Read Mission at Nuremberg Online
Authors: Tim Townsend
232Â Â
“with great dignity . . .”:
Neave,
On Trial at Nuremberg,
p. 304.
232Â Â
“more honest”:
Gilbert,
Nuremberg Diary,
p. 227.
232Â Â
“ . . . disparaging Keitel's intelligence . . .”:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 176.
233Â Â
smuggling them out:
Speer,
Spandau,
p. 8.
233Â Â
O'Connor smuggled it:
Niklas Frank interview.
233Â Â
The epigraph of the manuscript:
Frank,
In the Shadow,
p. 333.
233Â Â
peddling it to right-wing:
Ibid., p. 332.
233Â Â
short exercise walks:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 142.
233Â Â
“It was gratifying . . .”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
233Â Â
“ . . . before the verdict”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
233Â Â
in nearby homes:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
234Â Â
wives who were scrambling:
Hank Gerecke interview, 1 April 2008, and Niklas Frank interview.
234Â Â
“I am too emotionally unstrung . . .”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
234Â Â
“He would not show the victors
. . .”:
Posner,
Hitler's Children
, p. 54.
234Â Â
Erich Raeder couldn't see his wife:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
234Â Â
Lawrence had personally:
Raeder,
My Life
, p. 400.
234Â Â
The Russians never explained:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
234Â Â
without ever charging her:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 391.
234Â Â
“that of being my wife
. . .”:
Raeder,
My Life,
p. 400.
234Â Â
O'Connor smuggled Schirach's son:
Schirach,
Price of Glory,
pp. 211â212.
234Â Â
accompanied the family members:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
235Â Â
“the most ungodly woman
. . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
235Â Â
escorted her down:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 320.
235Â Â
Gerecke had traveled to Sackdilling:
Goering,
My Life with Goering,
pp. 154â155.
236Â Â
was outcast in school:
Klaus von Schirach interview.
236Â Â
he sent them care packages:
Hank Gerecke interview, 4 January 2008 and Niklas Frank interview.
236Â Â
“We saw little hands . . .”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
237Â Â
“They were Katzenjammer Kids . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
237Â Â
Cordula's earliest memories:
Posner,
Hitler's Children,
p. 103.
237Â Â
tried to make him laugh:
Niklas Frank interview.
237Â Â
“like an eternal zombie
. . .”:
Frank,
In the Shadow,
p. 371.
238Â Â
“ . . . killed for nothing”:
Niklas Frank interview.
238Â Â
“heart-rending” . . . “emotional impact . . .”:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 320.
238Â Â
standing on a chair . . . “My golden treasure!
. . .”:
Posner,
Hitler's Children,
p. 198
239Â Â
Emmy had urged Edda:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
239Â Â
“Got a cigarette?”:
Ibid.
239Â Â
Andrus had relaxed another rule:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
pp. 318â319.
240Â Â
would be extended for another week:
Conot,
Justice at Nuremberg,
p. 492.
240Â Â
gave the families more time:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
240Â Â
an atmosphere of general gloom:
Conot,
Justice at Nuremberg,
p. 492.
240Â Â
One thousand extra guards:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 467.
240Â Â
Snipers positioned themselves:
Ibid., p. 466.
240Â Â
“was at his most absurd . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 574.
240Â Â
“. . . have made a mockery . . .”:
TMWC, Vol. 22, pp. 522â523.
241Â Â
in a bleak mood:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 321.
241Â Â
“if there is ever to be . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 571.
241Â Â
“It is your duty . . .”:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 142.
241Â Â
Lawrence had banned photography:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 321.
242Â Â
“Goering persecuted the Jews . . .”:
TMWC, Vol. 22, pp. 524â527.
242Â Â
“worst shape of any man . . .”:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
pp. 397â398.
242Â Â
they took off their headphones:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 322.
242Â Â
“ . . . Fritzsche is not guilty . . .”:
TMWC, Vol. 22, p. 585.
242Â Â
“ . . . the walls of Jericho crumble”:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
pp. 323â324.
243Â Â
Schacht shook hands with no one:
Speer,
Spandau,
p. 5.
243Â Â
some congratulations in return:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 324.
243Â Â
a bizarre press conference:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 402.
243Â Â
“ . . . the Spiritual Councilor . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
243Â Â
“took the verdicts like soldiers . . .”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
243Â Â
rode the elevator up to the dock:
Reactions of the defendants to their sentences are drawn from Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 403, and TMWC, Vol., 22, pp. 588â589.
244Â Â
it sounded abstract:
Speer,
Spandau,
pp. 3â4.
245Â Â
Forty-five minutes after:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 598.
245Â Â
cell doors were left open:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 325.
245Â Â
“It is a terrible thing . . .”:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 473.
245Â Â
Keitel refused to allow:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 342.
245Â Â
frank admission of weakness:
Smith,
Reaching Judgment,
p. 186.
245Â Â
“ . . . no surprise to me . . .”:
Keitel,
Memoirs,
p. 237.
246Â Â
“I will willingly . . .”:
Ibid., p. 238.
246Â Â
Goering's bravery:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 601.
246Â Â
or that he be shot:
Ibid., p. 602.
246Â Â
“ . . . and not for being soldiers”:
Ibid., p. 607.
246Â Â
he became emotional:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 124.
247Â Â
“shunning his own personal responsibility”:
Keitel,
Memoirs,
p. 235.
247Â Â
Despite his depression:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 485, and Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 126.
247Â Â
“One has only a bunk . . .”:
Keitel,
Memoirs,
p. 31.
247Â Â
“I regret nothing . . .”:
Ibid., p. 237.
247Â Â
“in the name of humanity”:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
pp. 180â181.
248Â Â
a gradual distancing:
Childs,
Introduction to the Old Testament
, p. 154.
249Â Â
“will suffer a sevenfold vengeance”:
Genesis 4:15, NRSV.
249Â Â
In Hebrew folk etymology:
Rosenberg, “Genesis: Introduction,” p. 10.
249Â Â
a tribe of metalworkers:
Miller and Hayes,
History of Ancient Israel and Judah,
p. 80.
249Â Â
he wanted to connect the history:
Westermann,
Genesis 1â11: A Commentary
, p. 318, cited in Volf,
Exclusion & Embrace,
p. 93.
249Â Â
“The logic of sin proves stronger . . .”:
Volf,
Exclusion & Embrace,
p. 96.
250Â Â
“The story about a murderous âthem' . . .”:
Ibid., p. 93.
250Â Â
Jesus's suffering on the cross:
Ibid., p. 26.
250Â Â
“ . . . why have you forsaken me?”:
Mark 15:34, NRSV.
250Â Â
armor to protect him:
Lapide,
Von Kain bis Judas: Ungewohnte Einsichten zu Sünde und Schuld
, cited in Volf,
Exclusion & Embrace,
p. 98.
250Â Â
“ . . . Cain's scanty offering . . .”:
Volf,
Exclusion & Embrace,
p. 98.
251Â Â
“away from the presence of the Lord”:
Genesis 4:16, NRSV.
251Â Â
not whether they should:
Volf interview, 26 August 2010.
Â
CHAPTER 10
252Â Â
“Good is opposed to evil
. . .”:
Mackie, “Evil and Omnipotence,” p. 1.
252Â Â
almost day and night:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
252Â Â
a walk up and down:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 607.
252Â Â
no more chapel services:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
252Â Â
four or five times a day:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
252Â Â
“What an effect . . .”:
Speer,
Spandau,
pp. 6â10.
253Â Â
Ribbentrop read his Bible:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
254Â Â
if they could take cold showers:
Conot,
Justice at Nuremberg,
pp. 502â503.
254Â Â
“My God, give me the strength . . .”:
Goering,
My Life with Goering,
pp. 156â158.
255Â Â
He had died when:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
255Â Â
Until December 1947:
“U.S. Army Trials in Post-War Germany.”
256Â Â
hanged twenty-eight men:
Unless otherwise noted, the description of the execution preparations is drawn from Tilles,
By the Neck Until Dead,
pp. 40â49 and pp. 111â113.
258Â Â
Speer was irritated at first:
Speer,
Spandau,
p. 10.
258Â Â
The team blacked out:
Tilles,
By the Neck Until Dead,
p. 124.
258Â Â
their final instructions:
Ibid., p. 128.
258Â Â
the chaplains went from cell to cell:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
258Â Â
Andrus had summoned:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 417.
258Â Â
he hadn't heard anything:
Ibid.
259Â Â
refusing to leave his cell:
Swearingen,
Mystery of Hermann Goering's Suicide,
p. 68.
259Â Â
“What time are the executions . . .”:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 420.
259Â Â
Eggers had been surprised:
Swearingen,
Mystery of Hermann Goering's Suicide,
p. 157.
259Â Â
“Is there money in it?”:
Ibid., p. 158.
259Â Â
he began writing a letter:
Ibid., p. 70.
260Â Â
Gerecke returned to Goering's cell:
In writing about these final meetings with Goering, Gerecke's own affidavit to the military's investigators of Goering's suicide is at odds with his later telling of the tale. In later writings, he conflated two separate meetings on the final two nights of Goering's life into one meeting on the final night. In describing it here, I've restored the two-night sequence under the logic that what the chaplain told investigators in the hours immediately after the events was more accurate than what he wrote down from memory years later.
260Â Â
He would watch Gerecke pray:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 420.
260Â Â
more depressed than he had earlier:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
260Â Â
“Surrender your heart . . .”:
Report of the Board Proceedings in Case of Hermann Goering (Suicide), Nuremberg, Germany
, October 1946.
260Â Â
to make fun of the creation story:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”