Authors: Roger Moorhouse
Nazi excesses and the rights of sovereign nations, now they were being
called upon to defend the very homeland of the proletarian revolu-
tion. With the period of ideological limbo at an end, Römer and Uhrig
were among the first to call the faithful to arms.
Their primary weapon in the struggle was the monthly ‘Information
Service’ pamphlet, which they produced in Berlin for distribution to
communist cells in the city, as well as across Germany and abroad.
Intended to inform its readers about the military and political situ-
ation, and inoculate them against Nazi propaganda, the pamphlet also
called for sabotage actions against industrial and military targets. Its
December 1941 issue, for instance, made the following demands of its
readers:
Every intervention that we can make in the economy, however modest,
must lead to an effective blow against the imperialist, anti-proletarian
war of the Hitler-Bourgeoisie.
. . .
Hitler’s Achilles Heel is the fuel supply. Any action that destroys
fuel, weakens his military capacity.
Rubber is rarer still. Its destruction will ground German bombers.
. . .
Above all, give your full backing to every slowing of the work-rate
to weaken productivity. In this way, the proletarian revolution will break
forth, and will be victorious.18
Both Uhrig and Römer were reasonably adept at avoiding the atten-
tions of the Gestapo, but they could not escape detection for long.
Early in 1942, a wave of arrests across Germany signalled an end to
the conspiracy. In Berlin alone, more than 150 individuals were arrested,
Römer and Uhrig among them. Charged as ‘enemies of the state’,
and members of an ‘illegal organisation’, they would spend over two
years under interrogation, being shunted between some of the most
odious camps and prisons of the Berlin area, including Sachsenhausen
and Wuhlheide. Brought to trial for high treason in the summer of
1944, both men were sentenced to death and guillotined. Over seventy
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of their fellow conspirators faced the same fate, while many more
were sentenced to lengthy periods of hard labour.19
With the demise of Römer and Uhrig, the baton passed initially to
Anton Saefkow, a trained machinist, who sought to gather all those
who had not been arrested. Under his leadership, acts of sabotage,
distribution of flyers and help to fugitives continued. Like his prede-
cessors, however, Saefkow could not escape the Gestapo and was
arrested in the summer of 1944. Along with another sixty members
of his group, he was sentenced to death and executed that autumn.
A similar fate awaited the most famous communist resistance group
in wartime Berlin – the so-called ‘Red Orchestra’. Founded by Air
Ministry officer Harro Schulze-Boysen and the economist Arvid
Harnack, it too was active in producing fly-posters and aiding fugi-
tives in the capital, but its primary activity was espionage – it was one
of the many sources that warned Moscow of the looming German
attack in the early summer of 1941. The group – which is known by
the name given it by Gestapo counter-intelligence – was large and
eclectic, and unlike the Uhrig–Römer and Saefkow groups comprised
not only communists, but also left-leaning intellectuals, artists and
pacifists, including the playwright Adam Kuckhoff and the writer
Günther Weisenborn. Despite this more elitist complexion, however,
the ‘Red Orchestra’ fared little better than its more working-class
fellows, and was rounded up in the autumn of 1942. The vast majority
of its members – including Schulze-Boysen and Harnack – paid for
their actions with their lives. Among them was Harnack’s wife,
Mildred Fish-Harnack, the only American woman executed during
the Second World War as an underground conspirator. As she was led
to the guillotine, her last words were ‘And I have loved Germany so
much’.20
Berlin’s Christians were also active. Most notable among them were
those of the Confessing Church, which had emerged in protest at the
Nazification of the established Protestant Church. One of the move-
ment’s founders was Martin Niemöller, a parish pastor in the Berlin
suburb of Dahlem. A former U-boat captain from the First World
War, Niemöller had been an early supporter of Hitler who was spurred
to resistance by his objection to Nazi racial policies and the regime’s
interference in religious affairs. Arrested for his public criticisms in
1937, he would spend the entire war in a succession of concentration
enemies of the state
275
camps. The post-war poem attributed to him eloquently summed up
the humanitarian case for resistance against Nazism:
First they came for the communists,
and I did not speak out – because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I did not speak out – because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews,
and I did not speak out – because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me,
and there was no one left to speak out for me.21
The Provost of Berlin’s St Hedwig’s cathedral, Bernhard Lichtenberg,
was another outspoken critic of the Nazis, often fulminating against
the regime’s excesses from his pulpit. Most famously, he wrote to the
Chief Physician of the Reich in August 1941 in protest at the ‘T4’
euthanasia programme. ‘As a human being, a Christian and a German’,
he wrote, ‘I demand of you . . . that you answer for the crimes that
have been perpetrated at your bidding and with your consent, and
which will call forth the vengeance of the Lord on the heads of the
German people.’22 In the autumn of 1941, Lichtenberg was denounced
for concluding his evensong sermon by saying: ‘Now let us pray for
the Jews and for the poor prisoners in the concentration camps.’23
Arrested soon after, he perished en route to Dachau.
Churchmen were also well represented in the resistance groups that
were formed among Berlin’s elites. The first such group was the Solf
Circle, which was established in the capital in 1936 as a traditional
‘salon’, where intellectuals would gather to discuss the pressing matters
of the day. Meeting initially in the Wannsee home of Johanna Solf,
the widow of the former German ambassador to Tokyo, the group
contained a number of prominent and well-connected members,
including minor aristocrats, diplomats and senior civil servants. Though
it was not primarily involved with subversion or active resistance
against the Nazi regime – despite Solf and her daughter personally
assisting many fugitive Jews – it was intended to provide a forum for
like-minded individuals, where they could exchange opinions and keep
the concept of intellectual and political liberty alive. Yet, even these
rather modest ambitions were too much for the authorities, and in
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the autumn of 1943 the circle was infiltrated by a Gestapo informant,
a doctor by the name of Paul Reckzeh. Though the members were
warned about the infiltration by Helmuth James von Moltke, they
were rounded up for questioning the following January. Only a few
of them would survive the end of the Third Reich.24
Moltke himself was typical of this type of non-violent, intellec-
tual opposition to the Nazis, and was the focus of perhaps the most
famous opposition group in Nazi Germany, the Kreisau Circle. Named
by its Gestapo investigators after Moltke’s Silesian estate, where the
group had first come together, the circle held most of its meetings
in Moltke’s Berlin flat on Derfflingerstrasse, close to the Tiergarten.
Moltke was a dynamic and genial host. Born in rural Silesia, the scion
of an old Prussian military family but with a South African mother, he
was self-consciously cosmopolitan. Educated in Berlin, he had travelled
widely and had completed his legal training in Britain, before returning
to the German capital with the outbreak of war in 1939. It was there
that he began to gather like-minded individuals, who would meet for
largely theoretical discussions on topics such as international law and
the nature of the state and society that might succeed the Nazis. It was
an eclectic group – socialists, aristocrats and churchmen – but one whose
resistance was primarily a cerebral one, influenced by Christian morality
and by Moltke’s strict advocacy of non-violence. Indeed, when they
were finally tried, Moltke quipped that he and his fellows were to be
hanged ‘because we thought together’.25
The uncomfortable truth for all of the organised resistance groups in
the capital, however, was that ordinary Berliners were not generally
minded to risk their lives to oppose the Nazi regime. Most were not
minded to resist at all. It should be remembered that the regime ruled
primarily by consent. It was very effective, not only at co-opting those
who might have opposed it – through the promise of work, for instance
– but also at maintaining at least nominal popular support through
its social policies and the expert use of propaganda. It had also been
astonishingly successful, not only in restoring the nation’s fortunes
before 1939, but also in the early phase of the war that followed. These
successes convinced vast numbers of ordinary Germans that the Nazi
regime deserved their support. For the majority, therefore, ‘resistance’
to the Nazis never went beyond a raised eyebrow.
enemies of the state
277
Importantly, even those who might have thought otherwise were
often silenced. Would-be opponents of the regime often had their
rebellious impulses curbed by the reflexive patriotism engendered in
a nation at war. They were also dissuaded from voicing their dissent
by knowledge of the dark role played by the Gestapo in preserving
the consensus. And the fact that almost every one of the capital’s
resistance groups – of whatever hue – had been infiltrated, betrayed
and judicially murdered would have done nothing to embolden them.
Ruth Andreas-Friedrich, herself a member of the ‘Uncle Emil’ resist-
ance group, outlined the difficulties in her diary: ‘If we talk, plan, and
recruit allies, we are hanged; among ten people there is always at least
one who is treacherous or loose-mouthed.’26 For many ordinary
Berliners, therefore, engaging in formal organised resistance must have
seemed like something akin to suicide.
Yet, there was still much that determined and principled individ-
uals could do on a personal level to express their opposition. It was a
course of action that was certainly not without its perils and could
easily result in a visit from the Gestapo or a spell in a concentration
camp, if betrayed. But it was nonetheless a relatively common occur-
rence in wartime Berlin; more common indeed, than anywhere else
in the Reich.27
One method was simply to refuse to give the Nazi greeting. George
Kennan noted that this was already common in the capital early in the
war. Berliners, he recalled, ‘could never be induced to give the Nazi
salute. They continued to greet each other with the usual “
Guten Morgen
”
in place of the obligatory “
Heil Hitler
”.’28 Maria Nickel was one of those who chose this route and taught her two young sons not to use the
new ‘German Greeting’. In retrospect, she recalled, it was her first revolt
against Hitler and the Nazis.29
Other protests were more overtly political. The reports of the SS
security service attest to a spate of incidents of politically motivated
vandalism and graffiti, beginning in the autumn and winter of 1939.
Anti-Nazi leafleting also flourished. One of the most remarkable
cases was that of Otto and Elise Hampel, an ordinary couple from
Wedding, who began leafleting in the autumn of 1940 after Elise’s
brother was killed in France. Beyond a vague, working-class soli-
darity, the couple were largely apolitical and their protest was as
much spurred by the slaughter of Germany’s young men in war as
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anything else. Centred on their home district of Wedding, they
distributed postcards and leaflets – which were often crudely printed,
with disjointed, misspelt text – calling for civil disobedience and
decrying the Nazi ‘Winter Aid’ scheme as fraudulent. One of their
cards implored the German people simply to ‘wake up’, while another
urged that ‘we need to believe in ourselves’. For over two years, the
Hampels evaded detection and distributed countless postcards and
leaflets across the German capital. Denounced and arrested in the
autumn of 1942, they were sentenced to death and executed the
following spring.30
The Hampels were not alone. Many others followed suit. Most
commonly, leaflets would be fly-posted on street signs and postboxes
in the centre of the city, where they would be visible to the largest
number of citizens. In content, they ranged widely from simple slogans
– ‘Down with Hitler!’ – to subversive ditties such as:
Great are the times