Gudrun Burwitz,
ever-loyal daughter of Nazi mastermind Heinrich Himmler, dies at 88
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/gudrun-burwitz-ever-loyal-daughter-of-nazi-mastermind-heinrich-himmler-dies-at-88/2018/06/30/6d57d42a-7c76-11e8-93cc-6d3beccdd7a3_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.89ffd8869b1e
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/gudrun-burwitz-ever-loyal-daughter-of-nazi-mastermind-heinrich-himmler-dies-at-88/2018/06/30/6d57d42a-7c76-11e8-93cc-6d3beccdd7a3_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.89ffd8869b1e
Gudrun Burwitz, the true-believing daughter of Heinrich Himmler, the
architect of the Holocaust and Nazi Germany’s highest-ranking official after
Adolf Hitler, died May 24 in or near Munich. She was 88.
Her death was first reported by the German newspaper Bild, which also
confirmed that Mrs. Burwitz had worked for two years in West Germany’s foreign
intelligence agency. The agency’s chief historian, Bodo Hechelhammer, told the
newspaper that Mrs. Burwitz worked as a secretary under an assumed name in the
early 1960s. The agency does not comment on current or past employees until they
have died.
Mrs. Burwitz, who was sometimes called a “Nazi princess” by supporters and
detractors alike, remained unrepentant and loyal to her father to the end.
Although she had visited a concentration camp, she denied the existence of the
Holocaust and, in later years, helped provide money and comfort to former Nazis
convicted or suspected of war crimes.
At the time of her birth in 1929, her father was consolidating power as leader of the elite Nazi paramilitary corps known as the SS. Himmler also commanded the German secret police, the Gestapo, and established the system of prison and concentration camps in which more than 6 million people — primarily Jews but also Roma (or Gypsies), homosexuals and others — would perish.
The only
person who outranked Himmler in the Nazi hierarchy was Hitler himself.
Gudrun, who
was Himmler’s oldest child and only legitimate daughter, was exceptionally
devoted to her father. Himmler and his wife later adopted a son and had two
other children with his mistress.
Throughout the 1930s and
early 1940s, the bespectacled, undistinguished-looking Himmler enjoyed having
Gudrun at his side, as a blond, blue-eyed symbol of Aryan youth. In a diary
later seized by Allied authorities, she noted that she liked to see her
reflection in her father’s polished boots. She attended Christmas parties with
Hitler, who gave her dolls and chocolates.When she was 12, Gudrun accompanied her father to the Dachau concentration camp, which was the site of Nazi medical experiments and the execution of tens of thousands of people.
Gudrun
recalled the visit in her diary: “Today we went to the SS concentration camp at
Dachau. We saw everything we could. We saw the gardening work. We saw the pear
trees. We saw all the pictures painted by the prisoners. Marvelous.
“And
afterward we had a lot to eat. It was very nice.”
As the
Third Reich was collapsing in May 1945, 15-year-old Gudrun and her mother fled
to northern Italy, where they were arrested by American troops. Himmler was seized
by Russian forces on May 20, 1945 and transferred to British custody. Three
days later, he killed himself by biting on a cyanide capsule he had concealed.
Gudrun and her mother were held for four years in various detention facilities in Italy, France and Germany. She refused to believe that her father’s death was a suicide and maintained that he had been killed by his British captors.
She was present at some of the war-crimes trials of her father’s associates in Nuremberg, Germany.
“She did
not weep, but went on hunger strikes,” Norbert and Stephan Lebert wrote in “My
Father’s Keeper,” their 2002 book about the children of Nazi leaders. “She lost
weight, fell sick, and stopped developing.”
After their
release, mother and daughter settled in the northern German town of Bielefeld,
where Gudrun trained as a dressmaker and bookbinder. She found it hard to hold
a steady job with her family history.
In 1961,
she joined the German intelligence service as a secretary under an assumed name
at the agency’s headquarters near Munich. She was dismissed in 1963, when West
German authorities were reviewing the presence of former Nazis in the
government.
In the late
1960s, she married Wulf-Dieter Burwitz, a writer who became an official in a
right-wing political group and settled in a Munich suburb. They had two
children.
Gudrun Margarete Elfriede Emma Anna Himmler was born Aug. 8, 1929, in Munich. Except for a brief interview in 1959, she is not known to have spoken in public about her father or her later life.
She did,
however, often wear a silver brooch given to her by her father, depicting the
heads of four horses arranged in the shape of a swastika.
She was
also known to be active in a group called “Stille Hilfe,” or silent help, which
was formed in the 1940s to help Nazi fugitives flee Germany, particularly to
South America, and to support their families.
The
organization is “closely linked to a number of outlawed neo-Nazi movements and
actively promotes revisionism — the notion that the Holocaust never happened
and Jews caused their own downfall,” Andrea Roepke, a German authority on
neo-Nazis, told Britain’s Daily Mail newspaper in 1998.
Among followers of the
group, Mrs. Burwitz was “a dazzling Nazi princess, a deity among these
believers in the old times,” according to German author Oliver Schrom, who
wrote a book about Stille Hilfe.
Mrs.
Burwitz attended underground reunions of Nazi SS officers, often held in
Austria, possibly as recently as 2014.
“She was
surrounded all the time by dozens of high-ranking former SS men,” Roepke said,
after attending one such gathering. “They were hanging on her every word . . .
It was all rather menacing.”
Mrs.
Burwitz also provided support, through Stille Hilfe, to convicted Nazi war
criminals, including Klaus Barbie, an SS officer dubbed the “Butcher of Lyon,”
and Anton “Beautiful Tony” Malloth, who was convicted of killing prisoners at
the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
Malloth was
sentenced to death in absentia by a court in the Czech Republic, but Mrs.
Burwitz reportedly helped arrange for him to stay at a retirement facility
outside Munich on land once owned by Nazi official Rudolf Hess.
“I never
talk about my work,” she said in 2015 when British journalist Allan Hall
confronted her at her home. “I just do what I can when I can.”
“Go away,”
her husband said. “You are not welcome.”
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