. Also to Peter Devitt, assistant curator of the RAF museum at Hendon, who helped me find out more about Operation Manna; Katharine Thomson of the Churchill Archives Centre at Churchill College, Cambridge; and Alec Holmes, whose surgical knowledge enabled me to make sense of Mussolini’s autopsy. Thanks, too, to Andrew Lownie, my agent, and Rob Kirkpatrick, Nicole Sohl, and Margaret Smith of Thomas Dunne Books in New York. From seventeen floors up, Rob edited a British author with skill and tact, which takes some doing!
Finally, an apology to President Jimmy Carter for my failure to find an appropriate context for his generous contribution. For the record, he says he was at sea with the U.S. Navy when Hitler died, wishing he could be in Times Square in time to join the celebrations when the war ended. To my great regret, I couldn’t find a suitable place to mention it in the book.
CONTENTS
PART ONE: SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1945
Mussolini and his mistress dragged from their beds; Rachele Mussolini terrified for her children; Mussolini shot at Lake Como
Hitler in his bunker; Helmut Altner fights for his life; Hildegard Knef terrified of rape
Himmler offers to surrender; an astrologer summoned to Lübeck; Count Bernadotte dismayed; Jack Winocour betrays Himmler to the press; Hitler orders an execution
Dönitz prepares for death; Speer hides in the woods; Ribbentrop on the road; Göring imprisoned in his own castle; Rudolf Hess in a Welsh asylum
Mussolini strung up in Milan; Rachele Mussolini listens to the killing; the German army agrees to surrender; Sophia Loren fears the Moroccans; Harold Macmillan and the spattered brains; Ezra Pound awaits arrest; Joseph Heller just glad to be home
Himmler’s fortune read; Hitler gets married; the Russians approach the Reichstag; Altner fights underground; Hildegard Knef runs for her life; mass rape in Berlin
The bodies almost buried; Chaim Herzog and Willie Whitelaw; the Union Jack doesn’t fly; Josef Kramer and Irma Grese; Marlene Dietrich and her sister’s shameful secret; outrage in London and the United States
Food drop over Holland; the Dutch see manna from heaven; Queen Wilhelmina pleased; Walter Cronkite witnesses the starvation; Audrey Hepburn escapes a brothel
The Americans reach Dachau; atrocity met with atrocity; ecstatic prisoners; scientific experiments; Pastor Niemöller still a hostage
Winston Churchill at Chequers; Harry Truman in Washington; Jan Smuts in San Francisco; procedural wrangling at the United Nations; Molotov difficult; Jack Kennedy unimpressed; Orson Welles and a stripper; General Franco fears exclusion; Vidkun Quisling resigned to his fate
The Russians attack the Reichstag; Adolf Hitler prepares for death; Altner meets some SS girls; Hildegard Knef waits for a bayonet; Nikolai Masalov rescues a child; Hitler says goodbye
12.
Curtain Call for Lord Haw Haw
Dönitz takes the reins; William Joyce makes his last broadcast; the Russians liberate Ravensbrück; Odette Sansom in the condemned cell; the Day of Judgment in Neubrandenburg; Micheline Maurel faces a firing squad
General Bedell Smith meets Seyss-Inquart; Munich falls to the Americans; Lee Miller at Dachau; Victor Klemperer longs for liberation; Henry Kissinger seeks his family
The surrender terms reach Bolzano; chaos at Wehrmacht HQ; Austria’s chancellor almost free; Venice ungrateful to the Allies; Mussolini’s body examined for syphilis; Rachele Mussolini fears execution
Group sex in the bunker; Hitler kills himself; Traudl Junge views the spot; bodies burned in the garden; Göbbels and Bormann contact the Russians
General Krebs meets General Chuikov; Major Bersenev shot under a white flag; the Reichstag falls; Altner learns of Hitler’s death; Hildegard Knef arrested for desertion; Göbbels writes his epitaph
Dönitz the new Führer; Field Marshal Keitel strafed by the RAF; Heinrich Himmler can’t keep away; Ribbentrop angles for a job; the SS reluctant to shoot Göring; Albert Speer in tears
Joseph Stalin takes the salute; Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in Lubianka; Nikita Khrushchev in Kiev; Clementine Churchill in Odessa; Otto Frank longs for his children
The Americans drop food for the Dutch; General Patton liberates Moosburg; Lee Miller in Hitler’s apartment; von Rundstedt surrenders; Wernher von Braun waits for the Americans; Private Ratzinger deserts; Leni Riefenstahl heads for the hills