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Reinhard Heydrich
Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1969-054-16, Reinhard Heydrich
Heydrich as a SS-Gruppenführer (1940)
Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia
(acting Protector)

In office
29 September 1941 – 4 June 1942
Appointed by Adolf Hitler
Preceded by Konstantin von Neurath
(Protector until 24 August 1943)
Succeeded by Kurt Daluege
(Acting Protector)
Director of the Reich Main Security Office

In office
27 September 1939 – 4 June 1942
Appointed by Heinrich Himmler
Preceded by Post created
Succeeded by Heinrich Himmler (acting)
President of Interpol

In office
24 August 1940 – 4 June 1942
Preceded by Otto Steinhäusl
Succeeded by Arthur Nebe
Director of the Gestapo

In office
22 April 1934 – 27 September 1939
Appointed by Heinrich Himmler
Preceded by Rudolf Diels
Succeeded by Heinrich Müller
Personal details
Born Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich
(1904-03-07)7 March 1904[1]
Halle an der Saale, Province of Saxony, German Empire
Died 4 June 1942(1942-06-04) (aged 38)[1]
Prague-Libeň, Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia (now Czech Republic)
Nationality German
Political party National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP)
Spouse(s) Lina von Osten (married 26 December 1931)
Children
  • Klaus Heydrich (17 June 1933 – 24 October 1943)
  • Heider Heydrich (born 23 December 1934)
  • Silke Heydrich (born 9 April 1939)
  • Marte Heydrich (born 23 July 1942)
Signature Reinhard Heydrich signatures
Military service
Nickname(s) The Hangman,[2] The Butcher of Prague,[3] The Blond Beast, Himmler's Evil Genius, Young Evil God of Death[4]
Rank SS-Obergruppenführer Collar Rank SS-Obergruppenführer

Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich (German: [ˈʁaɪnhaʁt ˈtʁɪstan ˈɔʏɡn̩ ˈhaɪdʁɪç]) (7 March 1904 – 4 June 1942) was a high-ranking German Nazi official during World War II, and one of the main architects of the Holocaust. He was SS-Obergruppenführer (General) and General der Polizei, chief of the Reich Main Security Office (including the Gestapo and Kripo) and Stellvertretender Reichsprotektor (Deputy Reich-Protector) of Bohemia and Moravia (in what is now known as the Czech Republic). Heydrich served as President of Interpol (the international law enforcement agency) and chaired the January 1942 Wannsee Conference, which formalised plans for the final solution to the Jewish Question—the deportation and extermination of all Jews in German-occupied territory.

Historians regard him as the darkest figure within the Nazi elite; Adolf Hitler christened him "the man with the iron heart".[5] He was the founding head of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), an intelligence organisation charged with seeking out and neutralising resistance to the Nazi Party via arrests, deportations, and killings. He helped organize Kristallnacht, a series of co-ordinated attacks against Jews throughout Nazi Germany and parts of Austria on 9–10 November 1938. The attacks, carried out by SA stormtroopers and civilians, presaged the Holocaust. Upon his arrival in Prague, Heydrich sought to eliminate opposition to the Nazi occupation by suppressing Czech culture and deporting and executing members of the Czech resistance.

Heydrich was attacked in Prague on 27 May 1942 by a British-trained team of Czech and Slovak soldiers who had been sent by the Czechoslovak government-in-exile to kill him in an operation code named Operation Anthropoid. He died from his injuries a week later. Intelligence falsely linked the assassins to the villages of Lidice and Ležáky. Lidice was razed to the ground; all adult males were executed, and all but a handful of its women and children were deported and killed in Nazi concentration camps.

Early life[]

Heydrich[6] was born in 1904 in Halle an der Saale to composer and opera singer Richard Bruno Heydrich and his wife Elisabeth Anna Maria Amalia Krantz, a Roman Catholic.[7] His two forenames were patriotic musical tributes: "Reinhard" referred to the tragic hero from Amen (an opera his father wrote), and "Tristan" stems from Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. Heydrich's third name, "Eugen", was his late maternal grandfather's forename (Professor Eugen Krantz had been the director of the Dresden Royal Conservatory).[8] Heydrich was born into a family of social standing and substantial financial means. Music was a part of Heydrich's everyday life; his father founded the Halle Conservatory of Music and his mother taught piano there.[9] Heydrich developed a passion for the violin and carried that interest into adulthood; he impressed listeners with his musical talent.[10]

File:Heydrichchildren2.jpg

Children of Richard Bruno Heydrich: Heinz Heydrich (seated), Reinhard Heydrich (centre), Maria Heydrich

His father was a German nationalist who instilled patriotic ideas in his three children, but was not affiliated with any political party until after World War I.[11] The Heydrich household was strict. As a youth, Heydrich engaged his younger brother, Heinz, in mock fencing duels. Heydrich was very intelligent and excelled in his schoolwork—especially in science—at the "Reformgymnasium".[12] A talented athlete, he became an expert swimmer and fencer.[10] But he was shy, insecure, and was frequently bullied for his high-pitched voice and rumored Jewish ancestry.[13] The latter claim earned him the nickname "Moses Handel".[14] Years later, Wilhelm Canaris said he had obtained photocopies proving Heydrich's Jewish ancestry, but these photocopies never surfaced.[15] Nazi Gauleiter Rudolf Jordan also claimed that Heydrich was not a pure "Aryan". Heydrich ultimately ordered Schutzstaffel (SS) researchers to investigate the rumour. They reported that he had no Jewish ancestors. Nazi official and "race expert" Achim Gercke concluded that Heydrich was a pure Aryan, with no Jewish ancestry.[16][17]

In 1918, World War I ended with Germany's defeat. In late February 1919, civil unrest—including strikes and clashes between communist and anti-communist groups—took place in Heydrich's home town of Halle. Under Defense Minister Gustav Noske's directives, a right-wing paramilitary unit was formed and ordered to "recapture" Halle. [18] Heydrich, then 15-years old, joined Maercker's Volunteer Rifles (the first Freikorps unit). When the skirmishes ended, Heydrich was part of the force assigned to protect private property.[19] Little is known about his role, but the events left a strong impression; it was a "political awakening" for him.[19] He joined the Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund (The National German Protection and Shelter League), an anti-Semitic organisation.[20]

As a result of the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles, hyperinflation spread across Germany and many lost their life savings. Halle was not spared. By 1921, few townspeople there could afford a musical education at Bruno Heydrich's conservatory. This led to a financial crisis for the Heydrich family.[21]

Naval career[]

File:Heydrichensign.jpg

Reinhard Heydrich, cadet

In 1922 Heydrich joined the Navy, taking advantage of the security, structure, and pension it offered. He became a naval cadet at Kiel, Germany's primary naval base. On 1 April 1924 he was promoted to senior midshipman (Oberfähnrich zur See) and sent to officer training at the Mürwik Naval College.[22] In 1926 he advanced to the rank of ensign (Leutnant zur See) and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship Schleswig-Holstein, the flagship of Germany's North Sea Fleet. With the promotion came greater recognition. He received good evaluations from his superiors and had few problems with other crewmen. He was promoted on 1 July 1928 to the rank of sub-lieutenant (Oberleutnant zur See). The increased rank fueled his ambition and arrogance.[23]

Heydrich became a notorious lothario, having countless affairs. In December 1930 he attended a rowing-club ball and met Lina von Osten. They became romantically involved and soon announced their engagement. Lina was already a Nazi Party follower; she had attended her first rally in 1929.[24] In 1931 Heydrich was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman" for breaking an engagement promise to a woman he had known for six months before the von Osten engagement.[25] Admiral Erich Raeder dismissed Heydrich from the navy that April. The dismissal devastated Heydrich, who found himself without career prospects.[26] He kept the engagement and married Lina in December 1931.[27]

Career in the SS and military[]

Obersalzberg meeting - May 1939

Reinhard Heydrich (middle) with Heinrich Himmler (left), Karl Wolff (right), and Hermann Esser (far right, back to camera) at the Obersalzberg, May 1939

In 1931, Heinrich Himmler began setting up a counterintelligence division of the SS. Acting on the advice of his associate Karl von Eberstein, who was von Osten's friend, Himmler interviewed Heydrich. Himmler was impressed and hired him immediately.[28] His pay was 180 reichsmarks per month (40 USD). His NSDAP number was 544,916 and his SS number was 10,120.[1] Heydrich later received a Totenkopfring from Himmler for his service.[29]

On 1 August 1931 Heydrich began his job as chief of the new 'Ic Service' (intelligence service).[28] He set up office at the Brown House, the Nazi Party headquarters in Munich. By October he had created a network of spies and informers for intelligence-gathering purposes and to obtain information to be used as blackmail to further political aims.[30] Information on thousands of people was recorded on index cards and stored at the Brown House.[31] To mark the occasion of Heydrich's December wedding, Himmler promoted him to the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer (major). In just over fifteen months, Heydrich had surpassed his former naval rank and was making what was considered a "comfortable" salary.[32]

In 1932 a number of Heydrich's enemies began to spread rumours of his alleged Jewish ancestry. Within the Nazi organisation such innuendo could be damning, even for the head of the Reich's counterintelligence service. Nazi Party racial expert Dr. Achim Gercke investigated Heydrich's genealogy. Gercke reported that Heydrich was "... of German origin and free from any coloured and Jewish blood".[33]

Gestapo and SD[]

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R97512, Berlin, Geheimes Staatspolizeihauptamt

Gestapo headquarters on Prinz-Albrecht-Straße in Berlin, 1933

In mid-1932, Himmler appointed Heydrich chief of the renamed security service—the Sicherheitsdienst (SD).[28] Heydrich's counterintelligence service grew into an effective machine of terror and intimidation. With Hitler striving for absolute power in Germany, Himmler and Heydrich wished to control the political police forces of all 17 German states. They began with Bavaria. In 1933, Heydrich gathered some of his men from the SD and together they stormed police headquarters in Munich and took over the police using intimidation tactics. Himmler became the Munich police chief and Heydrich became the commander of Department IV, the political police.[34]

In 1933, Hitler became Chancellor of Germany, and through a series of decrees[35] became Germany's Führer und Reichskanzler (leader and chancellor).[36] The first concentration camps, which were originally intended to house political opponents, were established in early 1933. By year's end there were over fifty camps.[37]

Hermann Göring founded the Gestapo in 1933 as a Prussian police force. When Göring transferred full authority over the Gestapo to Himmler in April 1934, it immediately became an instrument of terror under the SS's purview.[38] Himmler named Heydrich to head the Gestapo on 22 April 1934.[39] On 9 June 1934, Rudolph Hess declared the SD the official Nazi intelligence service.[40]

Crushing the SA[]

Beginning in April 1934, and at Hitler's request, Heydrich and Himmler began building a dossier on Sturmabteilung (SA) leader Ernst Röhm in an effort to remove him as a rival for party leadership. At this point, the SS was still part of the SA, the early Nazi paramilitary organisation which now numbered over 3 million men.[41] At Hitler's direction, Heydrich, Himmler, Göring, and Viktor Lutze drew up lists of those who should be liquidated, starting with seven top SA officials and including many more. On 30 June 1934 the SS and Gestapo acted in coordinated mass arrests that continued throughout the weekend. Röhm was shot without trial, along with the leadership of the SA.[42] The purge became known as the Night of the Long Knives. Up to 200 people were killed in the action. Lutze was appointed SA's new head and it was converted into a sports and training organisation.[43]

Bundesarchiv Bild 152-50-10, Reinhard Heydrich

SS-Brigadeführer Heydrich, head of the Bavarian police and SD, in Munich, 1934

With the SA out of the way, Heydrich began building the Gestapo into an instrument of fear. He improved his index-card system, creating categories of offenders with color-coded cards.[44] The Gestapo had the authority to arrest citizens on the suspicion that they might commit a crime, and the definition of a crime was at their discretion. The Gestapo Law, passed in 1936, gave police the right to act extra-legally. This led to the sweeping use of Schutzhaft—"protective custody", a euphemism for the power to imprison people without judicial proceedings.[45] The courts were not allowed to investigate or interfere. The Gestapo was considered to be acting legally as long as it was carrying out the leadership's will. People were arrested arbitrarily, sent to concentration camps, or killed.[37]

Himmler began developing the notion of a Germanic religion and wanted SS members to leave the church. In early 1936, Heydrich left the Catholic Church. His wife, Lina, had already done so the year before. Heydrich not only felt he could no longer be a member, but came to consider the church's political power and influence a danger to the state.[46]

Consolidating the police forces[]

Bundesarchiv Bild 119-5243, Wien, Arthur Seyß-Inquart, Adolf Hitler

Seyß-Inquart, Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and Heydrich in Vienna, March 1938

On 17 June 1936 all police forces throughout Germany were united, following Hitler's appointment of Himmler as Chief of German Police. Himmler immediately reorganised the police into two groups: the Ordnungspolizei (Order Police; Orpo), consisting of both the national uniformed police and the municipal police, and the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police; SiPo), consisting of the Geheime StaatsPolizei (Secret State Police; Gestapo) and Kriminalpolizei (Criminal Police; Kripo).[47] At that point, Heydrich was head of the SiPo and SD. Heinrich Müller was the Gestapo's operations chief.[48]

Heydrich was assigned to help organise the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. The games were used to promote the propaganda aims of the Nazi regime. Goodwill ambassadors were sent to countries that were considering a boycott. Anti-Jewish violence was forbidden for the duration, and news stands were required to stop displaying copies of Der Stuermer. [49][50] For his part in the games' success, Heydrich was awarded the Deutsches Olympiaehrenzeichen or German Olympic Games Decoration (First Class).[29]

In mid-1939 Heydrich created the Stiftung Nordhav Foundation to obtain real estate for the SS and Security Police to use as guest houses and vacation spots.[51] The Wannsee Villa, which the Stiftung Nordhav acquired in November 1940,[52] was the site of the Wannsee Conference (20 January 1942). At the conference, senior Nazi officials formalised plans to deport and exterminate all Jews in German-occupied territory and those countries not yet conquered.[53] This action was to be coordinated among the representatives from the Nazi state agencies present at the meeting.[54]

On 27 September 1939 the SD and SiPo (made up of the Gestapo and the Kripo) were folded into the new Reich Main Security Office or SS-Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA), which was placed under Heydrich's control.[55] The title of "Chef der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD" (Chief of Security Police and SD) or CSSD was conferred on Heydrich on 1 October.[56] Heydrich became the President of Interpol (then under Nazi control) on 24 August 1940,[57] and its headquarters were transferred to Berlin. He was promoted to SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei on 24 September 1941.[1]

Red Army purges[]

In 1936, Heydrich learned that a top-ranking Soviet officer was plotting to overthrow Joseph Stalin. Sensing an opportunity to strike a blow at both the Soviet Army and Admiral Canaris of Germany's Abwehr, Heydrich decided that the Russian officers should be "unmasked".[58] He discussed the matter with Himmler and both in turn brought it to Hitler's attention. But the "information" Heydrich had received was actually misinformation planted by Stalin himself in an attempt to legitimize his planned purges of the Red Army's high command. Stalin ordered one of his best NKVD agents, General Nikolai Skoblin, to pass Heydrich false information suggesting that Marshall Mikhail Tukhachevsky and other Soviet generals were plotting against Stalin. Hitler approved Heydrich's plan to act on the information immediately. Heydrich's SD forged a series of documents and letters implicating Tukhachevsky and other Red Army commanders. The material was delivered to the NKVD.[58] The Great Purge of the Red Army followed on Stalin's orders. While Heydrich believed they had successfully deluded Stalin into executing or dismissing some 35,000 of his officer corps, the importance of Heydrich's part is a matter of speculation and conjecture.[59] Soviet military prosecutors did not use the forged documents against the generals in their secret trial; they instead relied on false confessions extorted or beaten out of the defendants.[60]

Night-and-Fog Decree[]

KZ-Hinzert-Plakette-Nacht-und-Nebel

Commemorative plaque of the French victims of the Night-and-Fog Decree at Hinzert concentration camp

By late 1940, German armies had swept through most of Western Europe. The following year, Heydrich's SD was given responsibility for carrying out the Nacht und Nebel (Night-and-Fog) decree. According to the decree, "persons endangering German security" were to be arrested in a maximally discreet way: "under the cover of night and fog". People disappeared without a trace and none told of their whereabouts or fate.[61] For each prisoner, the SD had to fill in a questionnaire that listed personal information, country of origin, and the details of their crimes against the Reich. This questionnaire was placed in an envelope inscribed with a seal reading "Nacht und Nebel" and submitted to the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA). In the WVHA "Central Inmate File", as in many camp files, these prisoners would be given a special "covert prisoner" code, as opposed to the code for POW, Felon, Jew, Gypsy, etc.[lower-alpha 1] The decree remained in effect after Heydrich's death. The exact number of people who vanished under it has never been positively established, but it is estimated to be 7,000.[62]

Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia[]

Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-039-26, Reinhard Heydrich im Prager Schloß crop

Heydrich (left) with Karl Hermann Frank at Prague Castle in 1941

On 27 September 1941, Heydrich was appointed Deputy Reich Protector of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (the part of Czechoslovakia incorporated into the Reich on 15 March 1939) and assumed control of the territory. The Reich Protector, Konstantin von Neurath, remained the territory's titular head, but was sent on "leave" because Hitler, Himmler, and Heydrich felt his "soft approach" to the Czechs had promoted anti-German sentiment and encouraged anti-German resistance via strikes and sabotage.[63] Upon his appointment, Heydrich told his aides "[w]e will Germanize the Czech vermin."[64]

Heydrich came to Prague to enforce policy, fight resistance to the Nazi regime, and keep up production quotas of Czech motors and arms that were "extremely important to the German war effort".[63] He viewed the area as a bulwark of Germandom and condemned the Czech resistance's "stabs in the back". To realise his goals Heydrich demanded racial classification of those who could and could not be Germanized. He explained, "... making this Czech garbage into Germans must give way to methods based on racist thought".[65] Heydrich started his rule by terrorising the population: 92 people were executed within three days of his arrival in Prague. Their names appeared on posters throughout the occupied region.[66] Almost all avenues by which Czechs could express the Czech culture in public were closed.[65] According to Heydrich's estimate, between 4,000 and 5,000 people were arrested by February 1942. Those who were not executed were sent to Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp, where only four per cent of Czech prisoners survived the war.[66] In March 1942, further sweeps against Czech cultural and patriotic organisations, military, and intelligentsia resulted in the practical paralysis of Czech resistance. Although small disorganised cells of Central Leadership of Home Resistance (Ústřední vedení odboje domácího, ÚVOD) survived, only the communist resistance was able to function in a coordinated manner (although it also suffered arrests).[66] The terror also served to paralyse resistance in society, with public and widespread reprisals against any action resisting the German rule.[66] Heydrich's brutal policies during that time quickly earned him the nickname "the Butcher of Prague".[67]

Gnome-mime-sound-openclipart
Excerpt from a speech by Reinhard Heydrich in 1941

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As Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, Heydrich applied carrot-and-stick methods.[68] Labour was reorganised on the basis of the German Labour Front. Heydrich used equipment confiscated from the Czech organisation Sokol to organise events for workers.[69] Food rations and free shoes were distributed, pensions were increased, and (for a time) free Saturdays were introduced. Unemployment insurance was established for the first time.[68] The black market was suppressed. Those associated with it or the resistance movement were tortured or executed. Heydrich labelled them "economic criminals" and "enemies of the people", which helped gain him support. Conditions in Prague and the rest of the Czech lands were relatively peaceful under Heydrich, and industrial output increased.[68] Still, those measures could not hide shortages and increasing inflation; reports of growing discontent multiplied.[69]

Despite public displays of goodwill towards the populace, privately Heydrich left no illusions about his eventual goal: "This entire area will one day be definitely German, and the Czechs have nothing to expect here". Eventually up to two-thirds of the populace were to be either removed to regions of Russia or exterminated after Nazi Germany won the war. Bohemia and Moravia faced annexation directly into the German Reich.[70]

The Czech workforce was exploited as Nazi-conscripted labour.[69] More than 100,000 workers were removed from "unsuitable" jobs and conscripted by the Ministry of Labour. By December 1941, Czechs could be called to work anywhere within the Reich. Between April and November 1942, 79,000 Czech workers were taken in this manner for work within Nazi Germany. Also, in February 1942, the work day was increased from eight to twelve hours.[71]

Heydrich was, for all intents and purposes, military dictator of Bohemia and Moravia. His changes to the government's structure left President Emil Hacha and his cabinet virtually powerless. He often drove alone in a car with an open roof—a show of his confidence in the occupation forces and in his government's effectiveness.[72]

Summary of career[]

Heydrich's time in the SS was a mixture of rapid promotions, reserve commissions in the regular armed forces, and front-line combat service. During his 11 years with the SS Heydrich "rose from the ranks": he was appointed to every rank from private to full general. He was also a major in the Luftwaffe, flying nearly 100 combat missions until 22 July 1941, when his plane was hit by Soviet anti-aircraft fire. Heydrich made an emergency landing behind enemy lines. He evaded a Soviet patrol and met up with a forward German patrol.[73] After this Hitler personally ordered Heydrich to return to Berlin to resume his SS duties.[74] His service record also gives him credit as a Navy Reserve Lieutenant, although during World War II Heydrich had no contact whatsoever with this military branch.

Heydrich received several Nazi and military awards, including the German Order,[75] Blood Order,[76] Golden Party Badge, Luftwaffe Pilot's Badge, bronze and silver combat mission bars, and the Iron Cross First and Second Classes.[77]

Role in the Holocaust[]

Kristallnacht rh telegram pg1

1938 telegram giving orders during Kristallnacht, signed by Heydrich

Carta Göring

July 1941 letter from Göring to Heydrich concerning the "final solution" "in the manner of emigration or evacuation" (sic)

Historians regard Heydrich as the most fearsome member of the Nazi elite.[78][79][80] Hitler called him "the man with the iron heart".[5] He was one of the main architects of the Holocaust during the early war years, answering only to, and taking orders from, Hitler, Göring, and Himmler in all matters pertaining to the deportation, imprisonment, and extermination of Jews.

Heydrich was one of the organisers of Kristallnacht, a pogrom against Jews throughout Germany on the night of 9–10 November 1938. Heydrich sent a telegram that night to various SD and Gestapo offices, helping to coordinate the program with the SS, SD, Gestapo, uniformed police (Orpo), SA, Nazi party officials, and even the fire departments. It talks about permitting arson and destroying Jewish businesses and synagogues, and orders the confiscation of all "archival material" out of Jewish community centres and synagogues. The telegram ordered that "as many Jews – particularly affluent Jews – are to be arrested in all districts as can be accommodated in existing detention facilities ... Immediately after the arrests have been carried out, the appropriate concentration camps should be contacted to place the Jews into camps as quickly as possible."[81][82] Twenty-thousand Jews were sent to concentration camps in the days immediately following; [83] historians consider Kristallnacht the beginning of the Holocaust.[84]

When Hitler asked for a pretext for the invasion of Poland in 1939, Himmler, Heydrich, and Heinrich Müller masterminded a false flag plan code-named Operation Himmler. It involved a fake attack on the German radio station at Gleiwitz on 31 August 1939. Heydrich masterminded the plan and toured the site, which was about four miles from the Polish border. Wearing Polish uniforms, 150 German troops carried out several attacks along the border. Hitler used the ruse as an excuse to launch his invasion.[85][86]

On 21 September 1939, Heydrich sent out a teleprinter message on the "Jewish question in the occupied territory" to the chiefs of all Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police. It contained instructions on how to round up Jewish people for placement into ghettos, called for the formation of Judenräte (Jewish councils), ordered a census, contained Aryanization plans for Jewish-owned businesses and farms, among other measures.[lower-alpha 2] The Einsatzgruppen followed the army into Poland to implement the plans. Later, in the Soviet Union, they were charged with rounding up and killing Jews via firing squad and gas vans. By the end of the war, the Einsatzgruppen had murdered over one million people, including over 700,000 in Russia alone.[87]

On 29 November 1939, Heydrich issued a cable about the "Evacuation of New Eastern Provinces", detailing the deportation of people by railway to concentration camps, and giving guidance surrounding the December 1939 census, which would be the basis on which those deportations were performed.[88] In May 1941 Heydrich drew up regulations with Quartermaster general Eduard Wagner for the upcoming invasion of the Soviet Union, which ensured that the Einsatzgruppen and army would cooperate in murdering Soviet Jews.[89]

On 10 October 1941, Heydrich was the senior officer at a meeting in Prague that discussed deporting 50,000 Jews from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia to ghettos in Minsk and Riga. The officers also discussed taking 5,000 Jews from Prague "in the next few weeks" and handing them over to the Einsatzgruppen commanders Arthur Nebe and Otto Rasch. Establishing ghettos in the Protectorate was also planned, resulting in the construction of Theresienstadt,[90] where 33,000 people would eventually die. Tens of thousands more passed through the camp on their way to their deaths in the East.[91] In 1941 Himmler named Heydrich as "responsible for implementing" the forced movement of 60,000 Jews from Germany and Czechoslovakia to the Lodz (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto in Poland.[92]

On 20 January 1942, Heydrich chaired the Wannsee Conference, at which he presented his plan to deport and transport 11 million Jews from every country in Europe, to be worked to death or killed outright in extermination camps:[93][94]

Under suitable direction, the Jews should be brought to the East in the course of the Final Solution, for use as labour. In large labour gangs, with the sexes separated, the Jews capable of work will be transported to those areas and set to road-building, in the course of which, without doubt, a large part of them ("ein Großteil") will fall away through natural losses. The surviving remnant, surely those with the greatest powers of resistance, will be given special treatment, since, if freed, they would constitute the germinal cell for the re-creation of Jewry.

— from Heydrich's speech at the Wannsee Conference, January 1942[95]

Death in Prague[]

Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-039-44, Heydrich-Attentat

The open-top Mercedes in which Heydrich was mortally wounded

In London, the Czechoslovak government-in-exile resolved to kill Heydrich. Jan Kubiš and Jozef Gabčík headed the team chosen for the operation. Trained by the British Special Operations Executive (SOE), the pair returned to the Protectorate, parachuting from a Handley Page Halifax, on 28 December 1941. They lived in hiding, preparing for the assassination attempt.[96]

On 27 May 1942, Heydrich planned to meet Hitler in Berlin. German documents suggest that Hitler intended to transfer Heydrich to German-occupied France, where the French resistance was gaining ground.[97] Heydrich would have to pass a section where the Dresden-Prague road merged with a road to the Troja Bridge. The intersection, in the Prague suburb of Libeň, was well-suited for the attack because motorists have to slow for a hairpin turn. As Heydrich's car slowed, Gabčík took aim with a Sten sub-machine gun, but it jammed and failed to fire. Instead of ordering his driver to speed away, Heydrich called his car to a halt and attempted to confront the attackers. Kubiš then threw a bomb (a converted anti-tank mine) at the rear of the car as it stopped. The explosion wounded Heydrich and Kubiš.[98]

File:Heydrichmarke.jpg

Postage stamp (1943) features the death mask of Heydrich

When the smoke cleared, Heydrich emerged from the wreckage with his gun in his hand; he chased Kubiš and tried to return fire. Kubiš jumped on his bicycle and pedalled away. Heydrich ran after him for half a block but became weak from shock and collapsed. He sent his driver, Klein, to chase Gabčík on foot. In the ensuing firefight, Gabčík shot Klein in the leg and escaped to a local safe house. Heydrich, still with pistol in hand, gripped his left flank, which was bleeding profusely.[99]

A Czech woman went to Heydrich's aid and flagged down a delivery van. Heydrich was first placed in the driver's cab, but complained that the truck's movement was causing him pain. He was placed in the back of the truck, on his stomach, and taken to the emergency room at Na Bulovce Hospital.[100] Heydrich had suffered severe injuries to his left side, with major damage to his diaphragm, spleen, and lung. He had also fractured a rib. Dr. Slanina packed the chest wound, while Dr. Walter Diek tried unsuccessfully to remove the splinters. He immediately decided to operate. This was carried out by Drs. Diek, Slanina, and Hohlbaum. Heydrich was given several blood transfusions. A splenectomy was performed. The chest wound, left lung, and diaphragm were all debrided and the wounds closed.[100] Himmler ordered Dr. Karl Gebhardt to fly to Prague to assume care. Despite a fever, Heydrich's recovery appeared to progress well. Dr. Theodor Morell, Hitler's personal physician, suggested the use of sulfonamide (a new antibacterial drug), but Gebhardt, thinking Heydrich would recover, refused.[101] On 2 June, during a visit by Himmler, Heydrich reconciled himself to his fate by reciting a part of one of his father's operas:

The world is just a barrel-organ which the Lord God turns Himself.
We all have to dance to the tune which is already on the drum.[102]

CyrilMethodious

Bullet-scarred window in the Church of St. Cyril and St. Methodius in Prague, where Kubiš and his compatriots were cornered

Heydrich slipped into a coma after Himmler's visit and never regained consciousness. He died on 4 June, probably around 04:30. He was 38. The autopsy concluded that he died of sepsis. Heydrich's facial expression as he died betrayed an "uncanny spirituality and entirely perverted beauty, like a renaissance Cardinal," according to Bernhard Wehner, a Kripo police official who investigated the assassination.[103]

After an elaborate funeral held in Prague on 7 June 1942, Heydrich's coffin was placed on a train to Berlin, where a second ceremony was held in the new Reich Chancellery on 9 June. Himmler gave the eulogy.[76] Hitler attended and placed Heydrich's decorations—including the highest grade of the German Order, the Blood Order Medal, the Wound Badge in Gold and the War Merit Cross 1st Class with Swords—on his funeral pillow.[104] Although Heydrich's death was employed for pro-Reich propaganda, Hitler privately blamed Heydrich for his own death, through carelessness:

Since it is opportunity which makes not only the thief but also the assassin, such heroic gestures as driving in an open, unarmoured vehicle or walking about the streets unguarded are just damned stupidity, which serves the Fatherland not one whit. That a man as irreplaceable as Heydrich should expose himself to unnecessary danger, I can only condemn as stupid and idiotic.[105]

Heydrich was interred in Berlin's Invalidenfriedhof, a military cemetery.[106] The exact burial spot is not known—a temporary wooden marker that disappeared when the Red Army overran the city in 1945 was never replaced, so that Heydrich's grave could not become a rallying point for Neo-Nazis.[107] A photograph of Heydrich's burial shows the wreaths and mourners to be in section A, which abuts the north wall of the Invalidenfriedhof and Scharnhorststraße, at the front of the cemetery.[107] A recent biography of Heydrich also places the grave in Section A.[108] Hitler wanted Heydrich to have a monumental tomb but, due to Germany's declining fortunes, it was never built.

After the war, the West German judicial system awarded Heydrich's widow a federal pension.[109] The couple had four children: Klaus, born in 1933; Heider, born in 1934; Silke, born in 1939; and Marte, born shortly after her father's death in 1942.[110] Klaus was killed in a traffic accident in 1943. Lina wrote a memoir, Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher (Living With a War Criminal), which was published in 1976.[111] She remarried once and died in 1985.[112]

Aftermath[]

File:Lidice massacred men.jpg

The massacre at Lidice

Heydrich's assailants hid in safe houses and eventually took refuge in Ss. Cyril and Methodius Cathedral, an Orthodox church in Prague. After a traitor in the Czech resistance betrayed their location,[113] the church was surrounded by 800 members of the SS and Gestapo. Several Czechs were killed, and the remainder hid in the church's crypt. The Germans attempted to flush the men out with gunfire, tear gas, and by flooding the crypt. Eventually an entrance was made using explosives. Rather than surrender, the soldiers took their own lives. Supporters of the assassins who were killed in the wake of these events included the church's leader, Bishop Gorazd, who is now revered as a martyr of the Orthodox Church.[114]

Infuriated by Heydrich's death, Hitler ordered the arrest and execution of 10,000 randomly selected Czechs. But after consultations with Karl Hermann Frank, he tempered his response. The Czech lands were an important industrial zone for the German military, and indiscriminate killing could reduce the region's productivity.[115] Hitler ordered a quick investigation. Intelligence falsely linked the assassins to the towns of Lidice and Ležáky. A Gestapo report stated that Lidice, 22 kilometres (14 mi) north-west of Prague, was suspected as the assailants' hiding place because several Czech army officers, then in England, had come from there and the Gestapo found a resistance radio transmitter in Ležáky.[116] On 9 June, after discussions with Himmler and Karl Hermann Frank, Hitler ordered brutal reprisals.[117] Over 13,000 people were arrested, deported, and imprisoned. Beginning on 10 June, all males over the age of 16 in the villages of Lidice and Ležáky were murdered. All the women in Ležáky were also murdered.[113] All but four of the women from Lidice were deported immediately to Ravensbrück concentration camp (four were pregnant – they were forcibly aborted at the same hospital where Heydrich had died and then sent to the concentration camp). A number of children were chosen for Germanization, but 81 were killed in gas vans at the Chełmno extermination camp. Both towns were burned and Lidice's ruins were levelled.[118][119] At least 1,300 people were massacred after Heydrich's death.[120][121]

Heydrich's replacements were Ernst Kaltenbrunner as the chief of RSHA,[106] and Karl Hermann Frank (27–28 May 1942) and Kurt Daluege (28 May 1942 – 14 October 1943) as the new acting Reichsprotektors.

After Heydrich's death, the policies formalised at the Wannsee conference he chaired were carried out. The first three true death camps, designed for mass killing with no legal process or pretext, were built and operated at Treblinka, Sobibór, and Bełżec. The project was named Operation Reinhard after Heydrich.[122]

See also[]

Footnotes[]

  1. For the coding of prisoners, see IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black, pp 355 and 362. Black references the "Administration of German Concentration Camps", 9 July 1945, PRO FO 371/46979 (Public Record Office, London), as well as "Decoding Key for Concentration Camp Card Index Files", n.d. NARG242/338 T-1021 Roll 5, JAG (National Archives, College Park); and in the last source Frame 99 is mentioned.
  2. 2.0 2.1 The telegram is evidence number PS-3363 from the Oswald Pohl case at the Nuremburg Trials. A translation of the text is available at yadvashem.org.

Citations[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Dederichs 2009, p. 12.
  2. Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (Tenth ed.). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster. 1996. p. 1416. ISBN 0-87779-709-9. 
  3. Ramen 2001, p. 8.
  4. Snyder 1994, p. 146.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Dederichs 2009, p. 92.
  6. Dederichs 2009, p. 11.
  7. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 14–15, 18.
  8. Gerwarth 2011, p. 14.
  9. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 14, 20.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Dederichs 2009, p. 28.
  11. Gerwarth 2011, p. 28.
  12. Gerwarth 2011, p. 24.
  13. Dederichs 2009, pp. 23, 28.
  14. Lemons 2005, p. 225.
  15. "Reinhard Heydrich". Auschwitz.dk. 20 January 1942. http://www.auschwitz.dk/Canaris/id3.htm. Retrieved 7 January 2012. 
  16. "Reinhard Heydrich". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007406. Retrieved 27 January 2012. 
  17. "Reinhard Heydrich biography". Historyplace.com. http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/biographies/heydrich-biography.htm. Retrieved 7 January 2012. 
  18. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 28, 29.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Gerwarth 2011, p. 30.
  20. Waite 1969, pp. 206–207.
  21. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 32, 33.
  22. Gerwarth 2011, p. 34.
  23. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 37, 38.
  24. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 39–41.
  25. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 43, 44.
  26. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 44, 45.
  27. Calic 1985, p. 51.
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 Longerich 2011, p. 125.
  29. 29.0 29.1 SS service record collection, United States National Archives. College Park, Maryland
  30. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 56, 57.
  31. Calic 1985, p. 72.
  32. Gerwarth 2011, p. 58.
  33. Williams 2001, p. 38.
  34. Longerich 2011, p. 149.
  35. Shirer 1960, pp. 196–200.
  36. Shirer 1960, p. 226–227.
  37. 37.0 37.1 Shirer 1960, p. 271.
  38. Shirer 1960, pp. 270–271.
  39. Williams 2001, p. 61.
  40. Longerich 2011, p. 165.
  41. Kershaw 2008, p. 306–307.
  42. Kershaw 2008, pp. 309–12.
  43. Kershaw 2008, p. 313.
  44. Flaherty 2004, pp. 56, 68.
  45. McNab 2009, p. 156.
  46. Williams 2001, p. 66.
  47. Williams 2001, p. 77.
  48. Weale 2010, p. 132, 135.
  49. Calic 1985, p. 157.
  50. Kershaw 2008, pp. 358–359.
  51. Lehrer 2000, p. 55.
  52. Lehrer 2000, p. 61–62.
  53. Goldhagen 1996, p. 158.
  54. Kershaw 2008, p. 696.
  55. Longerich 2011, pp. 469, 470.
  56. Headland 1992, p. 22.
  57. Dederichs 2009, p. 83.
  58. 58.0 58.1 Williams 2001, p. 85.
  59. Williams 2001, p. 88.
  60. Conquest 2008, pp. 200–202.
  61. Snyder 1994, p. 242.
  62. "Night and Fog Decree". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007465. Retrieved 27 January 2012. 
  63. 63.0 63.1 Williams 2003, p. 82.
  64. Horvitz & Catherwood 2006, p. 200.
  65. 65.0 65.1 Bryant 2007, p. 140.
  66. 66.0 66.1 66.2 66.3 Bryant 2007, p. 143.
  67. Paces 2009, p. 167.
  68. 68.0 68.1 68.2 Williams 2003, p. 100.
  69. 69.0 69.1 69.2 Bryant 2007, p. 144.
  70. Garrett 1996, p. 60.
  71. MacDonald 1989, p. 133.
  72. Williams 2003, p. 141.
  73. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 174, 196, 197.
  74. Gerwarth 2011, p. 197.
  75. Gerwarth 2011, p. 279.
  76. 76.0 76.1 Dederichs 2009, pp. 148–150.
  77. Gerwarth 2011, p. 174.
  78. Sereny 1996, p. 325.
  79. Evans 2006, p. 53.
  80. Gerwarth 2011, p. xiii.
  81. "Glass: Image 3". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/kristallnacht/issues/kn-1-3.htm. Retrieved 27 January 2012. 
  82. Calic 1985, p. 192.
  83. Calic 1985, p. 193.
  84. "Kristallnacht". The Hutchinson Encyclopedia (18 ed.). Oxford: Helicon. 1998. p. 1199. ISBN 978-1-85833-951-1. 
  85. Shirer 1960, pp. 518–520.
  86. Calic 1985, pp. 194–200.
  87. Shirer 1960, pp. 958–963.
  88. 88.0 88.1 Aly, Götz; Roth, Karl Heinz; Black, Edwin; Oksiloff, Assenka (2004). The Nazi Census: Identification and Control in the Third Reich. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-59213-199-0. 
  89. Hillgruber 1989, pp. 94–96.
  90. "The Path to the Mass Murder of European Jews, part 2. Notes from the meeting on the solution of Jewish questions held on 10.10.1941 in Prague". Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz – Gedenk- und Bildungsstätte. http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm. Retrieved 3 February 2012. 
  91. "Theresienstadt". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?ModuleId=10005424. Retrieved 27 January 2012. 
  92. "The Path to the Mass Murder of European Jews, part 2: Letter of 18 September 1941 from Himmler to Reichsstatthalter Greiser". Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz – Gedenk – und Bildungsstätte. http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm. Retrieved 3 February 2012. 
  93. Kershaw 2008, p. 696–697.
  94. "The Wannsee Conference". Holocaust-history.org. 4 February 2004. http://www.holocaust-history.org/short-essays/wannsee.shtml. Retrieved 3 February 2012. 
  95. "Shofar FTP Archive File: Adolf Eichmann judgment transcript: The Wannsee conference". The Nizkor Project. 27 May 1999. http://www.nizkor.org/ftp.py?people/e/eichmann.adolf/transcripts/Judgment/Judgment-025. Retrieved 3 February 2012. 
  96. Calic 1985, p. 254.
  97. Bryant 2007, p. 175.
  98. Williams 2003, pp. 145–147.
  99. Williams 2003, pp. 147, 155.
  100. 100.0 100.1 Williams 2003, p. 155.
  101. Williams 2003, p. 165.
  102. Lehrer 2000, p. 86.
  103. Höhne 2000, p. 495.
  104. Williams 2003, p. 223.
  105. MacDonald 1989, p. 182.
  106. 106.0 106.1 Dederichs 2009, p. 107.
  107. 107.0 107.1 Lehrer 2000, p. 87.
  108. Dederichs 2009, p. 176.
  109. Frei 2002, p. 335.
  110. Gerwarth 2011, pp. 77, 83, 113, 289.
  111. Browder 2004, p. 260.
  112. Lehrer 2000, p. 58.
  113. 113.0 113.1 Dederichs 2009, p. 152.
  114. Dederichs 2009, pp. 153–155.
  115. Craig 2005, p. 189.
  116. Dederichs 2009, pp. 151–152.
  117. Gerwarth 2011, p. 280.
  118. Calic 1985, p. 253.
  119. Frucht 2005, p. 236.
  120. Burian et al. 2002.
  121. Kershaw 2008, p. 714.
  122. Arad 1987, p. 13.

Bibliography[]

  • Arad, Yitzhak (1987). Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34293-5. 
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  • Calic, Edouard (1985) [1982]. Reinhard Heydrich: The Chilling Story of the Man Who Masterminded the Nazi Death Camps. New York: Morrow. ISBN 978-0-688-00481-1. 
  • Conquest, Robert (2008) [1990]. The Great Terror: A Reassessment. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531700-8. 
  • Craig, John S. (2005). Peculiar Liaisons: In War, Espionage, and Terrorism in the Twentieth Century. New York: Algora. ISBN 978-0-87586-331-3. 
  • Dederichs, Mario R. (2009) [2005]. Heydrich: The Face of Evil. Drexel Hill, PA: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-935149-12-5. 
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  • Gerwarth, Robert (2011). Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11575-8. 
  • Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah (1996). Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-0-679-44695-8. 
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Further reading[]

  • Aronson, Shlomo (1984) [1971]. Reinhard Heydrich und die Frühgeschichte von Gestapo und SD. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. ISBN 978-3-421-01569-3. 
  • Fest, Joachim (1999) [1970]. The Face of the Third Reich: Portraits of the Nazi Leadership. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80915-6. 
  • Graber, G. S. (1996) [1978]. The History of the SS. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 978-0-7090-5880-9. 
  • Graber, G. S. (1980). The Life and Times of Reinhard Heydrich. Philadelphia, PA: David McKay. ISBN 978-0-679-51181-6. 
  • Heydrich, Lina (1976). Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher [Life with a War Criminal]. Pfaffenhofen: Ludwig Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7787-1025-8. 
  • Lehrer, Steven (2002). Hitler Sites: A City-by-city Guidebook (Austria, Germany, France, United States). Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1045-0. 
  • Reitlinger, Gerald (1989) [1956]. The SS: Alibi of a Nation 1922–1945. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80351-2. 
  • Schellenberg, Walter (2000) [1956]. The Labyrinth: Memoirs of Walter Schellenberg, Hitler's Chief of Counterintelligence. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80927-9. 
  • Schreiber, Carsten (2008) (in German). Elite im Verborgenen. Ideologie und regionale Herrschaftspraxis des Sicherheitsdienstes der SS und seines Netzwerks am Beispiel Sachsens. Studien zur Zeitgeschichte; Bd. 77. München: Oldenbourg. ISBN 978-3-486-58543-8. 
  • Wiener, Jan G. (1969). The Assassination of Heydrich. New York, NY: Grossman Publishers. OCLC 247895. 
  • Williamson, Gordon (1995). Loyalty is my Honor. London: Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0-7603-0012-1. 

External links[]

Government offices
Preceded by
Konstantin Freiherr von Neurath
Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia (acting Protector)
29 September 1941 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Kurt Daluege
Preceded by
Post Created
Director of the Reich Main Security Office
27 September 1939 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Heinrich Himmler (acting)
Preceded by
Otto Steinhäusl
President of Interpol
24 August 1940 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Arthur Nebe
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Boris Shaposhnikov
Cover of Time Magazine
23 February 1942
Succeeded by
Tomoyuki Yamashita
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