Book Review: Hitler's Last Secretary by Traudl Junge
Book Review by Bud Gundy
When I start reading about a topic, I often find myself
obsessed for a while. So right
after I finished The Third Reich at War (review below) I decided to read
a book I’ve been meaning to get to for years. Hitler’s Last Secretary by Traudl Junge is an
engrossing read, every bit as mesmerizing as the movie it inspired, “Downfall.”
Traudl Junge is the secretary in question, and the forward
gives us a good overview of the scope of her life and how she came to see
Hitler for what he really was, looking back on her gullibility with amazement.
But her own memoirs offer very little in the way of that
insight, and I recommend you watch the documentary interview conducted shortly
before she died for that sort of perspective. These memoirs were written in 1947, while the memories were
still fresh in her mind, and she hadn’t yet grasped the true nature of the
story she relays with such a dispassionate (dare I say Germanic?) voice.
She begins her story with her life in Munich as a girl, before
her parents ended their unhappy marriage.
While she didn’t hate her father, he was an absent parent – working in
Turkey for several years before the divorce. She has evident admiration for her mother, a single woman
struggling to raise her children and to give them a decent upbringing with the
help of her own parents. Even
still, both parents are shadowy enigmas, making it easy, I suppose, to identify
her later devotion to Hitler as the love for a misbegotten father figure.
Junge tells breezily clueless stories from her school years,
remarking on the disappearance of Jewish friends with a voice struggling with
nothing greater than confusion.
She never joined the Nazi party, partly because of her mother’s warnings
to remain aloof from the savage political forces at work in Germany, and partly
because her outlook was decidedly apolitical. One is tempted to feel scorn for a girl so willfully
ignorant of the terror for anyone identified as an outsider in Germany. In the documentary, she stated that she
found it hard to forgive herself for this, and I have to say that I agree.
She followed her older sister to Berlin to start a career as
a dancer, but by this time the war was in full swing, and Germany was not
clamoring for new dancers. She
secured a secretarial job before a family friend tipped her off to an open
position at the Reich Chancellery.
After working there a short while, she found herself among a group of
just nine women who are asked to submit to a battery of tests to join the small
circle of women who work exclusively as secretaries to Hitler.
Junge is frank
about Hitler’s kindness and consideration, his doting affection for his
secretaries and others who served him in crucial but low-level positions. But he is a demanding boss, too, expecting
his personal workers to be available at any time, and to conform to his
vampire-like schedule of staying up all night and sleeping until early
afternoon.
At first, she is excited by the thrill of living at the
center of power, with all the famous names sweeping in and out – Speer, Borman,
Goring, Goebbels, Himmler, Mussolini and other notorious people. Details of this life are rich and
fascinating – the tedium of listening to Hitler’s famously dull nightly
lectures, the glamour provided by Evan Braun, the distinction of living and
working in Hitler’s various enclaves.
We see the regular entourage at dinner, at work, at play. It is a fascinating glimpse into this
world, especially since so much of it seems routine and, at times, utterly
banal.
As the war progresses, Junge writes of the hope and
inspiration that Hitler gave those in his immediate circle. She does not write of the sense of doom
that many in Germany felt, starting in 1941, when they realized that Hitler had
expanded the war too quickly, and that that country was rushing headlong to
defeat. She lived in a gilded
bubble, something she did not realize until many years later.
Junge marries one of Hitler’s valets, but she is emotionally
vacant about this episode. Her
husband is transferred to the Western front where he is eventually killed.
The final year is easily the most engrossing. Hitler survives the assassination
attempt at his Wolf’s Lair headquarters but never really recovers. His health deteriorates, a physical
manifestation of his intellectual realization that everything is falling
apart. Naturally, he blames
everyone else for his own failures.
Finally, his inner circle moves into the bunker beneath the Reich
Chancellery to wait for the arrival of the Russian army and for Hitler’s
demise.
He announces that he’s decided to kill himself, and along
with a handful of other stalwart supporters, Junge refuses leave the bunker
when a final chance presented itself.
She says she surprised herself with this decision, but it allowed her to
see Hitler’s final days with a very unique insider’s perspective. This is a riveting read.
Amazingly, Junge only felt a single instance of anger toward
Hitler before his suicide. It
wasn’t until he was dead that a more permanent sense of fury settled into her
feelings about him. Only then did
she wonder why he had prolonged the war, and thus the suffering.
As usual, people mistook vanity for courage, hubris for
resolve, pettiness for ideological consistency, and Junge was only one of the
millions who did so in Germany at that time (let’s not get into the scary
recent parallels in our own country).
I believe she was being honest when she says that she foolishly believed
Nazi propaganda about the war being a defensive move for Germany. I’m happy that she eventually realized
that this was no excuse.
I’ve heard criticism of the various incarnations of her
story for granting Hitler the ability to show kindness and solicitude, but as
much as a I sympathize with those critics I have to disagree. I think it’s a mistake to make cartoon
characters of human monsters.
Pretending that hateful people are hateful in every respect only makes
it more difficult to identify true evil.
A dull and ridiculous little man can inspire needless war and
genocide. Shouldn’t we know that
and be on guard?
Available online: Click here.
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