Article by George J. Wittenstein, M. D.
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7/18/04:
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When a German medical student and soldier named Jürgen
Wittenstein introduced two young men in the fall of 1940, he had no
way of knowing his friends would make history and forever be remembered
as heroes.
By
the summer of 1942, Hans
Scholl and Alexander
Schmorell were at the center of a close-knit group of friends who shared
the same ideals and interests in medicine, music, art, theology and philosophy.
They soon recognized their shared disgust for Adolf Hitler, the Third Reich
and the Gestapo. Hans and Alex were soon joined by Christoph
Probst (a level-headed, married soldier and father of three who was
loved by everyone who knew him) and Willi
Graf (another medical student and a devout Catholic who never joined
the Hitler Youth and refused to acknowledge those who did). And there was
Sophie,
Hans Scholl's younger sister who joined Hans and his friends at the University
to study biology and philosophy. These friends, sometimes joined by popular
philosophy professor Kurt
Huber, Jürgen Wittenstein and others, formed the heart of The
White Rose.
.
Hans
and Alex acted alone at first, writing and duplicating an editorial leaflet
with the heading: "Leaflets
of The White Rose". The piece was scathing in its criticism of every-day
Germans who sat back and did nothing to combat the Third Reich. The leaflet
went on to suggest "passive resistance" as the best way to silently encourage
the downfall of the "government". Three more leaflets quickly appeared,
all with the same heading: "Leaflets of The White Rose". Each of these
documents was more hard-hitting than the last, while more and more friends
of Hans and Alex began to contribute. Two final leaflets appeared, one
in January 1943 and the last around February 18th. These were headed "Leaflets
of the Resistance".
.
The
members of The White Rose worked day and night, cranking a hand-operated
duplicating machine thousands of times to create the leaflets which were
each stuffed into envelopes, stamped and mailed from various major cities
in Southern Germany. Recipients were chosen from telephone directories
and were generally scholars, medics and pub-owners (which seemed to puzzle
the Gestapo -- but who better to spread the word or post a leaflet!). While
Hans and Alex alone drafted the first four leaflets, they counted on Christoph
Probst to comment and criticize. Jürgen edited the third and fourth
leaflets and traveled to Berlin with the dangerous documents. Willi contributed
to the fifth leaflet and did a generous amount of leg-work, getting supplies
and trying
to recruit support outside of Munich. Sophie worked hard at getting stamps
and paper (one couldn't buy too many stamps at one place without arousing
suspicion) and also managed the group's funds. Kurt Huber contributed to
the fifth leaflet and solely drafted the sixth (and final) leaflet, while
Hans was apprehended with a rough-draft of a seventh
leaflet written by Christoph Probst. All members traveled throughout
Southern Germany (and beyond) to mail stacks of leaflets from undetectable
locations. Hundreds of leaflets were also left at the University of Munich,
carefully hand-delivered in the middle of the night.
.
On
three nights in February 1943 -- the 3rd, 8th and 15th -- Hans, Alex and
Willi conducted the most dangerous of all the White Rose activities.
The three men used tar and paint to write slogans on the sides of houses
on Ludwigstrasse, a main thoroughfare in Munich near the University.
They wrote "Down With Hitler", "Hitler Mass Murderer", "freedom", and drew
crossed-out swastikas... this while policemen and other officials patroled
the streets of Munich. It was, by far, the most public, blatant and
dangerous of their activities.
.
It
isn't certain why Hans and Sophie Scholl brought a suitcase full of leaflets
to the University during the day on Thursday, February 18, 1943. Upon reaching
the University, they passed Willi Graf and friend, Traute
Lafrenz, who were leaving. They made plans to meet later in the
evening, never mentioning the leaflets in the case. Together, Hans and
Sophie entered the deserted atrium which, in minutes, would be flooded
with students exiting lectures and classes. They worked quickly, dropping
stacks of Kurt Huber's leaflets throughout the corridors. With time running
out, the brother and sister hurried outside to safety. Then they noticed
there were still leaflets left in
the suitcase. Deciding it would be silly not to leave the few extra documents,
they returned to the atrium, climbed a grand marble staircase to the upper
level of the hall and Sophie flung the last of the leaflets high into the
air. Sophie herself explained it this way: "It was either high spirits
or stupidity that made me throw 80 to 100 leaflets from the third floor
of the university into the inner courtyard." The dozens of pieces of paper
glided freely, landing in a shower at the feet of students who suddenly
poured out of lecture halls into the atrium. And standing somewhere in
the crowd was Jakob Schmidt, University handyman and Nazi party member,
who saw Hans and Sophie with the leaflets. The police were called, the
doors were locked, and Hans and Sophie apprehended and taken into Gestapo
custody. By some accounts, Hans and Sophie had plenty of time and could
easily have escaped before the Gestapo arrived. Jakob Schmidt became
a momentary Nazi hero and was cheered at rallies after the capture of White
Rose members.
.
Today,
there are many memorials of the White Rose throughout Munich and their
story is known to every German. The White Rose may have been silenced
too early but their words echo on...
.
"Freedom!" |