Himmler, Heinrich

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| '''Death'''
 
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|May 23, 1945 (31a Ülzenerstraße [[Lüneburg]], [[Germany]])
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|May 23, 1945 ([[Lüneburg]], [[Germany]])
 
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*Reich Leader of the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] in the NSDAP (1929–1945)
 
*Reich Leader of the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] in the NSDAP (1929–1945)
 
*Reich & Prussian Minister of the Interior of Germany (August 1943–1945)
 
*Reich & Prussian Minister of the Interior of Germany (August 1943–1945)
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*President of "The Ancestral Heritage Research & Teaching Society" of the NSDAP
 
*President of "The Ancestral Heritage Research & Teaching Society" of the NSDAP
 
*Nazi Party Commissioner for All Racial Matters
 
*Nazi Party Commissioner for All Racial Matters
*General for Administration) of Germany (August 1943–1945).
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*General for Administration of Germany (August 1943–1945)
 
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'''Heinrich Luitpold Himmler''' (October 7, 1900–May 23, 1945) was the commander of the Pprotective Squadron (''[[Schutzstaffel SS]]'') and one of the most powerful men in [[Nazi Germany]] by being second in power to [[Adolf Hitler]] in the [[List of SS personnel|Nazi hierarchy]]. As Protective Squadron commander([Reichsführer-SS]]) he controlled the SS and the Secret State Police [[Gestapo]].  
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'''Heinrich Luitpold Himmler''' (October 7, 1900 – May 23, 1945) was one of the most powerful men in [[Nazi Germany]], second only to [[Adolf Hitler]]. As Protective Squadron ([[SS]]) commander, he came to control the Secret State Police ([[Gestapo]]) and was the founder and officer-in-charge of the [[Concentration camp#Germany|Nazi concentration camps]]. Himmler held the final command responsibility for annihilating those deemed unworthy to live by the [[Nazi]] regime.
  
As founder and officer-in-charge of the [[Nazi concentration camps]] and the death squads(''[[Einsatzgruppen]]''), Himmler held final command responsibility for annihilating "subhumans" who were deemed [[Nazism and race|unworthy to live]]. Shortly before the end of the war, he offered to surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he was spared from [[prosecution]] as a Nazi leader. Later in 1945, Himmler committed suicide with [[suicide pill|cyanide]] when he became a captive of the [[British Army]] after Germany had lost [[World War II]].
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He rose to power on the foundation of his absolute loyalty to Hitler and supported the Nazi vision of Aryan supremacy with an almost mystical zeal. In 1934, after convincing Hitler that [[Stormtrooper]] (SA) commander [[Ernst Röhm]] was a threat, Himmler orchestrated Röhm's execution in what has become known as the "[[Night of the Long Knives]]." He proceeded to create, not only in Germany, but throughout Nazi-occupied Europe, a massive secret police apparatus whose efficiency and ruthlessness is perhaps second to none in the annals of human history. During the war years, he amassed even greater personal power and was widely considered as a candidate to become Hitler's successor.
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Himmler is one of the few Nazi leaders on record openly discussing what he called "the extermination of the Jews," which he characterized as a policy known to "every (Nazi) Party member," in a 1943 speech to SS leaders in [[Poland]]. Shortly before the end of the [[World War II]], Himmler became convinced of the futility of the war effort and offered to surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he would be spared from [[prosecution]]. Later, after Germany had lost the war, Himmler committed [[suicide]] with [[cyanide]] when he became a captive of the [[British Army]].
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Himmler was born in [[Munich]] to a [[Bavaria|Bavarian]] [[middle-class]] family. His father was Joseph Gebhard Himmler, a secondary-school teacher and principal in Munich. His mother was Anna Maria Himmler (maiden name Heyder), a devout [[Roman Catholic]]. Heinrich had two brothers. Although Himmler's childhood was quite normal for the time, his father and mother were extraordinarily strict.
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Himmler was born in 1900, in [[Munich]], to a [[Bavaria|Bavarian]] [[middle-class]] family. His father was Joseph Gebhard Himmler, a secondary-school teacher and principal in Munich. His mother was Anna Maria Himmler (maiden name Heyder), a devout [[Roman Catholic]]. Heinrich had two brothers. His father and mother were reportedly extraordinarily strict.
 
   
 
   
Heinrich was named after his [[godparent]], [[Prince Heinrich of Wittelsbach]] of the [[Line of succession to the Bavarian Throne|royal family of Bavaria]]. In 1910, Himmler began attending elite secondary schools in [[Munich]] and [[Landshut]], where studies revolved around [[classic literature]]. While he struggled in athletics, he did well in his schoolwork. At his father's urging, Heinrich kept an extensive diary from age 10 until 24. He enjoyed [[chess]], [[harpsichord]], [[stamp collecting]], and [[gardening]].
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Heinrich was named after his [[godparent]], [[Prince Heinrich of Wittelsbach]] of the [[Line of succession to the Bavarian Throne|royal family of Bavaria]], who was tutored by Heinrich's father.<ref>Richard Breitman, ''The Architect of Genocide'' (The Harvill Press, 2004, ISBN 1844130894), 9.</ref> In 1910, he began attending elite secondary schools in [[Munich]] and [[Landshut]], where his studies revolved around [[classical literature]]. Although he struggled in athletics, he did well with his schoolwork. At his father's urging, Heinrich kept an extensive diary from age 10 until 24. He enjoyed [[chess]], [[harpsichord]], [[stamp collecting]], and [[gardening]].
 
   
 
   
When [[World War I]] began in 1914, Himmler's [[diaries]] showed a keen interest in news of the war. He implored his father to help him get an officer's candidate position. His parents acquiesced, and after his graduation from school in 1918 he began training with the eleventh Bavarian Regiment. Far from athletic, he struggled throughout his military training. Later in that same year, the war ended with Germany's defeat. The [[Treaty of Versailles]], severely limiting Germany's military, ended his aspirations of becoming a professional army officer and he was discharged without seeing battle.
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When [[World War I]] began in 1914, Himmler's [[diaries]] showed a keen interest in news of the war. He implored his father to help him obtain an officer's candidate position. His parents acquiesced to his wishes, and after his graduation from school in 1918, he began training with the eleventh Bavarian Regiment. Because of his poor athletic skills, he struggled throughout his military training. Later that year, the war ended with Germany's defeat, and the [[Treaty of Versailles]] severely limited Germany's military, thus ending Himmler's aspirations of becoming a professional army officer.
 
   
 
   
In 1919 to 1922 Himmler studied [[agronomy]] at Munich Technical Institute. In his diaries, he claimed to be a devout Catholic, and wrote that he would never turn away from the church. However, he was a member of a fraternity that he felt to be at odds with the tenets of the church. Biographers have defined Himmler's theology as [[Ariosophy]], his own religious dogma of the racial superiority of the Aryan race and Germanic [[Meso-Paganism]], partly from his interests in folklore and mythology of the ancient [[Teutonic]] tribes of Northern Europe. Himmler turned into a disbeliever in Christian doctrine and he was very critical of sermons given by priests. However, he felt that the teachings of the church were of the utmost importance to Aryans, since he thought that a "supreme deity" had chosen the German people to rule the world. During this time he became obsessed with the idea of becoming a soldier. He wrote that if Germany did not find itself at war soon, he would go to another country to seek battle.  
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From 1919 to 1922, Himmler studied [[agronomy]] at Munich Technical Institute. He wrote as a devout Catholic, and said that he would never turn away from the Church. At the same time, he was a member of a fraternity that he felt to be at odds with the tenets of his religion. He also demonstrated a strong interest in [[folklore]] and the [[mythology]] of the ancient [[Teutonic]] tribes of Northern Europe.
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In November 1923, Himmler took part in [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler's]] [[Beer Hall Putsch]] under [[Ernst Röhm]]. In 1926, he met his wife in a hotel lobby while escaping a storm. Margarete Siegroth (née Boden) was blonde-haired and blue-eyed, seven years older than Himmler, [[divorced]], and [[Protestant]]. She was physically the epitome of the [[Nordic theory|Nordic]] ideal, though not exceptionally attractive. On July 3, 1928, the two were married and had their only child, daughter Gudrun, on August 8, 1929. Himmler adored his daughter, and called her ''Püppi'' (dolly). Margarete later adopted a son, in whom Himmler showed no interest. Their marriage was difficult, and they separated in 1940 without seeking a divorce. Himmler was far too engulfed in militaristic ideology by this time to serve as a competent husband. He started to become friendly with a staff secretary, Hedwig Potthast, who left her job in 1941 and became his mistress. He fathered two illegitimate children with her — a son, Helge (1942), and a daughter, Nanette Dorothea (1944).
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[[Image:Heinrich-der-finkler-darbringung-der-kaiserkrone.jpg|thumb|Heinrich I of Germany, called Henry the Fowler, was considered a great leader by Himmler, who may have considered himself Henrich's reincarnation.]]
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Soon, Himmler began to reject many tenets of Christian doctrine and was very critical of sermons given by priests who preached compassion for the weak and the brotherhood of all men. He believed that the supreme Deity had chosen the German people to rule the world, and that this was impossible to achieve by "loving one's enemy" or turning the other cheek. During this time he became obsessed with the idea of becoming a soldier. He wrote that if Germany did not find itself at war soon, he would go to another country to seek battle.
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Himmler became increasingly fascinated with ancient German lore and joined various right-wing and [[anti-semitism|anti-semitic]] paramilitary organizations, including [[Ernst Röhm]]'s ''Reichskriegsflagge'' (“Imperial War Flag”). In November 1923, Himmler took part in [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler's]] [[Beer Hall Putsch]] under Ernst Röhm.
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In 1926, Himmler met his wife in a hotel lobby while escaping a storm. Margarete Siegroth (née Boden) was blonde-haired and blue-eyed, seven years older than Himmler, [[divorce]]d, and [[Protestant]]. She was physically the epitome of the [[Nordic theory|Nordic]] ideal, although not exceptionally attractive. On July 3, 1928, the two were married and had their only child, Gudrun, on August 8, 1929. Himmler adored his daughter, and called her ''Püppi'' (dolly). The couple later adopted a son, in whom Himmler reportedly showed little interest. Himmler, by this time, was far too engulfed in militaristic ideology to serve as a competent husband. Their marriage was difficult and they separated in 1940, without seeking a divorce. He started to become friendly with a staff secretary, Hedwig Potthast, who left her job in 1941, and became his mistress. He fathered two illegitimate children with her—a son, Helge (1942), and a daughter, Nanette Dorothea (1944).
  
 
==Rise in the SS==
 
==Rise in the SS==
[[Image:HimmlerOberfhr.jpg|thumb|left|200 px|Photo of Heinrich Himmler with the early uniform of the[[SS]](black cravat and bonnet) in the rank of -[[oberführer]].]]
 
===Early SS (1927–1934)===
 
Himmler joined the [[SS]] in 1925, and in 1927 was appointed deputy [[reichsführer-SS]], a role he took very seriously. Upon the [[resignation]] of SS Commander [[Erhard Heiden]], Himmler was appointed Reichsführer-SS in January 1929. At that time the SS had 280 members, and was considered a mere [[battalion]] of the much larger [[Sturmabteilung|SA]]. Himmler was only considered to be an SA-Oberführer, but after 1929 he referred to himself as "Reichsführer-SS."
 
  
By 1933, when the Nazi Party gained power in Germany, Himmler's SS numbered 52,000 members. The organization had developed strict membership requirements ensuring that all members were of [[Adolf Hitler]]'s "[[Aryan]] [[Herrenvolk]]" ("Aryan master race"). Now a SS commander (''[[Gruppenführer]]'') in the SA, Himmler, along with his deputy [[Reinhard Heydrich]], next began a massive effort to separate the SS from SA control; he introduced black [[SS uniform]]s (designed by [[Hugo Boss]]) to replace the SA brown shirts in the autumn of 1933. Shortly thereafter, he was promoted to commander of the largest SS groups (''[[Obergruppenführer]]) und Reichsführer-SS'' and became an equal of the senior SA commanders, who by this time loathed the SS and the power it held.
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===Early SS career===
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In 1925, Himmler joined the ''Schutzstaffel'' (“Protective Echelon”), the elite corps of the [[Nazi Party]], better known as the [[SS]]. In 1927, he was appointed deputy commanding general of the SS, a role he took very seriously. Upon the [[resignation]] of SS commander [[Erhard Heiden]], Himmler was appointed to lead the SS unit in January 1929. At that time, the SS had only 280 members and was considered an elite [[battalion]] of the much larger [[Stormtroopers]] ([[Sturmabteilung|SA]]).
  
[[Image:Vlcsnap-5522132.png|thumb|right|200px|Heinrich Himmler (left) together with, from left to right: [[Reinhard Heydrich]], [[Karl Wolff]] and an unidentified assistant at the [[Berghof (Hitler)|Obersalzberg]], May 1939.]]
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Under Himmler's leadership, the SS became the vanguard of the Nazi movement, and by 1933, when the Nazi Party gained power in Germany, Himmler's SS numbered 52,000 members. The organization had also developed a mythical ethos based on ancient German lore, as well as strict membership requirements ensuring that all members were of the "Aryan master race." Now holding the rank of commander ''([[Gruppenführer]])'' in the SA, Himmler, along with his deputy, [[Reinhard Heydrich]], began a drive to separate the SS from SA control. He introduced black [[SS uniform]]s to replace the SA brown shirts, in the autumn of 1933.  
[[Image:Himmler Hitler.jpg|thumb|right|[[Heinrich Himmler]] (left) chief of the SS, with [[Adolf Hitler]] (right)]]
 
Himmler, [[Hermann Göring]], and General [[Werner von Blomberg]] agreed that the SA and its leader [[Ernst Röhm]] posed a threat to the German Army and the Nazi leadership of Germany. Röhm had strong "socialistic" and populist views believing that, although Hitler had successfully gained power in Germany, the "real" [[revolution]] had not yet begun and that the Sturmabteiling should become the sole arms-bearing corp of the State, leaving some Nazi leaders believing Röhm was intent on using the SA to administer a [[coup]].
 
  
With persuasion from Himmler and Göring, Hitler agreed that Röhm had to die. He delegated the task of Röhm's demise to Himmler and Göering who, along with [[Reinhard Heydrich]], [[Kurt Daluege]], and [[Walter Schellenberg]], ordered the [[execution]] of Röhm (carried out by [[Theodor Eicke]]) and other senior SA officials, as well as some of Hitler's personal enemies (like [[Gregor Strasser]] and [[Kurt von Schleicher]]) on June 30, 1934, in what became known as "The [[Night of the Long Knives]]." The next day, Himmler's title of Reichsführer-SS became a rank to which he was appointed, and the SS became an independent organization of the Nazi Party.
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SA leader [[Ernst Röhm]] had strong [[socialistic]] and populist views and argued that the [[Stormtroopers]] should be the sole arms-bearing corp of the state. Himmler and [[Hermann Göring]] agreed that the SA now constituted a threat and convinced Hitler that Röhm had to die. Himmler and [[Reinhard Heydrich]] developed the legal pretext for the [[execution]] of Röhm, and Hitler personally led the SS raid against the SA leaders on June 30, 1934. Röhm and SA Senior Group Leader Edmund Heines were among at least 85 SA leaders put to death in what became known as "The [[Night of the Long Knives]]." The next day, the SS became independent from the SA in the Nazi Party, while the SA was soon marginalized in the Nazi power structure, in favor of the SS.
  
 
===Consolidation of power===
 
===Consolidation of power===
In 1936, Himmler gained further authority as all of Germany's uniformed [[law enforcement]] agencies were amalgamated into the new, uniformed, regular German police force (''[[Ordnungspolizei]]''), whose main office became a headquarters branch of the SS as Himmler was accorded the title Chief of the German Police. Himmler, however, was never able to gain operational control over the uniformed police. The actual powers granted to him with the appointment were those previously exercised in police matters by the ministry of the interior, and not even all of those. It was only in 1943, when Himmler was appointed Minister of the Interior, that the transfer of ministerial power was complete. Indeed, his full title was Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police in the Ministry of the Interior, which clearly indicates the limits of his powers.
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Himmler had become the head of the Munich police soon after Hitler came to power in 1933. Germany's political police forces came under his authority in 1934, when he organized them into the secret-police force, the ''[[Gestapo]],'' which had formerly been a branch of the [[Prussia]]n Police. He also established the Nazi regime's first concentration camp at [[Dachau]], as well as Germany's entire [[concentration camp]] complex. (Once the war began, new internment camps not formally classified as "concentration camps" would be established, over which Himmler and the SS would not exercise control.)
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[[Image:Flag Schutzstaffel.svg|thumb|Official insignia of the SS]]
  
Germany's political police forces came under Himmler's authority in 1934, when he organized them into the ''[[Gestapo]]'' secret-police force as well as Germany's entire ''[[concentration camps]]'' complex. Once war began, though, new internment camps not formally classified as concentration camps would be established, over which Himmler and the SS would not exercise control. In 1943, following the outbreak of popular word-of-mouth criticism of the regime as a result of the [[Stalingrad]] disaster, the party apparatus, professing disappointment with the Gestapo's performance in deterring such criticism, established the so-called [[Politische Staffeln]] as its own political policing organ, destroying the Gestapo's nominal monopoly in this field.  
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Himmler's SS was imbued with a mystical devotion to Hitler and the Nazi vision for the future glory of the [[Third Reich]]. Himmler exhorted his officers to revere Germany’s ancient past, telling them: “Just as a tree withers if its roots are removed, so a people fall if they do not honor their ancestors.” On July 1, 1935, Himmler founded an SS institute whose task was to research primeval German culture. He had come to detest Christianity and its "Jewish" Christ, insisting the Germanic ethics even reject such basic values as monogamy. SS recruits were closely examined to ensure their pure Aryan blood and features. Since many of these Aryan men would surely be killed in the coming war, young German women were encouraged to bear their children, even without the benefit of wedlock.
  
With his 1936 appointment, Himmler also gained ministerial authority over Germany's non-political detective forces (''[[Kripo]]''), which he attempted to combine with the Gestapo into the security police (''[[Sicherheitspolizei]]''), placed under the command of [[Reinhard Heydrich]], and thus gain operational control over Germany's entire detective force. But the merger remained a dead letter within the [[Reich]], with Kripo remaining firmly under the control of the civilian administration and later the party apparatus as the latter annexed the civilian administration. However, in occupied territories not incorporated into the Reich proper it mostly proved effective.  Following the outbreak of [[World War II]], Himmler formed the Reich Security Main Office (''[[RSHA|Reichssicherheitshauptamt]]'') wherein Gestapo, Kripo, and the ''[[SD]]'' became departments. Attempts in 1940 to use the new RSHA structure to gain control over Kripo by giving RSHA regional officers command authority over Kripo offices in their jurisdictions were rebuffed. The SS was also developing combat divisions of the SS  (''[[SS-Verfügungstruppe]]''), which would later become known as the Armed SS ([[Waffen-SS]]).
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In 1936, Himmler gained further authority when all of Germany's uniformed [[law enforcement]] agencies were amalgamated into the new regular German police force ''([[Ordnungspolizei]])'', whose main office became a headquarters branch of the SS. Himmler was accorded the title Chief of the German Police. He also gained ministerial authority over Germany's non-political detective forces ''([[Kripo]])''. With the outbreak of [[World War II]], Himmler formed the Reich Security Main Office ''([[RSHA|Reichssicherheitshauptamt]])''. The SS was also developing combat divisions which would later become known as the Armed SS ([[Waffen-SS]]).
  
 
== Himmler's war on the Jews ==
 
== Himmler's war on the Jews ==
[[Image:Himmler visits Dachau 1936.jpg|right|thumb|SS Chief Heinrich Himmler (front right, facing prisoner) on a personal visit to the [[Dachau Concentration Camp]] in 1936.]]
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{{readout||left|250px|Heinrich Himmler was second only to [[Adolf Hitler]] in power in [[Nazi]] [[Germany]] and was the founder and commander of the Nazi [[concentration camp]]s}}
After the Night of the Long Knives, the death camp guards (''SS-[[Totenkopfverbände]]'') were given the task of organizing and administering Germany's regime of [[concentration camp]]s and, after 1941, the [[extermination camp]]s in occupied [[Poland]]. The SS, through its intelligence arm, the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]'' (SD), was charged with finding [[Jew]]s, [[Roma (people)|Gypsies]], [[communists]], and those persons of any other cultural, [[racial]], political, or [[religious]] affiliation deemed by the Nazis to be either ''[[Untermensch]]'' (sub-human) or in opposition to the regime, and placing them in concentration camps. Himmler opened the first of these camps near [[Dachau concentration camp|Dachau]] (see picture) on March 22, 1933. He became one of the main architects of [[the Holocaust]], using elements of [[mysticism]] and a fanatical belief in the [[racism|racist]] Nazi [[ideology]] to justify the [[mass murder]] and [[genocide]] of millions of victims. Himmler had similar plans for the Poles and for many other people in East-Europa, for example, the Russians. All intellectuals were to be killed and other Poles were to be only literate enough to read traffic signs.
 
  
In contrast to [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]], Himmler inspected several concentration and war camps. In August 1941, Himmler was present at a mass shooting of Jews in [[Minsk]], [[Belarus]] and was said to have turned green in the face after brain matter from a victim splashed onto his coat; his assistant [[Karl Wolff]] had to jump forward and hold him steady. After that, the [[Nazis]] were searching for a "more hygienic" or "organized" way to kill, which culminated in the use of the gas chambers.
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Himmler opened the first of the [[concentration camp]]s near [[Dachau concentration camp|Dachau]] on March 22, 1933. Under his direction, the ''SS-[[Totenkopfverbände]]''—"Death's Head Formations"—were given the task of organizing and administering Germany's growing network of these centers. Starting in 1941, they also began to run the [[extermination camp]]s in occupied [[Poland]]. The SS, through its intelligence arm, the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]'' (SD), was also charged with finding [[Jew]]s, [[Roma (people)|Gypsies]], [[communism|communists]], and other persons of any other cultural, [[race|racial]], political, or [[religion|religious]] affiliation deemed by the Nazis to be either "sub-human" ''([[Untermensch]])'' or in opposition to the regime, and placing them in concentration camps.
  
Himmler believed that it was actually possible to breed a master race of all blond-haired, blue-eyed Aryans in Germany as his previous experience as a chicken farmer had taught him the rudimentary basics of animal breeding. He believed that he could engineer the German populace, through selective breeding, to be entirely 'Nordic' in appearance within several decades of the end of the war.
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Himmler was thus one of the main architects of [[the Holocaust]], using elements of [[mysticism]] and a fanatical belief in the [[racism|racist]] Nazi [[ideology]] to justify the [[mass murder]] and [[genocide]] of millions of victims.<ref>Albert Speer, ''Inside the Third Reich'' (New York, NY: Macmillan, 1970, ISBN 0297000152)</ref> Himmler had similar plans for the Poles and for many other people in Eastern Europe.
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[[Image:VolarydeadJews.jpg|thumb|200px|German citizens are required to walk past the bodies of Jewish women killed by Himmler's SS troops at the end of WWII.]]
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Unlike [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]], Himmler personally inspected several concentration and war camps. In August 1941, he was present at a mass shooting of Jews in [[Minsk]], [[Belarus]]. The gore and inefficiency of this massacre led to a search for a more hygienic and organized way to put large numbers of victims to death, which culminated in the use of the [[gas chamber]]s.  
  
===[[Posen speech]]===
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On October 4, 1943, Himmler referred explicitly to the extermination of the Jewish people during a secret SS meeting in the city of [[Poznań]] (Posen), Poland. The following are excerpts from a transcription of an audio recording that exists of the speech:
On October 4, 1943, Himmler referred explicitly to the extermination of the Jewish people during a secret SS meeting in the city of [[Poznań]]. The following are excerpts from a transcription of an audio recording that exists of the speech:
 
  
<blockquote>
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<blockquote>I am now referring to the evacuation of the Jews, to the extermination of the Jewish people. This is something that is easily said: "The Jewish people will be exterminated," says every Party member, "this is very obvious, it is in our program—elimination of the Jews." …Most of you here know what it means when 100 corpses lie next to each other, when 500 lie there or when 1,000 are lined up. To have endured this and at the same time to have remained a decent person—with exceptions due to human weaknesses—had made us tough. This is an honor roll in our history which has never been and never will be put in writing… If the Jews were still part of the German nation, we would most likely arrive now at the state we were at in 1916/17.<ref>Holocaust History.org, [http://www.holocaust-history.org/himmler-poznan/ Himmler's Poznan Speech.] Retrieved August 25, 2007.</ref> </blockquote>
<p>I also want to mention a very difficult subject before you here, completely openly.</p>
 
 
 
<p>It should be discussed amongst us, and yet, nevertheless, we will never speak about it in public …</p>
 
 
 
<p>I am talking about the "Jewish evacuation": the extermination of the Jewish people.</p>
 
 
 
<p>It is one of those things that is easily said. "The Jewish people is being exterminated," every Party member will tell you, 'perfectly clear, it's part of our plans, we're eliminating the Jews, exterminating them, ha!, a small matter. </p>
 
</blockquote>
 
  
 
==The Second World War==
 
==The Second World War==
Before the [[Operation Barbarossa|invasion of Russia]] in 1941, Himmler began preparing his SS for a war of extermination against the forces of "[[Judeo-Bolshevism]]." Himmler, always glad to make parallels between Nazi Germany and the [[Middle Age]]s, compared the invasion to the [[Crusade]]s. He collected volunteers from all over Europe, including [[Denmark|Danes]], [[Norway|Norwegians]], [[Sweden|Swedes]], [[Netherlands|Dutch]], [[Belgium|Belgians]], [[France|French]], [[Spain|Spaniards]], and, after the invasion, [[Ukraine|Ukrainians]], [[Latvia]]ns, [[Lithuania]]ns, and [[Estonia]]ns, attracting the non-Germanic volunteers by declaring a pan-European crusade to defend the traditional values of Old Europe from the "Godless Bolshevik Hordes."  
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Even before the [[Operation Barbarossa|invasion of Russia]] in 1941, Himmler began preparing his SS for a war of extermination against the forces of "[[Judeo-Bolshevism]]." He compared the invasion to the [[Crusade]]s and mobilized volunteers from Nazi-occupied territories all over Europe. After the invasion more volunteers joined from the former Soviet countries: [[Ukraine|Ukrainians]], [[Latvia]]ns, [[Lithuania]]ns, and [[Estonia]]ns, attracted to Himmler's vision of a pan-European crusade to defend the traditional values of Old Europe from the "Godless Bolshevik Hordes." As long as they were employed against the hated Soviet troops, many of these recruits from the former Soviet territories performed fanatically, expecting no mercy if captured. When employed against the Western Allies, however, they tended to surrender eagerly. [[Waffen SS]] recruitment in Western and Nordic Europe was largely unsuccessful.
  
In truth, the "volunteers" from the occupied Soviet territories were mostly collaborator policemen pressed en-masse into the Waffen SS once their territories of origin were overrun by the [[Red Army]], though especially in the Baltic states many natives volunteered to serve in the Black Order of Himmler due to their loathing of communism. As long as they were employed against Soviet troops, they performed fanatically, expecting no mercy if captured. When employed against the Western Allies, they tended to surrender eagerly. Waffen SS recruitment in Western and Nordic Europe was abysmally unsuccessful, though a number of Waffen-SS Legions were founded, such as the Wallonian contingent led by [[Leon Degrelle]], whom Himmler planned to appoint as [[Chancellor]] of a restored [[Burgundy]] controlled by the SS once the war was over.
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In 1942, [[Reinhard Heydrich]], Himmler's right hand man, was killed in [[Prague]] after an attack by Czech special forces. Himmler immediately carried out a reprisal, killing the entire male population in the village of [[Lidice]].
  
In 1942, [[Reinhard Heydrich]], Himmler's right hand man was killed in [[Prague]] after an attack by Czech special forces. Himmler immediately carried out a reprisal, killing the entire male population in the village of [[Lidice]].
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In 1943, Himmler was appointed German [[Interior Minister]]. Although his attempts to use this office to gain even more power incurred displeasure from Hitler, the involvement of the German Military Intelligence in the [[July 20 Plot|July 20, 1944, plot]] led the ''Führer'' to make Himmler's SD the sole intelligence service of the [[Third Reich]]. It also soon emerged that General [[Friedrich Fromm]], Commander-in-Chief of the Replacement Army, was implicated in the conspiracy. Fromm's removal, coupled with Hitler's great suspicion of the army, led the way to Himmler's appointment as Fromm's successor.
  
In 1943, Himmler was appointed German [[Interior Minister]]. This was very much a ''[[Pyrrhic victory]]''. Himmler sought to use his new office to reverse the party apparatus' annexation of the civil service and tried to challenge the authority of the Party Gauleiters.
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In late 1944, Himmler became Commander-in-Chief of the [[army group]] ''Upper [[Rhine]],'' which was fighting the oncoming [[United States]] [[U.S. Seventh Army|7th Army]] and the [[France|French]] 1st Army in the [[Alsace]] region on the west bank of the Rhine. Himmler held this post until early 1945, when Russian advances led Hitler to place Himmler in command of the newly formed [[Army Group Vistula]] on the eastern front. As Himmler had no practical military experience as a field commander, this choice proved catastrophic and he was quickly relieved of his field commands, to be replaced by General [[Gotthard Heinrici]].
This hopeless aspiration was easily frustrated by [[Martin Bormann]], Hitler's secretary and party chancellor. It also incurred some displeasure from Hitler, himself, whose long-standing disdain for the traditional Civil Service was one of the foundations of Nazi administrative thinking. Himmler made things much worse still, when following his appointment as head of the ''[[Ersatzheer]]'' (Replacement Army), he tried to use his authority in both military and police matters by transferring soldiers to the Waffen-SS.  
 
  
With Himmler about to hang himself, Bormann could not give him the rope fast enough, initially acquiesing in the lunacy, until furious protests broke out, then destroying the scheme with a vengeance leaving Himmler much discredited especially with the Party, whose Gauleiters now saw Bormann as their protector, since Himmler was urged on by his [[SS and Police Leaders]] to cement the authority of the SS in the Reich at the expense of the Party.
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As the war was drawing to a German defeat, Himmler was considered by many to be a candidate to succeed Hitler as the ''[[Führer]]'' of Germany, although it now appears that Hitler never considered Himmler as a successor.
 
 
The involvement in the [July 20 Plot|July 20, 1944 plot]] against Hitler by leaders of the ''[[Abwehr]]'' (German military intelligence), including its head, Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]], prompted Hitler to disband the ''Abwehr'' and make the SD the sole intelligence service of the [[Third Reich]]. This increased Himmler's already considerable personal power.
 
It also soon emerged that General [[Friedrich Fromm]], Commander-in-Chief of the Replacement Army, was implicated in the conspiracy. Fromm's removal, coupled with Hitler's great suspicion of the army, led the way to Himmler's appointment as Fromm's successor, a position he predictibly abused to enormously expand the Waffen SS even further to the detriment of the rapidly deteriorating ''[[Wehrmacht]]''.
 
 
 
Unfortunately for Himmler, the investigation soon revealed the involvement of many SS Officers in the conspiracy, including some senior ones, which played into the hands of Bormann's power struggle against the SS, as very few party cadre officers were implicated. Even more importantly, a number of senior SS officers began to conspire against the Reichsführer SS, as they believed that he would be unable to achieve victory in the power struggle against Martin Bormann. Among these defectors were [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]], Heydrich's successor as Chief of the [[Reichssicherheitshauptamt]], and [[Gruppenführer]] [[Heinrich Müller]], the Chief of the [[Gestapo]].
 
 
 
In late 1944, Himmler became Commander-in-Chief of [[army group]] ''Upper [[Rhine]]'', which was fighting the oncoming [[United States]] [[U.S. Seventh Army|7th Army]] and the[[France|French]] 1st Army in the [[Alsace]] region on the west bank of the Rhine. Himmler held this post until early 1945 when, after the Wehrmacht's failure to halt the [[Red Army]]'s [[Vistula-Oder offensive]], Hitler placed Himmler in command of the newly formed [[Army Group Vistula]] at the instigation of Bormann, who knew that Himmler had no ability at commanding troops. As Himmler had no practical military experience as a field commander, this choice proved catastrophic and he was quickly relieved of his field commands, to be replaced by General [[Gotthard Heinrici]].
 
 
 
As the war was drawing to a German defeat, Himmler was considered by many to be a candidate to succeed Hitler as the [[Führer]] of Germany. However, it became known after the war that Hitler never really considered Himmler as a successor, even before his betrayal, believing that the authority that was his as head of the SS had caused him to be so hated that he would be rejected by the Party.
 
 
 
===Controversial Speeches===
 
In 1939, Himmler spoke of how it would be useful if every man (even if he was married) had a mistress. He said this because he believed that the nation would need more people as many men would be killed in War.
 
  
 
==Peace negotiations, capture, and death==
 
==Peace negotiations, capture, and death==
[[Image:Himmler45.jpg|thumb|175px|left|Heinrich Himmler in 1945.]]
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[[Image:Himmler45.jpg|thumb|175px|left|Heinrich Himmler in 1945]]
In the winter of 1944-45, Himmler's [[Waffen-SS]] numbered 910,000 members, with the ''[[Allgemeine-SS]]'' (at least on paper) hosting a membership of nearly two million. However, by the spring of 1945, Himmler had lost faith in German victory, probably partially due to his discussions with his [[masseur]] [[Felix Kersten]] and [[Walter Schellenberg]]. He came to the realization that if the Nazi regime was to have any chance of survival, it would need to seek peace with [[United Kingdom|Britain]] and the United States. Toward this end, he contacted [[Count]] [[Folke Bernadotte]] of [[Sweden]] at [[Lübeck]], near the [[Denmark|Danish]] border, and began [[Negotiation (process)|negotiation]]s to surrender in the West.
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By the spring of 1945, Himmler had lost faith in German victory. He came to the realization that if the Nazi regime was to have any chance of survival, it would need to seek peace with [[United Kingdom|Britain]] and the United States. Toward this end, he contacted [[Count]] [[Folke Bernadotte]] of [[Sweden]] at [[Lübeck]], near the [[Denmark|Danish]] border, and began [[Negotiation (process)|negotiation]]s.
  
Himmler hoped the British and Americans would fight their [[Soviet]] allies with the remains of the [[Wehrmacht]]. When Hitler discovered this, Himmler was declared a [[treason|traitor]] and stripped of all his titles and ranks the day before [[death of Adolf Hitler|Hitler committed suicide]]. Hitler's successor as Chancellor of Germany was [[Joseph Goebbels]] who had argued with Himmler many times during his Nazi career. [[Hermann Goering]] was also considered as a traitor by Hitler. At the time of Himmler's denunciation, he held the positions of Reich Leader-SS, Chief of the German Police, Reich Commissioner of German Nationhood, Reich Minister of the Interior, Supreme Commander of the ''[[Volkssturm]]'', and Supreme Commander of the Home Army.
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When Hitler discovered this, Himmler was declared a [[treason|traitor]] and stripped of all his titles and ranks the day before [[death of Adolf Hitler|Hitler committed suicide]]. Hitler's successor as Chancellor of Germany was [[Joseph Goebbels]]. At the time of Himmler's denunciation, he held the positions of Commanding General of the SS, Chief of the German Police, Realm Commissioner of German Nationhood, Realm Minister of the Interior, Supreme Commander of the People's Storm ''([[Volkssturm]])'', and Supreme Commander of the Home Army.
  
Unfortunately for Himmler, his negotiations with Count Bernadotte failed. Since he could not return to [[Berlin]], he joined [[Grand Admiral]] [[Karl Dönitz]], who by then was commanding all German forces within the northern part of the western front, in nearby [[Plön]]. Dönitz immediately sent Himmler away, explaining that there was no place for him in the German government.
+
Unfortunately for Himmler, his negotiations with Count Bernadotte failed. Since he could not return to [[Berlin]], he joined [[Grand Admiral]] [[Karl Dönitz]], who by then was commanding all the German forces within the northern part of the western front, in nearby [[Plön]]. Dönitz immediately sent Himmler away, explaining that there was no place for him in the German government.
  
Himmler next turned to the Americans as a [[defector]], contacting the headquarters of General [[Dwight Eisenhower]] and proclaiming he would surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he was spared from [[prosecution]] as a Nazi leader. In an example of Himmler's mental state at this point, he sent a personal application to Eisenhower stating he wished to apply for the position of "Minister of Police" in the post-war government of Germany. He also reportedly mused on how to handle his first meeting with the [[Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force|SHAEF]] commander and whether to give the Nazi salute, or shake hands with him. Eisenhower refused to have anything to do with Himmler, who was subsequently declared a major [[war crimes|war criminal]].
+
Himmler next turned to the Americans as a [[defector]], contacting the headquarters of General [[Dwight Eisenhower]] and proclaiming he would surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he was spared from [[prosecution]] as a Nazi leader. Eisenhower refused to have anything to do with Himmler, who was subsequently declared a major [[war crimes|war criminal]].
  
 
[[Image:Himmler Dead.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Himmler's corpse after his suicide by poison in Allied custody, 1945.]]
 
[[Image:Himmler Dead.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Himmler's corpse after his suicide by poison in Allied custody, 1945.]]
In an extract from [[Norman Brook]]'s ''War Cabinet Diaries'', [[Winston Churchill]] took a view towards Himmler widely shared during the war, advocating his assassination. According to Brook, responding to a suggestion that the Nazi leaders be executed, "this prompted Churchill to ask if they should negotiate with Himmler 'and bump him off later,' once peace terms had been agreed. The suggestion to cut a deal for a German surrender with Himmler and then assassinate him with support from the Home Office. 'Quite entitled to do so,' the minutes record it (eg, Churchill) as commenting."
 
  
Unwanted by his former colleagues and hunted by the Allies, Himmler wandered for several days around [[Flensburg]] near the Danish border, capital of the Dönitz government. Attempting to evade [[arrest]], he disguised himself as a sergeant-major of the Secret Military Police, using the name Heinrich Hitzinger, shaving his moustache and donning an eye patch over his left eye, in the hope that he could return to Bavaria. He had equipped himself with a full set of false documents, but someone whose papers were wholly in order was so unusual that it aroused the suspicions of a [[British Army]] unit in [[Bremen (city)|Bremen]], Germany. Himmler was arrested on May 22 by Sergeant Arthur Britton, and in captivity, was soon recognized.
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Unwanted by his former colleagues and hunted by the Allies, Himmler wandered for several days near the Danish border, around [[Flensburg]], the capital of the Dönitz government. Attempting to evade [[arrest]], he disguised himself as a sergeant-major of the Secret Military Police, using the name Heinrich Hitzinger, shaving his mustache and donning an eye patch over his left eye, in the hope that he could return to [[Bavaria]]. He had equipped himself with a full set of false documents, but someone whose papers were wholly "in order" was so unusual that it aroused the suspicions of a [[British Army]] unit in [[Bremen (city)|Bremen]]. He was arrested on May 22, and, in captivity, was soon recognized.
  
Himmler was scheduled to stand trial with other German leaders as a major war criminal at [[Nuremberg Trials|Nuremberg]], but committed [[suicide]] in [[Lüneburg]] by swallowing a [[potassium cyanide]] capsule before [[interrogation]] could begin. These cyanide tablets were fitted in caps in SS officers' teeth (which they snapped open and swallowed the tablet) before the Holocaust began, so that they would always have the choice of suicide if anything went wrong. His last words were "''Ich bin Heinrich Himmler!''" ("''I am Heinrich Himmler!''"). Shortly afterwards, Himmler's body was secretly buried in an [[unmarked grave]] on the [[Lüneburg Heath]]. The precise location of Himmler's grave remains unknown.
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Himmler was scheduled to stand trial with other German leaders as a major war criminal at [[Nuremberg Trials|Nuremberg]], but committed [[suicide]] in [[Lüneburg]] by swallowing a [[potassium cyanide]] capsule before [[interrogation]] could begin. His last words were "''Ich bin Heinrich Himmler!''" ("I am Heinrich Himmler!"). Shortly afterward, Himmler's body was secretly buried in an [[unmarked grave]] on the [[Lüneburg Heath]]. The precise location of Himmler's grave remains unknown.
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
As Reichsführer-SS, Heinrich Himmler controlled the SS and the Gestapo and, as such, he was second in power to Adolf Hitler in the Nazi hierarchy. Besides using the ''Einsatzgruppen'' death squads to round up, murder, and oppress people, Himmler is also remembered as the founder and commander of the infamous Nazi concentration camps, where he held final responsibility for annihilating "subhumans" (actually the Jews, political prisoners, ethnic minorities of Europe, and those who dod not fit the Aryan mold) who were deemed unworthy to live.
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Heinrich Himmler controlled the Nazi regime's Protective Squad ([[SS]]) and the Secret Police ([[Gestapo]]) making him second only to [[Adolf Hitler]] in power, in the Nazi hierarchy. Besides using the infamous death squads to round up, murder, and oppress people, Himmler is also remembered as the founder and commander of the infamous Nazi [[concentration camp]]s, where he held final responsibility for annihilating "subhumans"—actually the [[Jews]], [[political prisoner]]s, ethnic minorities, and those who did not fit the Aryan mold—who were deemed unworthy to live.  
 
   
 
   
Historians are divided on the psychology, motives, and influences that drove Himmler. Some see him as a willing dupe of Hitler, fully under his influence and seeing himself essentially as a tool, carrying Hitler's views to their logical conclusion. A key issue in understanding Himmler is to what extent he was a primary instigator and developer of anti-Semitism and racial murder in Nazi Germany in his own right, and not totally within Hitler's control, or was simply the executor of Hitler's direct orders. A related issue is the extent to which anti-semitism and racism were primary motives for him, over and above self-aggrandisement, accumulation of power and influence.
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Historians are divided on the psychology, motives, and influences that drove Himmler. Many see him as a willing tool of Hitler, carrying Hitler's views to their logical conclusion. A key issue in understanding Himmler is to what extent he was a primary instigator and developer of [[anti-semitism]] and racial murder in [[Nazi Germany]]—and not totally within Hitler's control—and to what extent he was simply the executor of Hitler's direct orders. A related issue is whether antisemitism and racism were primary motives for him, as opposed to self-aggrandizement and the accumulation of power.
  
Himmler to some extent answered this himself saying if Hitler were to tell him to shoot his mother, he would do it and "be proud of the Führer's confidence." It was this unconditional loyalty that was the driving force behind Himmler's unlikely career. Most commentators agree that commitment to Hitler's murderous racism made Himmler the mastermind of ethnic cleansing and the Holocaust.
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Himmler to some extent answered this himself, once saying that if Hitler were to tell him to shoot his mother, he would do it and "be proud of the Führer's confidence." This unconditional loyalty was surely one of the driving forces behind Himmler's unlikely career.
  
According to the [[Jewish Virtual Library]], Himmler's decisive innovation was to transform the race question from "a negative concept based on matter-of-course anti-Semitism" into "an organizational task for building up the SS ... It was Himmler's master stroke that he succeeded in indoctrinating the SS with an apocalyptic `idealism' beyond all guilt and responsibility, which rationalized mass murder as a form of martyrdom and harshness towards oneself."
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==Notes==
 
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<references/>
Wolfgang Sauer, historian at [[University of California, Berkeley|Berkeley]] felt that "although he was pedantic, dogmatic, and dull, Himmler emerged under Hitler as second in actual power. His strength lay in a combination of unusual shrewdness, burning ambition, and servile loyalty to Hitler."
 
 
 
A main focus of recent work on Himmler has been the extent to which he competed for, and craved, Hitler's attention and respect, along with other Nazi leaders. The events of the last days of the war, when he abandoned Hitler and began separate negotiations with the Allies, are obviously significant in this respect.
 
 
 
Himmler appears to have had a completely distorted view of how he was perceived by the Allies; he intended to meet with American and British leaders and have discussions "as gentlemen." He tried to buy off their vengeance by last-minute reprieves for Jews and important prisoners. According to British soldiers who arrested Himmler, he was genuinely shocked to be treated as a prisoner.
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Breitman, Richard. ''Himmler and the Final Solution: The Architect of Genocide'', Pimlico/Random House, 2004. ISBN 1-84413-089-4
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* Breitman, Richard. ''The Architect of Genocide''. The Harvill Press, 2004. ISBN 1844130894
*Haiger, Ernst. "Fictions, Facts, and Forgeries: The `Revelations' of Peter and Martin Allen about the History of the Second World War." ''The Journal of Intelligence History'', Vol 6 No. 1 Summer 2006 [published 2007], pp. 105-117
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* Hale, Christopher. ''Himmler's Crusade: The True Story of the 1938 Nazi Expedition Into Tibet.'' Bantam Books, 2003. ISBN 0593049527
*Hale, Christopher. ''Himmler's Crusade: The True Story of the 1938 Nazi Expedition Into Tibet'', Transworld Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0-593-04952-7
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* Padfield, Peter. ''Himmler: Reichs Führer-SS''. Cassel & Company, 2001. ISBN 0304358398
*Padfield, Peter. ''Himmler: Reichsführer-SS'', Cassel & Company, 2001. ISBN 0-304-35839-8
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* Pringle, Heather. ''The Master Plan: Himmler's Scholars and the Holocaust''. Hyperion, 2006. ISBN 0786868864
*Pringle, Heather.'' The Master Plan: Himmler's Scholars and the Holocaust'', Hyperion, 2006. ISBN 0786868864
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* Speer, Albert. ''Inside the Third Reich''. New York, NY: Macmillan, 1970. ISBN 0297000152
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.worldfuturefund.org/wffmaster/Reading/Germany/Himmlerspeeches.htm List of Himmler speeches] A very detailed list of Himmler speeches including online sources and material in the U.S. National Archives.  Article numbers in the Archives are listed for professional scholars.
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All links retrieved December 13, 2017.
* [http://www.holocaustresearchproject.net/holoprelude/himmler.html About Heinrich Himmler]
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* [http://www.worldfuturefund.org/wffmaster/Reading/Germany/Himmlerspeeches.htm List of Himmler speeches] U.S. National Archives
{{wikisource author}}
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* [http://www.fpp.co.uk/Himmler/index.html Index to some items on Heinrich Himmler] International Campaign for Real History
  
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Latest revision as of 22:49, 3 February 2022

Heinrich Himmler
HLHimmler.jpg
Birth October 7, 1900 (Munich, Germany)
Death May 23, 1945 (Lüneburg, Germany)
Party National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP)
Political positions
  • Reich Leader of the SS in the NSDAP (1929–1945)
  • Reich & Prussian Minister of the Interior of Germany (August 1943–1945)
  • Chief of German police (June 1936–1945)
  • Chief of Army Equipment and Commander of the Replacement Army of Germany (July 1944–1945)
  • Reich Commissioner for the Strengthening of Germanism in the NSDAP (October 1939–1945)
  • President of the Society "Fountain of Life" of the NSDAP (September 1936–1945)
  • President of "The Ancestral Heritage Research & Teaching Society" of the NSDAP
  • Nazi Party Commissioner for All Racial Matters
  • General for Administration of Germany (August 1943–1945)

Heinrich Luitpold Himmler (October 7, 1900 – May 23, 1945) was one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany, second only to Adolf Hitler. As Protective Squadron (SS) commander, he came to control the Secret State Police (Gestapo) and was the founder and officer-in-charge of the Nazi concentration camps. Himmler held the final command responsibility for annihilating those deemed unworthy to live by the Nazi regime.

He rose to power on the foundation of his absolute loyalty to Hitler and supported the Nazi vision of Aryan supremacy with an almost mystical zeal. In 1934, after convincing Hitler that Stormtrooper (SA) commander Ernst Röhm was a threat, Himmler orchestrated Röhm's execution in what has become known as the "Night of the Long Knives." He proceeded to create, not only in Germany, but throughout Nazi-occupied Europe, a massive secret police apparatus whose efficiency and ruthlessness is perhaps second to none in the annals of human history. During the war years, he amassed even greater personal power and was widely considered as a candidate to become Hitler's successor.

Himmler is one of the few Nazi leaders on record openly discussing what he called "the extermination of the Jews," which he characterized as a policy known to "every (Nazi) Party member," in a 1943 speech to SS leaders in Poland. Shortly before the end of the World War II, Himmler became convinced of the futility of the war effort and offered to surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he would be spared from prosecution. Later, after Germany had lost the war, Himmler committed suicide with cyanide when he became a captive of the British Army.

Biography

Himmler was born in 1900, in Munich, to a Bavarian middle-class family. His father was Joseph Gebhard Himmler, a secondary-school teacher and principal in Munich. His mother was Anna Maria Himmler (maiden name Heyder), a devout Roman Catholic. Heinrich had two brothers. His father and mother were reportedly extraordinarily strict.

Heinrich was named after his godparent, Prince Heinrich of Wittelsbach of the royal family of Bavaria, who was tutored by Heinrich's father.[1] In 1910, he began attending elite secondary schools in Munich and Landshut, where his studies revolved around classical literature. Although he struggled in athletics, he did well with his schoolwork. At his father's urging, Heinrich kept an extensive diary from age 10 until 24. He enjoyed chess, harpsichord, stamp collecting, and gardening.

When World War I began in 1914, Himmler's diaries showed a keen interest in news of the war. He implored his father to help him obtain an officer's candidate position. His parents acquiesced to his wishes, and after his graduation from school in 1918, he began training with the eleventh Bavarian Regiment. Because of his poor athletic skills, he struggled throughout his military training. Later that year, the war ended with Germany's defeat, and the Treaty of Versailles severely limited Germany's military, thus ending Himmler's aspirations of becoming a professional army officer.

From 1919 to 1922, Himmler studied agronomy at Munich Technical Institute. He wrote as a devout Catholic, and said that he would never turn away from the Church. At the same time, he was a member of a fraternity that he felt to be at odds with the tenets of his religion. He also demonstrated a strong interest in folklore and the mythology of the ancient Teutonic tribes of Northern Europe.

Heinrich I of Germany, called Henry the Fowler, was considered a great leader by Himmler, who may have considered himself Henrich's reincarnation.

Soon, Himmler began to reject many tenets of Christian doctrine and was very critical of sermons given by priests who preached compassion for the weak and the brotherhood of all men. He believed that the supreme Deity had chosen the German people to rule the world, and that this was impossible to achieve by "loving one's enemy" or turning the other cheek. During this time he became obsessed with the idea of becoming a soldier. He wrote that if Germany did not find itself at war soon, he would go to another country to seek battle.

Himmler became increasingly fascinated with ancient German lore and joined various right-wing and anti-semitic paramilitary organizations, including Ernst Röhm's Reichskriegsflagge (“Imperial War Flag”). In November 1923, Himmler took part in Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch under Ernst Röhm.

In 1926, Himmler met his wife in a hotel lobby while escaping a storm. Margarete Siegroth (née Boden) was blonde-haired and blue-eyed, seven years older than Himmler, divorced, and Protestant. She was physically the epitome of the Nordic ideal, although not exceptionally attractive. On July 3, 1928, the two were married and had their only child, Gudrun, on August 8, 1929. Himmler adored his daughter, and called her Püppi (dolly). The couple later adopted a son, in whom Himmler reportedly showed little interest. Himmler, by this time, was far too engulfed in militaristic ideology to serve as a competent husband. Their marriage was difficult and they separated in 1940, without seeking a divorce. He started to become friendly with a staff secretary, Hedwig Potthast, who left her job in 1941, and became his mistress. He fathered two illegitimate children with her—a son, Helge (1942), and a daughter, Nanette Dorothea (1944).

Rise in the SS

Early SS career

In 1925, Himmler joined the Schutzstaffel (“Protective Echelon”), the elite corps of the Nazi Party, better known as the SS. In 1927, he was appointed deputy commanding general of the SS, a role he took very seriously. Upon the resignation of SS commander Erhard Heiden, Himmler was appointed to lead the SS unit in January 1929. At that time, the SS had only 280 members and was considered an elite battalion of the much larger Stormtroopers (SA).

Under Himmler's leadership, the SS became the vanguard of the Nazi movement, and by 1933, when the Nazi Party gained power in Germany, Himmler's SS numbered 52,000 members. The organization had also developed a mythical ethos based on ancient German lore, as well as strict membership requirements ensuring that all members were of the "Aryan master race." Now holding the rank of commander (Gruppenführer) in the SA, Himmler, along with his deputy, Reinhard Heydrich, began a drive to separate the SS from SA control. He introduced black SS uniforms to replace the SA brown shirts, in the autumn of 1933.

SA leader Ernst Röhm had strong socialistic and populist views and argued that the Stormtroopers should be the sole arms-bearing corp of the state. Himmler and Hermann Göring agreed that the SA now constituted a threat and convinced Hitler that Röhm had to die. Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich developed the legal pretext for the execution of Röhm, and Hitler personally led the SS raid against the SA leaders on June 30, 1934. Röhm and SA Senior Group Leader Edmund Heines were among at least 85 SA leaders put to death in what became known as "The Night of the Long Knives." The next day, the SS became independent from the SA in the Nazi Party, while the SA was soon marginalized in the Nazi power structure, in favor of the SS.

Consolidation of power

Himmler had become the head of the Munich police soon after Hitler came to power in 1933. Germany's political police forces came under his authority in 1934, when he organized them into the secret-police force, the Gestapo, which had formerly been a branch of the Prussian Police. He also established the Nazi regime's first concentration camp at Dachau, as well as Germany's entire concentration camp complex. (Once the war began, new internment camps not formally classified as "concentration camps" would be established, over which Himmler and the SS would not exercise control.)

Official insignia of the SS

Himmler's SS was imbued with a mystical devotion to Hitler and the Nazi vision for the future glory of the Third Reich. Himmler exhorted his officers to revere Germany’s ancient past, telling them: “Just as a tree withers if its roots are removed, so a people fall if they do not honor their ancestors.” On July 1, 1935, Himmler founded an SS institute whose task was to research primeval German culture. He had come to detest Christianity and its "Jewish" Christ, insisting the Germanic ethics even reject such basic values as monogamy. SS recruits were closely examined to ensure their pure Aryan blood and features. Since many of these Aryan men would surely be killed in the coming war, young German women were encouraged to bear their children, even without the benefit of wedlock.

In 1936, Himmler gained further authority when all of Germany's uniformed law enforcement agencies were amalgamated into the new regular German police force (Ordnungspolizei), whose main office became a headquarters branch of the SS. Himmler was accorded the title Chief of the German Police. He also gained ministerial authority over Germany's non-political detective forces (Kripo). With the outbreak of World War II, Himmler formed the Reich Security Main Office (Reichssicherheitshauptamt). The SS was also developing combat divisions which would later become known as the Armed SS (Waffen-SS).

Himmler's war on the Jews

Did you know?
Heinrich Himmler was second only to Adolf Hitler in power in Nazi Germany and was the founder and commander of the Nazi concentration camps

Himmler opened the first of the concentration camps near Dachau on March 22, 1933. Under his direction, the SS-Totenkopfverbände—"Death's Head Formations"—were given the task of organizing and administering Germany's growing network of these centers. Starting in 1941, they also began to run the extermination camps in occupied Poland. The SS, through its intelligence arm, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), was also charged with finding Jews, Gypsies, communists, and other persons of any other cultural, racial, political, or religious affiliation deemed by the Nazis to be either "sub-human" (Untermensch) or in opposition to the regime, and placing them in concentration camps.

Himmler was thus one of the main architects of the Holocaust, using elements of mysticism and a fanatical belief in the racist Nazi ideology to justify the mass murder and genocide of millions of victims.[2] Himmler had similar plans for the Poles and for many other people in Eastern Europe.

German citizens are required to walk past the bodies of Jewish women killed by Himmler's SS troops at the end of WWII.

Unlike Hitler, Himmler personally inspected several concentration and war camps. In August 1941, he was present at a mass shooting of Jews in Minsk, Belarus. The gore and inefficiency of this massacre led to a search for a more hygienic and organized way to put large numbers of victims to death, which culminated in the use of the gas chambers.

On October 4, 1943, Himmler referred explicitly to the extermination of the Jewish people during a secret SS meeting in the city of Poznań (Posen), Poland. The following are excerpts from a transcription of an audio recording that exists of the speech:

I am now referring to the evacuation of the Jews, to the extermination of the Jewish people. This is something that is easily said: "The Jewish people will be exterminated," says every Party member, "this is very obvious, it is in our program—elimination of the Jews." …Most of you here know what it means when 100 corpses lie next to each other, when 500 lie there or when 1,000 are lined up. To have endured this and at the same time to have remained a decent person—with exceptions due to human weaknesses—had made us tough. This is an honor roll in our history which has never been and never will be put in writing… If the Jews were still part of the German nation, we would most likely arrive now at the state we were at in 1916/17.[3]

The Second World War

Even before the invasion of Russia in 1941, Himmler began preparing his SS for a war of extermination against the forces of "Judeo-Bolshevism." He compared the invasion to the Crusades and mobilized volunteers from Nazi-occupied territories all over Europe. After the invasion more volunteers joined from the former Soviet countries: Ukrainians, Latvians, Lithuanians, and Estonians, attracted to Himmler's vision of a pan-European crusade to defend the traditional values of Old Europe from the "Godless Bolshevik Hordes." As long as they were employed against the hated Soviet troops, many of these recruits from the former Soviet territories performed fanatically, expecting no mercy if captured. When employed against the Western Allies, however, they tended to surrender eagerly. Waffen SS recruitment in Western and Nordic Europe was largely unsuccessful.

In 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, Himmler's right hand man, was killed in Prague after an attack by Czech special forces. Himmler immediately carried out a reprisal, killing the entire male population in the village of Lidice.

In 1943, Himmler was appointed German Interior Minister. Although his attempts to use this office to gain even more power incurred displeasure from Hitler, the involvement of the German Military Intelligence in the July 20, 1944, plot led the Führer to make Himmler's SD the sole intelligence service of the Third Reich. It also soon emerged that General Friedrich Fromm, Commander-in-Chief of the Replacement Army, was implicated in the conspiracy. Fromm's removal, coupled with Hitler's great suspicion of the army, led the way to Himmler's appointment as Fromm's successor.

In late 1944, Himmler became Commander-in-Chief of the army group Upper Rhine, which was fighting the oncoming United States 7th Army and the French 1st Army in the Alsace region on the west bank of the Rhine. Himmler held this post until early 1945, when Russian advances led Hitler to place Himmler in command of the newly formed Army Group Vistula on the eastern front. As Himmler had no practical military experience as a field commander, this choice proved catastrophic and he was quickly relieved of his field commands, to be replaced by General Gotthard Heinrici.

As the war was drawing to a German defeat, Himmler was considered by many to be a candidate to succeed Hitler as the Führer of Germany, although it now appears that Hitler never considered Himmler as a successor.

Peace negotiations, capture, and death

Heinrich Himmler in 1945

By the spring of 1945, Himmler had lost faith in German victory. He came to the realization that if the Nazi regime was to have any chance of survival, it would need to seek peace with Britain and the United States. Toward this end, he contacted Count Folke Bernadotte of Sweden at Lübeck, near the Danish border, and began negotiations.

When Hitler discovered this, Himmler was declared a traitor and stripped of all his titles and ranks the day before Hitler committed suicide. Hitler's successor as Chancellor of Germany was Joseph Goebbels. At the time of Himmler's denunciation, he held the positions of Commanding General of the SS, Chief of the German Police, Realm Commissioner of German Nationhood, Realm Minister of the Interior, Supreme Commander of the People's Storm (Volkssturm), and Supreme Commander of the Home Army.

Unfortunately for Himmler, his negotiations with Count Bernadotte failed. Since he could not return to Berlin, he joined Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz, who by then was commanding all the German forces within the northern part of the western front, in nearby Plön. Dönitz immediately sent Himmler away, explaining that there was no place for him in the German government.

Himmler next turned to the Americans as a defector, contacting the headquarters of General Dwight Eisenhower and proclaiming he would surrender all of Germany to the Allies if he was spared from prosecution as a Nazi leader. Eisenhower refused to have anything to do with Himmler, who was subsequently declared a major war criminal.

Himmler's corpse after his suicide by poison in Allied custody, 1945.

Unwanted by his former colleagues and hunted by the Allies, Himmler wandered for several days near the Danish border, around Flensburg, the capital of the Dönitz government. Attempting to evade arrest, he disguised himself as a sergeant-major of the Secret Military Police, using the name Heinrich Hitzinger, shaving his mustache and donning an eye patch over his left eye, in the hope that he could return to Bavaria. He had equipped himself with a full set of false documents, but someone whose papers were wholly "in order" was so unusual that it aroused the suspicions of a British Army unit in Bremen. He was arrested on May 22, and, in captivity, was soon recognized.

Himmler was scheduled to stand trial with other German leaders as a major war criminal at Nuremberg, but committed suicide in Lüneburg by swallowing a potassium cyanide capsule before interrogation could begin. His last words were "Ich bin Heinrich Himmler!" ("I am Heinrich Himmler!"). Shortly afterward, Himmler's body was secretly buried in an unmarked grave on the Lüneburg Heath. The precise location of Himmler's grave remains unknown.

Legacy

Heinrich Himmler controlled the Nazi regime's Protective Squad (SS) and the Secret Police (Gestapo) making him second only to Adolf Hitler in power, in the Nazi hierarchy. Besides using the infamous death squads to round up, murder, and oppress people, Himmler is also remembered as the founder and commander of the infamous Nazi concentration camps, where he held final responsibility for annihilating "subhumans"—actually the Jews, political prisoners, ethnic minorities, and those who did not fit the Aryan mold—who were deemed unworthy to live.

Historians are divided on the psychology, motives, and influences that drove Himmler. Many see him as a willing tool of Hitler, carrying Hitler's views to their logical conclusion. A key issue in understanding Himmler is to what extent he was a primary instigator and developer of anti-semitism and racial murder in Nazi Germany—and not totally within Hitler's control—and to what extent he was simply the executor of Hitler's direct orders. A related issue is whether antisemitism and racism were primary motives for him, as opposed to self-aggrandizement and the accumulation of power.

Himmler to some extent answered this himself, once saying that if Hitler were to tell him to shoot his mother, he would do it and "be proud of the Führer's confidence." This unconditional loyalty was surely one of the driving forces behind Himmler's unlikely career.

Notes

  1. Richard Breitman, The Architect of Genocide (The Harvill Press, 2004, ISBN 1844130894), 9.
  2. Albert Speer, Inside the Third Reich (New York, NY: Macmillan, 1970, ISBN 0297000152)
  3. Holocaust History.org, Himmler's Poznan Speech. Retrieved August 25, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Breitman, Richard. The Architect of Genocide. The Harvill Press, 2004. ISBN 1844130894
  • Hale, Christopher. Himmler's Crusade: The True Story of the 1938 Nazi Expedition Into Tibet. Bantam Books, 2003. ISBN 0593049527
  • Padfield, Peter. Himmler: Reichs Führer-SS. Cassel & Company, 2001. ISBN 0304358398
  • Pringle, Heather. The Master Plan: Himmler's Scholars and the Holocaust. Hyperion, 2006. ISBN 0786868864
  • Speer, Albert. Inside the Third Reich. New York, NY: Macmillan, 1970. ISBN 0297000152

External links

All links retrieved December 13, 2017.

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