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Between 1925 and 1945 thousands of ordinary Germans of both sexes and all ages wrote letters to Hitler. Lost for decades, a large cache of these letters was recently discovered in the KGB Special Archive in Moscow, having been carted off to Russia by the Soviet Secret Police at the end of the war. The letters range from gushing love letters ... to letters from teachers, students, priests, businessmen and others expressing gratitude for alleviating poverty or restoring dignity to the German people. There are a few protest letters and the occasional desperate plea to release a loved one from a concentration camp, but the overwhelming majority are positive and even rapturous, shedding fresh light on the nature of the Hitler cult in Nazi Germany
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"Four months after the end of the war, Hitler’ s personal physician Theo Morell stated to his fellow prisoner Karl Brandt: (3 )4z (BIn fact, Hitler was never sick. (3 )4y (BBrandt, who had been responsible for the (3 )4z (Beuthanasia (3 )4y (Bkillings and was thus deeply implicated in the crimes of the Nazi regime, disagreed. He claimed that Morell had (3 )4z (Bpumped the Führer full of drugs (3 )4y (Band was now merely attempting to justify his actions. In his opinion, Morell had turned Hitler into a physical wreck. The image of a decrepit and drug-dependent psychopath in the Reich Chancellery bunker is one of the most enduring myths about Hitler. It provides a simple explanation for his actions: who but a sick man could have ordered the killing of millions of people? Hans-Joachim Neumann and Henrik Eberle study this question and seek answers in the detailed notes and diaries left by Morell, in medical reports, pharmacological analyses and interviews with eye witnesses. Their conclusions are clear and definitive."--pub. desc.
Hitler, Adolf, --- Morell, Theodor Gilbert, --- Health. --- Health --- Heads of state --- Mental health. --- Chefs d'Etat --- Biography --- Biographie
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Soixante ans après la fin de la Second Guerre mondiale, Matthias Uhl, jeune historien allemand, découvre dans les archives russes un document d'un intérêt historique majeur. Intitulé "Le dossier Hitler", rédigé à l'usage exclusif de Staline, il a été établi sur la base des procès-verbaux des interrogatoires de deux officiers SS : Otto Günsche, l'aide de camp personnel de Hitler, et Heinz Linge, son majordome. Débriefés par le NKVD, les services secrets soviétiques, de 1945 à 1949, les deux hommes avaient évolué dans la proximité immédiate de Hitler durant de longues années. Apportant une foule de renseignements inédits sur la vie au jour le jour du dictateur, de sa prise de pouvoir en 1933 à son suicide en 1945, ce document unique contient non seulement un grand nombre de détails qui étaient restés ignorés sur la politique et la conduite de la guerre de Hitler, mais il donne également une image sans fard de ce qui se passait réellement dans son entourage. Publié récemment à grand fracas en Allemagne, cet ouvrage fascinant constitue à coup sûr l'une des sources historiques les plus impressionnantes récemment mises au jour sur le Troisième Reich.
World War, 1939-1945 --- 2ème guerre mondiale --- Sources. --- Sources --- Hitler, Adolf, --- Günsche, Otto, --- Linge, Heinz, --- Germany --- Allemagne --- History --- Histoire --- 2ème guerre mondiale --- Günsche, Otto, --- Audition des témoins --- Günsche, Otto --- Linge, Heinz --- Hitler, Adolf --- Politique et gouvernement --- Audition des témoins --- Günsche, Otto
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World War, 1939-1945 --- Germany --- Sources --- History --- 1933-1945 --- Hitler, Adolf --- Günsche, Otto --- Linge, Heinz
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