Little Adolf
At
half past six on the evening of April 20th, 1889 an innocent child was
born in the small town of Braunau Am Inn, Austria. The name of the child
was Adolf Hitler. He was the son a Customs official Alois Hitler, and
his third wife Klara. Initially Alois had taken his mother's name,
Schicklgruber, but changed it in 1876 and became Hiedler, or Hitler.
Quite important - it is hard to imagine tens of thousands of Germans
shouting "Heil Schicklgruber!" instead of "Heil
Hitler!"
Adolf
Hitler,
murderer of millions, master of destruction and organized insanity, did
not come into the world as a monster. He was not sent to earth by the
devil, nor was he sent by heaven to "bring order" to Germany,
to give the country the autobahn and rescue it from its economic crisis.
Young Adolf attended church regulary, sang in the local choir and spent
hours playing 'cowboys and indians' and revelled in the westerns penned
by Karl May. He grew up with a poor record at school and left, before
completing his tuition, with an ambition to become an artist or
architect. Alois Hitler had died when Adolf was thirteen and Klara
brought up Adolf and his sister, Paula, on her own.
His
only boyhood friend, August Kubizek, recalled Hitler as a shy,
reticent young man, yet he was able to burst into hysterical fits of
anger towards those who disagreed with him. The two became inseparable
during these early years and Kubizek turned out to be a patient
listener. He was a good audience for Hitler, who often rambled for
hours about his hopes and dreams. Sometimes Hitler even gave speeches
complete with wild hand gestures to his audience of one. Hitler would
only tolerate approval from his friend and could not stand to be
corrected, a personality trait he had shown in high school and as a
younger boy as well.
Then one day in 1905 the pair went to see a performance of Wagner's
Rienzi at the Linz Memorial Theater. This became a decisive event for
the teenaged Hitler, as he was to refer to it after he came to power.
In Kubizek's biography of Hitler The Young Hitler I Knew, 1953, he
recalls how it had a terrifying impact upon Hitler, who left the
theater in a state of trance.
"Adolf stood in front of me; and now he gripped both my hands and
held them tight. He had never made such a gesture before. I felt from
the grasp of his hands how deeply moved he was. His eyes were feverish
with excitement .. Never before and never again have I heard
Adolf Hitler speak as he did in that hour, as we stood there alone
under the stars, as though we were the only creatures in the world. He
now spoke of a mission that he was one day to receive from our people,
in order to guide them out of slavery, to the heights of freedom."
Thirty years later, the boyhood friends would meet again in Bayreuth,
and Kubizek told Adolf Hitler what he remembered of that night,
assuming that the enormous multitude of impressions and events which
had filled these past decades would have pushed into the background
the experience of a seventeen year old youth. But after a few words
Kubizek sensed that Hitler vividly recalled that hour and had retained
all its details in his memory. Hitler's words were unforgettable for
August Kubizek: "It began at that hour!".
Adolf Hitler founded the Third Reich with these goals - the
mass murder of the Jews, the establishment of a German Empire based on
the conquest of the Soviet Union, the murder of the original
inhabitants or their reduction to rightless slaves of the Third Reich.
His Nazi Regime led to the annihilation of more than six million Jews
in Europe. The Third Reich would survive him for one week - the
nightmare he had unleashed was over ...
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