 
.
.Martin
BORMANN
Martin Ludwig Bormann
(17 June 1900 – 2 May 1945) was a prominent Nazi official. He
became head of the Party Chancellery (Parteikanzlei) and
private secretary to
Adolf Hitler. He gained Hitler's trust and derived immense
power within the Third Reich by controlling access to the
Führer and by regulating the orbits of those closest to
him.
Early
life and family
Born in Wegeleben (now in
Saxony-Anhalt) in the Kingdom of Prussia in the German Empire,
Bormann was a son of Theodor Bormann (1862-1903), a post office
employee, and his second wife, Antonie Bernhardine Mennong. He had
two half-siblings (Else and Walter Bormann) from his father's
earlier marriage to Louise Grobler, who died in 1898. Antonie
Bormann gave birth to three sons, one of whom died in infancy.
Martin (born 1900) and Albert (born 1902) survived to adulthood.
Bormann dropped out of school to
work on a farm in Mecklenburg. He served in an artillery regiment
in the last days of World War I, but never saw action. He then
became an estate manager in Mecklenburg, which brought him into
contact with the Freikorps residing on the estate. He took part in
their activities, mostly in assassinations and the intimidation of
trade union organisers.
On 17 March 1924,
Bormann was sentenced to a year in prison as an accomplice to his
friend
Rudolf Höss in the murder of
Walther Kadow, who they thought had betrayed Freikorps
Albert Leo Schlageter to the French during the occupation of
the
Ruhr District.
On 2 September 1929, Bormann married 19-year-old Gerda Buch,
whose father, Major
Walter Buch, served as a chairman of the Nazi Party Court.
Bormann had recently met Hitler, who agreed to serve as a witness
at their wedding. Gerda Bormann would give birth to 10 children;
one died shortly after birth.
The children of Martin and Gerda Bormann were:
-
Adolf Martin Bormann (born 14 April 1930; called Krönzi;
named after his godfather
Hitler)
- Ilse Bormann (born 9 July 1931; twin sister Ehrengard died
after the birth; named after her godmother Ilse Hess)
- Irmgard Bormann (born 25 July 1933)
- Rudolf Gerhard Bormann (born 31 August 1934; named after his
godfather
Rudolf Hess)
- Heinrich Hugo Bormann (born 13 June 1936; named after his
godfather
Heinrich Himmler)
- Eva Ute Bormann (born 4 August 1938)
- Gerda Bormann (born 23 October 1940)
- Fred Hartmut Bormann (born 4 March 1942)
- Volker Bormann (born 18 September 1943)
Gerda Bormann suffered from cancer
in her later years, and died of mercury poisoning on 23 March,
1946, in Merano, Italy. All of Bormann's children survived the
war. Most were cared for anonymously in foster homes. His eldest
son, Martin, was Hitler's godson. Martin was ordained a Roman
Catholic priest in 1953, but left the priesthood in the late
1960s. He married an ex-nun in 1971 and became a teacher of
theology.
Rise
through the Nazi Party
In 1925, after his release from prison, Bormann joined the
NSDAP in
Thuringia. He became the party's regional press officer and
business manager in 1928.
Reich Leader and Head of the Party Chancellery
In October 1933, Bormann became a Reich Leader (Reichsleiter)
of the NSDAP, and in November, a member of the
Reichstag. From July 1933 until 1941, Bormann served as
the personal secretary for
Rudolf Hess. Bormann commissioned the building of the
Kehlsteinhaus (Eagle's Nest). The Kehlsteinhaus was formally
presented to Hitler on 20 April 1938, after 13 months of expensive
construction, and is commemorated on a plaque just above the
entrance to the tunnel to the lift up to the Eagle's Nest. During
this period, Bormann had also managed Hitler's finances through
various schemes such as royalties collected on
Hitler's book, his image on postage stamps, as well as setting
up an "Adolf Hitler Endowment Fund of German Industry", which was
really a thinly veiled extortion attempt on the behalf of Hitler
to collect more money from German industrialists.
In May 1941, the flight of Hess to Britain cleared the way for
Bormann to become Head of the
Party Chancellery (Parteikanzlei) that same month.
Bormann proved to be a master of intricate political infighting;
his mastery of such infighting along with his access and closeness
to Hitler, and because of the trust Hitler held in him, he was
able to constantly and effectively check and thus make enemies of
Joseph Goebbels,
Hermann Göring,
Heinrich Himmler,
Alfred Rosenberg,
Robert Ley,
Albert Speer and a plethora of other high-ranking officers and
officials, both public and private. The ruthless and continuous
intriguing for power, influence, and favour from Hitler within the
regime came to characterise the inner workings of the Third Reich.
Bormann took charge of all Hitler's paperwork, appointments and
personal finances. Hitler came to have complete trust in Bormann
and the view of reality he presented. During a meeting, Hitler was
said to have screamed, "To win this war, I need Bormann!".
Many historians have suggested Bormann held so much power that, in
some respects, he became Germany's "secret leader" during the war.
A collection of transcripts edited by Bormann during the war
appeared in print in 1951 as
Hitler's Table Talk 1941–1944, mostly a re-telling of
Hitler's wartime dinner conversations.
Bormann's
bureaucratic power and effective reach broadened considerably
by 1942. Faced with the imminent demise of the Third Reich, he
systematically went about the organising of German corporate
flight capital, and set up off-shore holding companies and
business interests in close coordination with the same
Ruhr industrialists and German bankers who, although often not
Nazis, had helped to facilitate Hitler's explosive rise to power
10 years before.
In February 1943, the crushing
German defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad produced a crisis in the
regime. Bormann exploited the disaster at Stalingrad, and his
daily access to Hitler, to persuade him to create a three-man
junta representing the State, the Army and the Party, represented
respectively by Hans Lammers, head of the Reich Chancellery, Field
Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, chief of the OKW (armed forces high
command), and Bormann, who controlled the Party and access to the
Führer. This Committee of Three would exercise dictatorial powers
over the home front. Goebbels, Speer, Göring and Himmler all saw
this proposal as a power grab by Bormann and a threat to their
power, and combined to block it.
However, their alliance was shaky at best. This was mainly due
to the fact that during this period Himmler was still cooperating
with Bormann to gain more power at the expense of Göring and most
of the traditional Reich administration; Göring's loss of power
had resulted in an overindulgence in the trappings of power and
his strained relations with Goebbels made it difficult for a
unified coalition to be formed, despite the attempts of Speer and
Göring's
Luftwaffe deputy
Field Marshal
Erhard Milch, to reconcile the two Party comrades.
However, the result was that
nothing was done—the Committee of Three declined into irrelevance
due to the loss of power by Keitel and Lammers and the ascension
of Bormann and the situation continued to drift, with
administrative chaos increasingly undermining the war effort. The
ultimate responsibility for this lay with Hitler, as Goebbels well
knew, referring in his diary to a "crisis of leadership," but
Goebbels was too much under Hitler’s spell ever to challenge his
power.
At the Nuremberg Trials, Arthur
Seyss-Inquart, the Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands,
testified that he had called Bormann to confirm an order to deport
the Dutch Jews to Auschwitz, and further testified that Bormann
passed along Hitler's orders for the extermination of Jews during
the Holocaust. A telephone conversation between Bormann and
Heinrich Himmler, who was his main antagonist in the struggle for
power within the Nazi elite, was overheard by telephone operators
during which Himmler reported to Bormann about the extermination
of 40,000 Jews in Poland. Himmler was sharply rebuked for using
the word "exterminated" rather than the codeword "resettled," and
Bormann ordered the apologetic Himmler never again to report on
this by phone but through SS couriers.
Berlin
Bormann, his adjutant,
SS-Standartenführer
Wilhelm Zander, and his secretary,
Else Krüger, were with Hitler in the Führer's shelter (Führerbunker)
during the
Battle of Berlin. The Führerbunker was located under
the
Reich Chancellery (Reichskanzlei) in the centre
government district of
Berlin.
On 28 April, Bormann wired the following message to German
Admiral
Karl Dönitz: "Situation very serious . . . Those ordered to
rescue the Führer are keeping silent . . . Disloyalty seems to
gain the upper hand everywhere . . . Reichskanzlei a heap
of rubble."
At 04:00 on 29 April 1945, Wilhelm
Burgdorf, Joseph Goebbels, Hans Krebs, and Bormann witnessed and
signed Hitler's last will and testament. Hitler dictated this
document to his personal secretary, Traudl Junge. Bormann was Head
of the Party Chancellery (Parteikanzlei) and was also the
private secretary to Hitler. Shortly before signing the last will
and testament, Hitler married
Eva Braun in a civil ceremony.
The
Soviet forces continued to fight their way into the centre of
Berlin. Hitler and Eva Braun committed
suicide during the afternoon of the 30 April. Braun took
cyanide and Hitler shot himself in the temple while
simultaneously biting a cyanide capsule. As per instructions,
their bodies were taken to the garden and burned. In accordance
with Hitler's last will and testament,
Joseph Goebbels, the Minister for Public Enlightenment and
Propaganda, became the new "Head
of Government" and
Chancellor of Germany (Reichskanzler).
Martin Bormann was named as Party Minister, thus officially
confirming his position as de facto
General Secretary of the Party.
At 03:15 on 1 May, Reichskanzler Goebbels and Bormann
sent a radio message to Dönitz informing him of Hitler's death.
Per Hitler's last wishes, Dönitz was appointed as the new
"President of Germany" (Reichspräsident).
Goebbels and his wife committed suicide later that same day.
On 2 May, the Battle in Berlin
ended when General der Artillerie Helmuth Weidling, the commander
of the Berlin Defence Area, unconditionally surrendered the city
to General Vasily Chuikov, the commander of the Soviet 8th Guards
Army. It is generally agreed that, by this day, Bormann had left
the Führerbunker. It has been claimed that he left with
Ludwig Stumpfegger and Artur Axmann as part of a group attempting
to break out of the city.
Death, rumours of survival and discovery of remains
Axmann's account of Bormann's death
As World War II came to a close,
Bormann held out with Hitler in the Führerbunker in Berlin. On 30
April 1945, just before committing suicide, Hitler signed the
order to allow a breakout. On 1 May, Bormann left the Führerbunker
with SS doctor Ludwig Stumpfegger and Hitler Youth leader Artur
Axmann as part of a group attempting to break out of the Soviet
encirclement. At the Weidendammer Bridge a Tiger tank spearheaded
the first attempt to storm across the bridge but it was destroyed.
Bormann and Dr. Stumpfegger were "knocked over" when the tank was
hit. There followed two more attempts and on the third attempt,
made around 1:00, Bormann in his group from the Reich Chancellery
managed to cross the Spree. Leaving the rest of their group,
Bormann, Stumpfegger and Axmann walked along railway tracks to
Lehrter station where Axmann decided to go alone in the opposite
direction of his two companions. When he encountered a Red Army
patrol, Axmann doubled back and later insisted he had seen the
bodies of Bormann and Stumpfegger near the railway switching yard
with moonlight clearly illuminating their faces. He did not check
the bodies, so he did not know what killed them.
Axmann, Werner Naumann, and their
adjutants escaped Berlin. Axmann hid in the Bavarian Alps under
the alias "Erich Siewert". He was arrested in December 1945 while
organising an underground Nazi movement. Naumann found asylum in
Argentina where he became an editor of the neo-Nazi magazine "Der
Weg".
Soviet Lieutenant General Konstantin Telegin of the Soviet 5th
Assault Army remembered his men bringing to him Bormann’s diary.
"It was brought-in immediately after the fighting had ended. As
far as I can remember, it was found on the road when they were
cleaning up the battle area." Inspired by the diary and reports
from prisoners, General Telegin said, "Naturally, we sent a recon
group to the bridge, who searched the site of the breakthrough
attempt. All they found were a few civilians. Bormann was not
found."
Tried at Nuremberg
in absentia
During the chaotic closing days of
the war, there were contradictory reports as to Bormann's
whereabouts. For example, Jakob Glas, Bormann's long-time
chauffeur, insisted he saw Bormann in Munich weeks after 1 May
1945. The bodies were not found, and a global search followed
including extensive efforts in South America. With no evidence
sufficient to confirm Bormann's death, the International Military
Tribunal at Nuremberg tried Bormann in absentia in October 1946
and sentenced him to death. His court-appointed defence lawyer
used the unusual and unsuccessful defence that the court could not
convict Bormann because he was already dead.
In 1965, a retired postal worker named Albert Krumnow stated
that around 8 May 1945 the Soviets had ordered him and his
colleagues to bury two bodies found near the railway bridge near
Lehrter station. One was "a member of the Wehrmacht" and the other
was "an SS doctor".
Krumnow’s colleague, Wagenpfohl is said to have found a paybook
on the SS doctor’s body identifying him as Dr. Ludwig Stumpfegger.
He gave the paybook to his boss, postal chief Berndt, who turned
it over to the Soviets. They in turn destroyed it. The Soviets
allowed Berndt to notify Stumpfegger’s wife. He wrote and told her
that her husband’s body was "…interred with the bodies of several
other dead soldiers in the grounds of the Alpendorf in Berlin NW
40, Invalidenstrasse 63."
In summer 1965, Berlin police excavated the alleged burial site
looking for Bormann's remains, but found nothing. Krumnow stated
he could no longer remember exactly where he buried the bodies.
Stern magazine editor, Jochen Von Lang, whose investigation
inspired the dig, later wrote, "even if bones had been discovered,
it would have been exceedingly difficult to identify them as those
of Martin Bormann." He went on to opine that the only way to
identify Bormann would be to find "glass particles" from a cyanide
capsule in the jaw and that "would border almost on the
miraculous."
Two decades of unconfirmed sightings
Unconfirmed sightings of Bormann were reported globally for two
decades, particularly in Europe,
Paraguay and elsewhere in South America. Some rumours claimed
that Bormann had
plastic surgery while on the run. At a 1967 press conference,
Simon Wiesenthal asserted there was strong evidence that
Bormann was alive and well in South America. Writer
Ladislas Farago's widely-known 1974 book Aftermath: Martin
Bormann and the Fourth Reich argued that Bormann had survived
the war and lived in
Argentina. Farago's evidence, which drew heavily on official
governmental documents, was compelling enough to persuade Dr.
Robert M. W. Kempner (a lawyer at the Nuremberg Trials) to
briefly re-open an active investigation in 1972. However, Farago's
claims were generally rejected by historians and critics.
Allegations that Bormann and his organisation survived the war
figure prominently in the work of
David Emory.
Russian spy?
Reinhard Gehlen states in his memoirs
his conviction that Bormann was in fact a Russian agent and that
at the time of his 'disappearance' in Berlin he in reality went
over to his Russian masters and was spirited away by them to
Moscow. He bases this startling conclusion on a conversation he
had with Admiral Canaris and on his conviction that there was an
enemy agent at work inside the German supreme command. He deduced
the latter from the fact that the Russians appeared to be able to
obtain "rapid and detailed information on incidents and top-level
decision-making on the German side". Of course, at the time he was
writing up his memoirs (late 1960s to early 1970s), Gehlen was not
aware of the British breaking of the Enigma codes. Gehlen goes on
to say that he discovered that Bormann was engaged in a Funkspiel
with Moscow with Hitler's express approval. He claims that in the
1950s, when he headed first the 'Gehlen Organisation' and later
the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), the West German Intelligence
Service, he "was passed two separate reports from behind the Iron
Curtain to the effect that Bormann had been a Soviet agent and had
lived after the war in the Soviet Union under perfect cover as an
adviser to the Moscow government. He has died in the meantime."
After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
based on KGB archival material from this period, it was claimed
that the Russians may indeed have had a spy in the bunker, code
named Sasha.
Discovery of
remains
The hunt for Bormann lasted 26 years without success.
International investigators and journalists searched for Bormann
from Paraguay to Moscow and from
Norway to Egypt.
Digs for his body in Paraguay in March 1964 and Berlin in July
1964 were unsuccessful. The German government offered a 100,000
Mark reward in November 1964, but no one claimed it. The final
straw came in July 1965 when the search of Albert Krumnow’s Berlin
location turned up nothing. The German government determined that
Berlin was simply "too full of cemeteries and mass graves dating
from the last days of the war."
On the political end, the hunt for Bormann became a recurring
memory of the Nazi regime and also an embarrassment that would not
go away. On 13 December, 1971, the West German government
officially called an end to the search for Bormann. This
pronouncement was met with protest from Jewish human rights groups
and Nazi hunters like
Simon Wiesenthal who insisted the search must continue until
Bormann was found, alive or dead.
Almost a year later, on 7 December 1972, Axmann and Krumnow's
accounts were bolstered when construction workers uncovered human
remains near the
Lehrter Bahnhof in
West Berlin just 12 metres from the spot where Krumnow claimed
he had buried them. Dental records — reconstructed from memory in
1945 by Dr.
Hugo Blaschke — identified the
skeleton as Bormann's, and damage to the collarbone was
consistent with injuries Bormann's sons reported he had sustained
in a riding accident in 1939. The second skeleton was deemed to be
Stumpfegger‘s, since it was of similar height to his last known
proportions. Fragments of glass in the jawbones of both skeletons
suggested that Bormann and Stumpfegger committed suicide by biting
cyanide capsules to avoid capture.
Soon after, in a press conference held by the West German
government, Bormann was declared dead, a statement condemned by
Britain's
Daily Express as a whitewash perpetrated by the
Brandt government. West German diplomatic officials were given
official instruction, "...if anyone is arrested on suspicion that
he is Bormann we will be dealing with an innocent man."
Some controversy continued, however. For example, Hugh Thomas'
1995 book Doppelgängers claimed there were
forensic inconsistencies suggesting Bormann died later than
1945. When exhumed, Bormann’s skeleton was covered in flecks of
red clay, whereas Berlin is a city based on yellow sand. This
indicated to some that the body had been re-interred from
somewhere with a clay-based soil, such as Paraguay, the
Andes Mountains or even Russia.
Nazi hunter
Simon Wiesenthal refused to accept the government’s
declaration of Bormann‘s death, persisting in the belief that
Bormann escaped Berlin with Axmann and headed south to the safety
of the Alps. There he was rumoured to have been seen in both
Bavaria and
Austria. In fact, Bormann’s aide,
Wilhelm Zander was captured in
Passau, along the
Austrian frontier in December 1945. From the Alps, Wiesenthal
believed, Bormann and others escaped to South America.
Others, like English scholar and intelligence officer,
Hugh Trevor-Roper, decried the evidence upon which the German
government based its searches for Bormann: the testimony of one
man. He and others argued that the testimony of Artur Axmann, the
only man who said he saw Bormann dead was falsified to protect
Bormann who was then on the run. Both men were unrepentant Nazis
and shared the motivation to keep their cause alive. Axmann, they
argued, probably escaped Berlin with Bormann. Russian investigator
Lev Bezymenski wrote that Axmann’s statements had, "the apparent
aim of convincing the world that the Reichsleiter had been
killed." Bezymenski also wrote that Axmann’s statements, "give
rise to a lot of doubt, especially when one considers that he
changed his explanations at least three times in the postwar
years."
Some also believed it implausible that the Soviets would identify
the body of Stumpfegger and ignore Bormann’s body, supposedly at
Stumpfegger’s side. Further, that Bormann was reinterred only to
later be "discovered" by the German government.
The controversy regarding the identity of the skeleton thought
to be Bormann allegedly ended in 1998 when German authorities
ordered a
genetic test on the skull. The test identified the skull as
that of Bormann, using DNA
from a relative of Bormann.
Bormann's remains were
cremated and the ashes scattered in the
Baltic Sea by Bormann's son, a priest.
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