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Hitler's Last Secretary: A Firsthand Account of Life with Hitler, by Traudl Junge
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In 1942 Germany, Traudl Junge was a young woman with dreams of becoming a ballerina when she was offered the chance of a lifetime. At the age of twenty-two she became private secretary to Adolf Hitler and served him for two and a half years, right up to the bitter end. Junge observed the intimate workings of Hitler’s administration, she typed correspondence and speeches, including Hitler’s public and private last will and testament; she ate her meals and spent evenings with him; and she was close enough to hear the bomb that was intended to assassinate Hitler in the Wolf’s Lair, close enough to smell the bitter almond odor of Eva Braun’s cyanide pill. In her intimate, detailed memoir, Junge invites readers to experience day-to-day life with the most horrible dictator of the twentieth century.
- Sales Rank: #112944 in eBooks
- Published on: 2011-09-01
- Released on: 2011-09-01
- Format: Kindle eBook
Review
A fascinating insight into the charismatic nature of Hitler's appeal.
About the Author
Traudl Junge was born in Munich in 1920. From the end of 1942 until April 1945 she was Hitler’s private secretary. After the war she was sent to a Russian prison camp and later returned to Germany. She died on February 10, 2002, shortly after the publication of the German edition of her book.
Most helpful customer reviews
117 of 122 people found the following review helpful.
The Fuhrer has two faces
By Virginia C. Hughes
I first saw Traudl Junge in an interview embedded in the movie "Downfall". She was an elderly woman who appeared to be struggling with guilt for her association with Hitler. She appeared very sincere and admitted that even though things were not discussed in depth in the Bunker and other residences she visited, she could have found out more about the death and destruction spearheaded by Hitler.
This 250 page paperback is a first hand account of Traudl Junge's association with the administration of the Third Reich as her job as secretary to Adolf Hitler. She was in her early 20's when she landed the job in Berlin in 1943. Germany was losing the war yet in her position she was sheltered from the world around her and by her account she was protected by Hitler; he seemed to be a father figure to her, very caring and interesting to talk to.
She writes of her time in the Reich's Chancellery, the Berghof, and the Bunker in East Prussia. She speaks of the many characters she came in contact with and how Hitler's personality garnered respect from all he commanded. She rarely saw Hitler's dark side; he was the consumate entertainer and host in his home, held lunches and dinner's for 25 people, and traveled to see heads of state, and she was part of the entourage.
She was not an ardent Nazi, did not come close to the horrid SS women of Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, she simply was there for the job but admittedly in awe of the Fuhrer. She liked the idea of a national community and everybody working together for a better Germany. She saw Hitler as a genial host on one hand and military supreme commander on the other and had a difficult time reconciling this dichotomy. she believed Hitler lived for his mission, for the idealogy of national socialism for a greater Germany. He always visited wounded soliders on his birthday. She said Hitler admitted prefering to "speak off the cuff", this fits with the writing of Mein Kampf which appears more as a speech than a liteary piece. The laws of nature were his religion. His oratory, she said held people spellbound suppressing their own convictions.
The last ten days in the bunker she describes vividly and offers a statement of Gunsche, the SS soldier who burnt the corpses of Hitler and Eva Braun. The "most powerful man in the Reich, and now ashes blowing in the wind." This book offers something few books do, actual quotes on a peronsal basis of people closest to Hitler and Hitler himself.
This is a sad story of a young woman who chose to be a follower of Hitler, a "young follower" as she was categorized. After 1945 and until the end of her life she was filled with guilt, but chose not to take the path taken by so many of suicide. She lived with the past and tried to make the future better for herself. Two and a half years of a life of German royalty had such a powerful impact on the rest of it. She was lucky she survived the Russian Camps. The book also contains 14 black and white photos and one authentic manuscipt page of her memoir. She offers a unique and honest perspective of Hitler, a man on a solitary path, whose inner core was never truly revealed, and who in the end succumbed to his own law of nature.
71 of 73 people found the following review helpful.
An observer of events...
By C. B. Miller
A re-published memoir by one of Hitler's private secretaries (from the first meeting in November 1942 through the end in April 1945). "Traudl" Junge was born Gertraud Humps. Later, with Hitler's encouragement, she married one of his orderies, Hans H. Junge in June of 1943. Hans Junge was killed in action on August 13, 1944. Though it all she continued working at Hitler's side and looked on him as a father figure. The book shows her interaction with Hitler along with his private side. She is able to give thumb nail sketches of his inner circle, as well. Mrs. Junge was present in the F�hrerbunker and describes the events therein. She typed Hitler's last will and political testament. She also heard "the shot" in which Hitler ended his life.
The book is not meant to be a scholarly written book as to those times and events. It is interesting and gives the reader anecdotes and observations. The book is written mainly from the point of view of the (then) rather naive, non-political young woman who witnessed the decline and fall of both Hitler and Nazi Germany. A main source for the movie "Downfall".
Footnote: Much of the information put forth in the book above was covered by Mrs. Junge in her contributions to: "Voices From the Bunker" by Pierre Galante. However, "Voices From the Bunker" was not quite as detailed overall and further did not include pre-Hitler and post-Hitler information as to Mrs. Junge's life.
79 of 83 people found the following review helpful.
Vivid Description of the "Banality of Evil"
By Sheila
Hannah Arendt, while observing Adolf Eichmann during his trial for Nazi war crimes, was struck by how very ordinary and unsinister he appeared. This led to her calling him the embodiment of the "banality of evil", disputing the idea that most Nazis were sociopaths and very different from ordinary human beings.
This book is a narrative illustrating that concept. Traudl Junge goes to work as a secretary for Hitler, not because of any burning ideological reasons, but simply because she wants to leave a job she dislikes. She wants to leave to become a dancer, but state regulations at the time require she do something that helps the state. Through a colleague related to Albert Bormann, she is invited to apply for the position of secretary for Hitler and is chosen from among several young women.
Here is where the story becomes absolutely fascinating and this is why: Junge wrote her account in 1947, only 2 years after the end of the war. While Hitler already was seen as an evil man by the Allies, the full extent of what had happened was just beginning to be known. So Junge has the freedom to simply detail her daily life with Hitler, unencumbered by the weighty responsibility she might have felt later on to villify him.
And so we see a Hitler who loves his German Shepherd,Blondi, and jokes with Eva Braun about how her two Scotch terriers are "nothing but a couple of dusting brushes"....a man who awkwardly tells young Traudl she should come to him if any of the young soldiers ever harass her... an wonderful conversationalist who loves to retell pranks he did as a young man....a father figure to Junge who made her feel protected. All in all, her experience was such that she decades later says, "I can still look back to that time with warm emotions. I never again felt that I belonged anywhere in just the same way."
This book also details the failed assassination attempt on Hitler, Junge's impressions of several prominent Nazis, and Hitler's last days in the Berlin bunker. Interestingly, she also alludes to different ways those around Hitler were affected by his charisma and drawn in to following him unquestioningly. The book ends by heartbreakingly describing Junge's later agony as she realizes truly what she had been a part of, enduring long bouts of depression which led to hospitalizations and psychotherapy as she struggled to overcome her guilt and shame.
How can we wrap our minds around the fact that a human who commit horrific atrocities can also love animals and exhibit tender kindness towards others? I don't have any answers, but while we cannot and should not forget the evil perpetrated by Hitler, if we value truth, we must also not turn him into simply a personification of evil, with no admirable qualities. Junge's story is a witness to that paradoxical truth. Highly recommended.
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