Saturday, October 5, 2013

Rochus Misch; guard for Hitler saw fuehrer's last hours, dead at 96, September 5, 2013. 'There are none so blind as those who will not see'.

by Dr. Jeffrey Lant.

 Author's program note. Another minion of the unmitigated evil now only known ironically  as the Thousand Year Reich has expired, full of years and blessed, so it seems,  by the absence of ghosts, demons, guilt or shame... or even significant recall  or remembrance. And as for remorse ...

 Thus his story becomes a cautionary tale, its immediate protagonist the most  apt representation of the original since John Heywood brought forth in 1546 the  celebrated words; the actuality, of course, having been known to discerning people  since such people first existed. (Sadly, just when that moment occurred no two people  agree.)

 The problem with Nazis...

 As the last living Nazis and their still extant (if muted and arthritic) sympathizers  approach their century, it is now predictable to hear certain "truths" about them  and the entire, antiquated apparatus of their gimcrack imperium. First and always,  that these are the oldest of folks far beyond their youthful hatreds. This is the  "why bother with these tabbies?" position adopted by those who in their salad  days unrelentingly pursued their quarry even into concentration camps and the  fearsome (and always spotlessly clean and gleaming) paraphernalia of organized  extermination.

 There was nothing casual about these representatives of the reprehensible regime...  and it is therefore only fitting and proper that there be nothing casual about the matter  of the process that finds, apprehends and punishes them. "Blessed are the  merciful for they will obtain mercy"... but there are no such people here.

 "I knew nothing."

 If you have ever entered an inhabited elevator, you know this excuse for in  this common, trivial event you may easily see its grander manifestation: you  move away from the canaille, as far away as you can get in the small space,  contained and swiftly moving.

 You avoid looking at your fellow travelers, much less offering any but the most  cursory of greetings; such contacts, after all, may mature beyond inconvenience,  and that will never do. Thus, eyes are instantly cast down, nothing seen, nothing  known, absolutely nothing admitted.

 The "shame" here is not that you have done anything wrong but that your fellow  denizens have; for their very presence is affronting and downcast eyes are sign  enough that you are right to shun them... thus if the elevator decapitates them at  journey's end, you can comfortably scurry away... for though you saw all, your  official position is adamantly the reverse.    "I was only following orders."

 Here is the most popular, the most frequently used and the most insidious  response; its defenders insisting it is not an excuse but a thorough and complete  explanation for "common" people in all times and places who secretly are in  solidarity with anyone oppressed but cannot say so, much less do so. "Sorry  about that, I'm sure  you understand", being the preferred words to discourage  any further mention of this awkward matter.

 The problem is that this line of explanation is understandable, one we might well  offer ourselves under the right circumstances. Opposition, even in the most  rooted and pacific of democracies, can be difficult, strenuous, even a risk, for  when you pipe up and oppose, even amongst the most civilized of people, you  invite the inevitable and often hilariously inadequate opposing "thought", up to  and including verbal abuse and physical violence . This inevitably discourages  many and thereby thins their otherwise noisome numbers.

 However, though this explanation is popular and sanctified by frequent usage,  it fails to satisfy. It will perhaps save your (and my) precious skin at a moment of  danger, trepidation and the full panoply of pain and retribution... but it will never  satisfy the moral man, that inconvenient being who uncomfortably resides in  each of us, insistently reminding us all that we each  bear our share of good and  evil and that we are required per the management to bear witness one way or  the other to what we did and didn't do. In that spirit, it is time for you to meet  Rochus Misch, soldier of the Third Reich, bodyguard to its fuehrer, the man  who saw everything and perceived nothing.

 "I have nothing."

 Born in the Silesian village of Alt Schalkowitz in what is today Poland, Misch  was orphaned at an early age. Thus, shiftless, no family or relatives to assist,  friendships precluded because of his rootless situation, he was just the person  Hitler's SS was looking for, the committed follower who would believe what he  was told was true, and would do whatever he was told to do. Such people are  always dangerous... and are always useful to have around.

 Whitney Houston in her mesmerizing "The Bodyguard" album (1992) might have  been singing for der fuehrer himself and his unbeatable pitch to people like Misch  where in the opening lines to "I Have Nothing" she caught the essence of Nazi  (or any other terrorist)  proselytizing. Go to any search engine and listen to  this tune now. And know this: Hitler was as effective, as spell binding, as  enthralling a speaker and propagandist as Houston was a singer.    "Share my life, take me for what I am/ 'cause I'll never change all my colors for you/  Take my love, I'll never ask for much/ Just all that you are and everything that you do."

 And the needy, aspiring, leaderless Misch sings back

 "Don't make me close one more door/ I don't wanna hurt anymore" and on this  mutually fulfilling basis, they cut the great deal that provides Hitler with another  absolutely loyal follower and Misch a hero to believe in and dedicate his  hitherto empty and pathetic life to... right up to and including the last day of  his long life, just the other day.

 This story of master and abject follower might easily have gone untold, so  common is it in its essentials but two things happened to lift it from obscurity  to fascinating, enigmatic prominence. On September 1,1939 Hitler invaded  Poland. Misch was among the forward troops. While arranging for the surrender  of a fort near Warsaw he was seriously injured.

 Sent back to Germany, he was in May 1940 selected as one of just two SS men  to be Hitler's personal bodyguard and personal assistant, his life now lived in the  closest proximity to the arbiter of life or death for millions worldwide. Here the story  evolves to something of the most importance, the greatest possible interest, one  that baffles, perplexes, confounds... but not for the reason you may suppose, not  that is for what Misch knew and confided to the ages... but rather, paradoxically, for  what he failed to know, never wanted to know and thus could not tell.

 "A very normal  man."

 For people like me, people interested in historical truth, Misch's very name  produces acute indignation and disgust, so close to power, so unable to see  its manifestations, people, uses, events. How one longs for one of the great  diarists of history... eyes that would see more in Hitler than "the boss", "a very  normal man", a judgement of breathtaking insipidity, so monumentally wrong,  as to generate immediate contempt in place of insight. Misch, however, is  adamant... "He was no brute. He was no monster. He was no superman."                   How could he be so astonishingly imperceptive, seeing neither forest nor trees?

 Here we see Hitler's genius at work, for genius he was, though of dark powers  and darker deeds. A more perceptive man, distinguished by acuity and discernment  would not have suited der fuehrer at all... someone who saw him as the German  equivalent of Dale Carnegie able to make friends and influence people did the  job nicely... and, for the nonce, saved Misch's life over and over again. Hitler  didn't order his immediate execution when he discovered Misch's biographical  notes and materials, for there were no such notes and materials, at any time.

 He was not shot by the Gestapo, as he thought he might be, because he had  witnessed the events surrounding the suicides of Eva Braun, who became Mrs.  Adolph as the vengeful Russians raced to capture Berlin, her face blue from  ingesting cyanide and her groom, shot with his own gun, slumped over, blood  dripping out of the right temple, both now ready to be burned and so be spared the  humiliations visited upon il duce and his mistress by a people expert in indignities  and eager to demonstrate their crude ingenuity.

 Finally, he was not shot by the Russians who captured him and after the German  surrender May 7, 1945, sent him to Russia. He returned to Berlin in 1954, alive,  the man at the center of power who was simply beneath anyone's notice, not  worth the trouble of killing. There he reunited with his wife, whom he had married  in 1942. Two survivors, their very ordinariness more protection than armor, perhaps  the luckiest couple on Earth. Together they opened a small shop, where each day  they forgot a little more... and lived another day in an obscurity richly earned and  deserved; cheating all of us and history, too... but alive.   


About the Author

Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is the author of over a dozen printed books, several ebooks, and over one thousand online articles. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol http://WorkingAtHome101.com




No comments:

Post a Comment