Two historians on Wednesday acclaimed the discovery in Germany
of a journal written by Adolf Hitler's sister, saying it offers
remarkable insights into the dysfunctional nature of the Fhrer's
family.
Paula Hitler's journal, unearthed at an undisclosed location in
Germany, reveals that her brother was a bully in his teens, and
would beat her.
Recounting the earliest memories of her childhood, when she was
around eight and Adolf was 15, Paula wrote: "Once again I feel my
brother's loose hand across my face."
The typewritten journal is among an assortment of documents that
have been disclosed by historians Timothy Ryback and Florian
Beierl.
Ryback is the head of Germany's Obersalzberg Institute of
Contemporary History, which is dedicated to research into Hitler,
while Beierl has written several books about the Nazi Party leader
and Third Reich chancellor.
They said that scientific tests had verified the documents'
authenticity.
Other insights include the revelation that Paula, always thought
of as the innocent bystander of the Hitler family, was engaged to
one of the Holocaust's most notorious euthanasia doctors.
Ryback said: "This is the first time that we have been able to
get an insight into the Hitler family from a very young age.
"Adolf was the older brother and father figure. He was very
strict with Paula and slapped her around. But she justified it in a
starry-eyed way, because she believed it was for the good of her
education."
The two historians have also located a joint memoir by Hitler's
half-brother, Alois, and half-sister, Angela.
One excerpt describes the violence exercised by Hitler's father,
also called Alois, and how Adolf's mother tried to protect her son
from regular beatings.
"She goes up to the attic, covers Adolf who is lying on the
floor, but cannot deflect the father's final blow. Without a sound
she absorbs it."
Beierl said: "This is a picture of a completely dysfunctional
family that the public has never seen before.
"The terror of the Third Reich was cultivated in Hitler's own
home."
Beierl's research also led him to Russian interrogation papers,
which exposed the fact that Paula Hitler was engaged to Erwin
Jekelius, responsible for gassing 4,000 people during the war.
Beierl said: "Until this point, Paula Hitler had a clean slate.
But the portrayal of her being a poor little creature has suddenly
shifted.
"In my opinion, the fact that she was due to marry one of
Austria's worst criminals means that she was also connected with
death, horror and gas chambers."
And Ryback added: "To me, discovering that Paula was going to
marry Jekelius is one of the most astonishing revelations of my
career.
"She bought into the whole thing -- hook, line and sinker."
Paula, who later lived under the pseudonym Wolf, did not marry
Jekelius, as the wedding was forbidden by her brother.
Ryback said: "It was like a scene from Monty Python. Jekelius
goes to Berlin to ask Hitler for his sister's hand; he is met by
the Gestapo, shipped off to the Eastern front, and snapped up by
the Russians."
'Starving artist' myth dispelled
Other eye-opening documents that shed light on the Hitler
household include a family account book.
One entry mentions a loan of 900 Austrian crowns given to Hitler
in the spring of 1908, enough for the teenager to live on for one
year, and dispels the myth that he existed as a "starving artist"
when in Vienna.
The historians were asked to carry out their extensive research
almost six years ago for the German television station ZDF. Their
findings, due to be broadcast in a 45-minute documentary in Germany
next week, also include interviews with two of Hitler's
relatives.
Ryback said: "This is the first time that these people have
spoken publicly about living under the shadow of Hitler.
They do not romanticize their past. They are very humble and
have suffered their whole lives under the curse of Adolf.
"It is an incredible closing of a loop: Hitler came from a
family of poor farmers. After he rose and fell as a dictator, his
family today is back where they started."
Hitler's relatives requested to remain anonymous in the
documentary and their faces are digitally altered.
(China Daily via agencies, August 5, 2005)