Read Mission at Nuremberg Online
Authors: Tim Townsend
155Â Â
“the foremost representatives . . .”:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 36.
155Â Â
Goering stood and took a microphone:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 166.
155Â Â
“
Nein!
”:
Ibid., p. 176.
155Â Â
“Not guilty . . .”:
Trial of the Major War Criminals (TMWC), Vol. 2, p. 97.
156Â Â
“modern juristic literature . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 167.
156Â Â
“The wrongs which we seek . . .”:
TMWC, Vol. 2, p. 98.
157Â Â
a ravine called Babi Yar:
Ibid., p. 124.
157Â Â
destruction of the Warsaw ghetto:
Ibid., p. 126.
157Â Â
the annihilation of millions:
Ibid., p. 136.
157Â Â
evidence of a “medical experiment”:
Ibid., p. 129.
157Â Â
Jackson spoke for four hours:
Barrett, “Civilization Opens Its Case.”
157Â Â
As Gerecke spoke:
Barrett, “Thanksgiving in Nuremberg (1945).”
157Â Â
prosecutor Major Frank Wallis spoke:
TMWC, Vol. 2, p. 177.
158Â Â
“This was history being made
. . .”:
Barrett, “Thanksgiving in Nuremberg (1945).”
158Â Â
to attend his services on Sundays:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
158Â Â
the small two-cell chapel:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
159Â Â
“You Lutherans have fifteen
. . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
159Â Â
“jolly” and “delightful”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
159Â Â
“You've got the right address, Chappie
. . .”:
Hank Gerecke interview, 2 February 2008.
159Â Â
the little church in Mögeldorf:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
160Â Â
OMGUS vacated:
Unless otherwise noted, the description of life in Nuremberg is drawn from Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses
(pp. 106â139), Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials
(pp. 209â217), Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial
(pp. 227â229), and West, “Greenhouse with Cyclamens I (1946)” (pp. 9â14).
161Â Â
a German band played jazz:
Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses,
p. 131, and Jerry Legow interview.
162Â Â
“ . . . a relaxed, tolerant and philanderous ambience . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 217.
162Â Â
“ . . . who was not on the vigorous side . . .”:
West, “Greenhouse with Cyclamens I (1946),” p. 13.
162Â Â
“ . . . in a manner certainly vulgar . . .”:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 229.
163Â Â
Because of the need to translate:
Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses,
p. 130.
163Â Â
the fishbowl of Nuremberg:
Ibid., p. 131
163Â Â
“water-torture, boredom . . .”:
West, “Greenhouse with Cyclamens I (1946),” p. 8.
163Â Â
“There was a lot of drinking . . .”:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 227.
164Â Â
“I must feel convinced . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
164Â Â
guards had placed notes:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
165Â Â
“I know little about your politics . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
165Â Â
German Imperial Navy:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 403.
165Â Â
would create a bottleneck:
Ibid., 407.
165Â Â
Doenitz had given them:
Ibid., 408.
166Â Â
Lieutenant Heinz Eck was on trial:
Law Reports of Trials of War Criminals,
p. 2.
166Â Â
When Eck's U-boat surfaced:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
pp. 408â409.
166Â Â
the Greek first officer:
Law Reports of Trials of War Criminals,
p. 3.
166Â Â
“No thank you,” Rosenberg said:
Gerecke, “Monthly Report of Chaplains,” December 1945.
166Â Â
a movement to leave the Catholic:
Steigmann-Gall,
Holy Reich,
p. 219.
167Â Â
might be better spent:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
167Â Â
“If my colleagues are . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
167Â Â
Raeder was born near Hamburg:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 368.
167Â Â
promoted to admiral and chief:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 239.
167Â Â
In a fit of jealousy:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 372.
167Â Â
“clear and relentless fight . . .”:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 239.
167Â Â
case of Reverend Martin Niemoeller:
Bird,
Erich Raeder,
p. 105.
168Â Â
Hitler made Raeder grand admiral:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 240.
168Â Â
Raeder began reading the scripture:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
168Â Â
prepared questions:
“Chaplain Gerecke Urges Aid.”
168Â Â
Soon enough:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
168Â Â
“This business of religion . . .”:
Ibid.
168Â Â
“the nastiest, the most disagreeable . . .”:
Ibid., and Gerecke, Toastmasters.
168Â Â
Born in Wesel:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
pp. 246â247.
169Â Â
Ribbentrop . . . was his gofer:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 147.
169Â Â
He was contemptuous:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 246, and Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 148.
169Â Â
“Can a man be patriotic . . .”
:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
169Â Â
“ . . . you must obey God . . .”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
169Â Â
“became more and more penitent . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
169Â Â
which he eventually did:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
169Â Â
Nazis were unresponsive at first:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
169Â Â
his entire family had been Catholic:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
169Â Â
“get right with God”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
170Â Â
“I'll be there . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
170Â Â
Schacht's bitterness:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
170Â Â
“But if there's any degree . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
170Â Â
“ . . . go to church with my wife”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
170Â Â
a bald head shaped like a bulldog's:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 204.
170Â Â
He wasn't smart:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 195.
170Â Â
the most notorious slaver:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 506.
170Â Â
hands constantly fluttering:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 204.
170Â Â
made most cringe:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 195.
170Â Â
a habit of pausing:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 428.
170Â Â
“one of the dullest . . .”:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 501.
170Â Â
“one of the toughest . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials
p. 427.
170Â Â
shining and buffing them:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 204.
170Â Â
“As a clergyman . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
171Â Â
working toward an ideal:
Ibid.
171Â Â
a working-class success story:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 204.
171Â Â
from a seafaring family:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 505, and Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 267.
171Â Â
shipwrecked off the Scottish coast:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 206, and Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 267.
171Â Â
in a French POW camp:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 347.
171Â Â
a lathe operator in a ball-bearing plant:
Ibid., and Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 206.
171Â Â
began studying engineering:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 505.
171Â Â
It was a happy marriage:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 347.
171Â Â
over the next fifteen years:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 206.
171Â Â
Two of the boys:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 505.
171Â Â
a labor leader at his factory:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 196.
171Â Â
he was making speeches:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 505.
171Â Â
Sauckel heard Hitler:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 347.
171Â Â
“the man chosen by fate . . .”:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
p. 208.
171Â Â
“the loyal fidelity of a dog . . .”:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 196.
171Â Â
elected into the Reichstag:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 267.
172Â Â
energetic leader of the Nazi Party:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 504.
172Â Â
lowered the minimum age:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 350.
172Â Â
the Reich's quenchless thirst:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 506, and Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 266.
172Â Â
rounded up fifty thousand men:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 512.
172Â Â
4.5 million foreign workers:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 350.
172Â Â
In a letter to Rosenberg:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 512.
173Â Â
jammed fifty to eighty . . . Sauckel evoked:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
pp. 509â517.
173Â Â
eight million foreign workers:
Evans,
Third Reich at War,
p. 357.
173Â Â
not how they were treated:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 507.
174Â Â
he would come to chapel services:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
174Â Â
“how I can prepare myself . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
174Â Â
Sauckel asked for God's mercy:
Ibid.
174Â Â
and wiped away tears:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
174Â Â
“All right, Mr. Sauckel . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
175Â Â
“big men . . .”:
Ibid.
175Â Â
“Of course I'm coming . . .”:
Ibid.
175Â Â
“a delightful conversationalist”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
175Â Â
His grandfather was an architect:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
pp. 290â291.
175Â Â
proved useful to Hitler:
Ibid., p. 291, and Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 483.
175Â Â
At the end of the war . . . he backed off:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 485.
176Â Â
“tried to continue Gerecke's ministry”:
Grossmith,
Cross and the Swastika,
p. 121.
176Â Â
“ . . . made a lasting impression . . .”:
Ibid., p. 5.
176Â Â
“fitted least snugly
. . .”:
Smith,
Reaching Judgment,
p. 292.
176Â Â
“deeply ashamed . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
177Â Â
“those important doctrines . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
177Â Â
walking in a public area:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
p. 312.
177Â Â
a long line of blacksmiths:
Goldensohn,
Nuremberg Interviews,
pp. 49â52.