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<text id=89TT2222>
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<title>
Aug. 28, 1989: Architect Of Evil
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Cover Stories
Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD WAR II, Page 48
Architect of Evil
</hdr>
<body>
<p>How Adolf Hitler mesmerized a nation--and terrorized a world
</p>
<p>By Stefan Kanfer
</p>
<p> One June morning in 1919, a Bavarian professor stopped to
watch a 30-year-old corporal haranguing a group of students. "I
had the peculiar feeling," the professor recalled, "that the man
was feeding on the excitement that he himself had whipped up.
I saw a pale, thin face and hair hanging down the forehead in
unmilitary fashion. He had a close-cropped mustache, and his
strikingly large, pale blue eyes shone with a cold fanatical
light."
</p>
<p> In the next 25 years the world was to grow fatally familiar
with that sight: the forelock vibrating, the voice agitated,
the stare fixed on destiny. Adolf Hitler seldom looked back;
history was saturated with national and personal grievance. The
future was what counted.
</p>
<p> He had reason to despise what had gone before. Hitler's
father was an Austrian civil servant, born illegitimate as
Alois Schicklgruber (Alois was 39 before he acknowledged his
origins and took his presumed father's surname). Although Alois
was nominally a Roman Catholic, he placed his faith in the whip.
When the sixth of his eight children misbehaved, he was beaten
unmercifully. Schicklgruber/Hitler died when Adolf was 13, a
lively and artistic youth racked by the need for recognition and
the appetite for vengeance.
</p>
<p> By Adolf Hitler's lights, there was much to avenge. The
Vienna Academy of Fine Arts twice refused to admit the
apprentice painter. Very well, then, he would become an
architect. But he was unqualified for further study. These
rejections were aggravated by the death of Hitler's beloved
mother Klara. The young man with no vices--he neither drank
nor smoked nor pursued women--drifted in the city, living in
flophouses, supporting himself by illustrating street scenes and
postcards.
</p>
<p> His self-education was wide but shallow. Vienna was peopled
with brilliant artists and thinkers; Sigmund Freud's
researches, Arnold Schoenberg's music, Oskar Kokoschka's
paintings, Arthur Schnitzler's plays, all had their roots in the
city. But Hitler dismissed modern art as "decadent." To the
impotent and solitary figure, power was what mattered, not
aesthetics. The Ring of the Nibelung proved more fascinating for
the drama than for the music. "Whoever wants to understand
National Socialist Germany," Hitler often said, "must know
Wagner." Particularly the heroic, irrational world of blood and
fire.
</p>
<p> In early 1914 Adolf, his head spinning with unassimilated
ideas, was rejected by the Austrian army as "unfit for
combatant and auxiliary duties, too weak. Unable to bear arms."
The Bavarian military had no such reservations. At the beginning
of World War I, he was issued a uniform and sent to the front.
Even there the trooper was set apart. He received no mail,
shared no confidences, had no girlfriend. A fellow enlistee
remembered "this white crow among us that didn't go along with
us when we damned the war to hell." In France the white crow
distinguished himself under fire. Thanks to the initiative of
a Jewish officer, Corporal Hitler was awarded the Iron Cross,
First Class.
</p>
<p> After the war, Hitler joined a new and violently
anti-Semitic group, the forerunner of the National Socialist
German Workers' Party--Nazi for short. There, for the first
time since adolescence, he found a home and friends. Within a
year, he became the chief Nazi propagandist. Judaism, he told
his audiences, had produced the profiteers and Bolsheviks
responsible for the defeat of the fatherland and the
strangulation of the economy. Jews were bacilli infecting the
arts, the press, the government. Pogroms would be insufficient.
"The final aim must unquestionably be the irrevocable Entfernung
(removal) of the Jews."
</p>
<p> Early on, Hitler had a central insight: "All epoch-making
revolutionary events have been produced not by the written but
by the spoken word." He concentrated on an inflammatory speaking
style flashing with dramatic gestures and catch phrases:
"Germany, awake!" He ingeniously added a series of symbols that
caught the national imagination. The most powerful was the
Hakenkreuz (hooked cross), set in a circle and inscribed on a
banner. "In red," he proclaimed, "we see the social idea of the
movement, in white the nationalist idea, in the swastika the
mission of the struggle for the victory of the Aryan man."
</p>
<p> The Hitlerian pathology became more pronounced. He now
regarded his audience as feminine: "The mass, the people, is for
me a woman," ready to be seduced. But the seduction was
figurative; the woman who seemed to beguile him most was Carola
Hoffmann, an elderly widow. He frequently visited his admirer's
home in a suburb of Munich, where she did his laundry and
indulged his sweet tooth; acquaintances were once astonished to
see Adolf put seven spoonfuls of sugar in his tea. When Frau
Hoffmann offered to buy him a gift, he suggested a
rhinoceros-hide dog whip like the one Alois had used long ago.
There was every reason to agree with the appraisal of Hitler
offered by the wife of an early follower: "I tell you, he is a
neuter."
</p>
<p> Initially, Hitler attracted those like himself, unappeased
outsiders, misfits, losers. Joseph Goebbels was an unsuccessful
novelist and playwright. Julius Streicher was a blackmailer.
Ernst Rohm was a sadistic homosexual who advocated violence and
murder. Hermann Goring was an air-force veteran without a
scruple to his name. "I have no conscience," he liked to
declare. "My conscience is Adolf Hitler." But then, Hitler was
the conscience of all his cadre. Pan-Germanism was their creed,
Adolf their Messiah. When criticized, Hitler would say, "Two
thousand years ago, a man was similarly denounced...That man
was dragged before a court, and they said, `He is arousing the
people!' So he too was an agitator!"
</p>
<p> Before long Hitler was dragged before a court. He and his
fellow Nazis had attempted an armed coup in Munich; when it
failed, the instigators were imprisoned. Here at last was the
longed-for martyrdom, and Hitler seized it. Up to now, events
had formed the leader: Germany's humiliating loss of the Great
War, the Allies' insistence on reparations, the monstrous
inflation, the centuries-old distrust of Jewish professionals
and merchants. From here on, the leader would create the events.
</p>
<p> During his months behind bars, Hitler dictated Mein Kampf,
the Nazi bible. The terrible arithmetic of the war and the
Holocaust was prefigured on every page. Propaganda: "The German...people must be misled, if the support of the masses is
required." Morality: "Success is the sole earthly judge of right
and wrong." Tactics: "The one means that wins the easiest
victory over reason: terror and force." Genetics: "All who are
not of good race in this world are chaff."
</p>
<p> Paroled on Dec. 19, 1924, Hitler spent the next five years
reinvigorating the Nazi Party, exploiting Weimar democracy to
bring down the Republic. The party's members were tireless,
cajoling, exhorting, running for local offices, gathering about
them a brutal elite guard called the Schutzstaffel, or SS.
During this period an American journalist, Louis Lochner,
watched the Nazi leader addressing students at Berlin
University. "I came away from that meeting," he reported,
"wondering how a man...who ranted and fumed and stamped
could so impress young intellectuals. Of all people, I thought,
they should have detected the palpable flaws in his logic."
</p>
<p> But the flaws were in Hitler's overconfident detractors.
The Nazi Party received strong support not only from the lower
middle class but also from university students and professors.
The existentialist Martin Heidegger joined the Nazi Party.
Psychologist Carl Jung grew intoxicated with "the mighty
phenomenon of National Socialism, at which the whole world gazes
in astonishment." A young architect named Albert Speer found
that Hitler's oratory "swept away any skepticism, any
reservations."
</p>
<p> Among the others swept away were two pretty frauleins. One
was Hitler's unstable niece Geli Raubal, the only woman he ever
truly loved. It was a sad and unfulfilled affair. On a September
evening in 1931, after an argument with her uncle, Raubal
fatally shot herself. He had only one subsequent lover, a young
blond named Eva Braun. In 1932, frustrated by Hitler's
inattention, she also aimed a pistol at herself, but the attempt
failed. Nearly 13 years later, under Berlin's streets, the drama
would be eerily restaged when Hitler took Braun for his bride,
40 hours before their double suicide by pistol, poison and
flames.
</p>
<p> Until that Walpurgisnacht, nothing could divert him from
the goal of a new world order. In 1931 Hitler adopted a
vegetarian diet, but it did not improve his disposition.
Convinced--falsely--that he was suffering from a
precancerous condition, he had a series of tantrums. "I cannot
lose even a year," he cried. "I must come to power quickly in
order to solve the gigantic problems in the little time
remaining to me. I must! I must!"
</p>
<p> Power arrived on Jan. 30, 1933. The unknown at 30 was named
Chancellor of Germany at 43. From the beginning the Third Reich
was a reflection of its new Fuhrer. Hitler's triumphs should
have increased his confidence. Instead they fed his paranoia.
Rohm and his followers were purged and murdered. The nation's
most original minds were exiled to a concentration-camp universe
from which few returned. Military tactics that demanded
objectivity were decided for personal reasons. Friends who came
upon the Fuhrer secretly reading with the aid of spectacles were
told, "You see, I need glasses. I am getting old, and that is
why I prefer to wage war at 50 rather than 60."
</p>
<p> He turned to amphetamines, but these only increased his
intimations of mortality. On another June morning, almost 21
years to the day after he caught the attention of the Bavarian
professor, Hitler was taken on a triumphal tour of Paris. He
paused at Napoleon's tomb, placed his cap over his heart, bowed
and gazed at the crypt. Then the Fuhrer turned to a favorite and
said somberly, "You will build my tomb." But construction had
already begun on that mausoleum. At its completion five years
later, it would also accommodate some 50 million others. It was
called the Third Reich, and its designer was Adolf Hitler. The
failed student was destined to be remembered as an architect
after all.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>