Helmuth James Graf von Moltke

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Helmuth James Graf (Count) von Moltke

Helmuth James Graf von Moltke in January, 1945
Born March 11, 1907
Kreisau, Lower Silesia, Germany
Died January 23, 1945
Berlin-Plötzensee, Germany
Cause of death Execution
Burial place Hamburg-Wandsbek, Germany
Nationality Germany
Other names Helmuth James Ludwig Eugen Heinrich Graf von Moltke
Education University of Breslau, Oxford University
Occupation International law
Known for Non-violent resistance to the Nazi government of Germany as co-founder of the Kreisau Circle
Spouse Freya von Moltke
Children Helmuth Caspar, Konrad

Helmuth James von Moltke (11 March 190723 January 1945) was a German jurist, a member of the opposition against Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany, and a founding member of the Kreisau Circle resistance group. He was the great-grandnephew of Helmuth von Moltke the Elder, the victorious commander in the Austro-Prussian and Franco-Prussian Wars, and the owner of the Kreisau Estate in Silesia. He was a member of the Prussian House of Lords.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Helmuth James Graf[1] von Moltke was born in Kreisau in Lower Silesia. His mother, Dorothy (née Rose-Innes), was a South African of British descent, the daughter of Sir James Rose-Innes, the highest judge in the Union of South Africa. Moltke's parents were members of the Christian Science church, and his father was a Christian Science practitioner and teacher and one of the translators of the German edition of the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy.[2]

[edit] Education

From 1927 to 1929, he studied legal and political sciences in Breslau (now Wrocław in Poland), Vienna, Heidelberg, and Berlin. In 1931 he married Freya Deichmann, whom he met in Austria. In 1928 he became involved with college teachers and youth movement leaders in the organization of the "Löwenberg Labour Community" (Löwenberger Arbeitsgemeinschaften) in which jobless young workers and young farmers were brought together with students so they could learn from each other. They also discussed civics, obligations, and rights. In Kreisau, Moltke set aside an unused part of the estate for farming startups, which earned him harsh criticism from neighbouring landowners.

In 1934, he wrote his junior law examination. In 1935, he declined the chance to become a judge because he would have been obliged to join the Nazi Party. Instead, he opened a law practice in Berlin. As a lawyer dealing in international law, he could help displaced Jews and other victims of Hitler's régime emigrate, and could travel abroad to establish contacts. Between 1935 and 1938, Moltke regularly went to Great Britain, where he completed English legal training in London and Oxford.

[edit] International law division of the Abwehr

In 1939, World War II began with the German invasion of Poland. Von Moltke was immediately drafted at the beginning of the Polish campaign by the Abwehr—specifically, the High Command of the Armed Forces (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht—OKW), Counter-Intelligence Service, Foreign Division—under Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, as an expert in martial law and international public law.[3] Von Moltke's work for the Abwehr mainly involved gathering insights from abroad, from military attachés and foreign newspapers, and news of military-political importance, and relaying this information to the Wehrmacht. He maintained the connection between the OKW and the Foreign Office, but above all to provide appraisals of questions of international law of war.

In his travels through German-occupied countries, he observed many human rights abuses, which he attempted to thwart by insisting that Germany observe the Geneva Convention (it continued not to) and through local actions in creating more benign outcomes for local inhabitants, citing legal principles.[3] In October, 1941, von Moltke wrote, "Certainly more than a thousand people are murdered in this way every day, and another thousand German men are habituated to murder... What shall I say when I am asked: And what did you do during that time?" In the same letter he said, "Since Saturday the Berlin Jews are being rounded up. Then they are sent off with what they can carry.... How can anyone know these things and walk around free?"[3][2]

He hoped that, with his appraisals, he could have a humanitarian effect on military events, and was supported in this by anti-Hitler officers such as Admiral Wilhelm Canaris and Major General Hans Oster, Chief of the Central Division. During Nazi Germany's war with the Soviet Union, von Moltke wrote a controversial opinion urging Germany to follow both the Geneva Convention and the Hague Convention, in order to comply with international law and to promote reciprocal good treatment for German prisoners of war; however he was overruled on the grounds that Russia was not a signatory to the agreements, with Field Marshal Keitel describing the Geneva Convention as "a product of a notion of chivalry of a bygone era." He further acted on his opposition to the brutalities of Nazism by ordering deportation of Jews to countries which provided safe haven, and by writing reports emphasizing the psychological problems German soldiers developed after witnessing and participating in mass killings of Jews and Eastern Europeans.[2]

Having access to this information, von Moltke began to oppose both the war, and the entire program of the Nazi party.

[edit] Non-violent resistance to Nazi rule

Von Moltke also surreptitiously spread the information to which he was privy, regarding the war and the concentration camps, to friends outside the Nazi party, including members of the resistance in occupied Europe. Declassified British documents reveal that he twice attempted to contact British officials, including friends from Oxford, offering to "go to any length" to assist them; however the British refused the first time, confusing him with his uncle, the German ambassador to Spain, and replied to the second offer by asking for "deeds" rather than "talk".[2]

Von Moltke possessed strong religious convictions and in a 1942 letter smuggled to a British friend Lionel Curtis, von Moltke wrote: “Today, not a numerous, but an active part of the German people are beginning to realize, not that they have been led astray, not that bad times await them, not that the war may end in defeat, but that what is happening is sin and that they are personally responsible for each terrible deed that has been committed - naturally, not in the earthly sense, but as Christians”[4] In the same letter, von Moltke wrote that before World War II, he had believed that it was possible to be totally opposed to Nazism without believing in God, but he now declared his former ideas to be "wrong, completely wrong". In von Moltke's opinion, only by believing in God could one be a total opponent of the Nazis.[4]

[edit] Kreisau Circle

The von Moltke main house at Kreisau
The von Moltke main house at Kreisau

In Berlin von Moltke had a circle of acquaintances who opposed Nazism and who met frequently there, but on three occasions met at Kreisau. These three incidental gatherings were the basis for the term “Kreisau Circle.”[5] The meetings at Kreisau had an agenda of well-organized discussion topics, starting with relatively innocuous ones as cover. The topics of the first meeting of May, 1942 included the failure of German educational and religious institutions to fend off the rise of Nazism. The theme of the second meeting in the Fall of 1942 was on post-war reconstruction, assuming the likely defeat of Germany. This included both economic planning and self-government, developing a pan-European concept that pre-dated the European Union by nearly sixty years, summarized in documented resolutions. The third meeting in June, 1943 addressed how to handle the legacy of Nazi war crimes after the fall of the dictatorship. These and other meetings resulted in “Principles for the New [Post-Nazi] Order” and “Directions to Regional Commissioners” that von Moltke asked his wife, Freya, to hide in a place that not even he knew.[5]

Von Moltke opposed the assassination of Hitler. He warned that if one succeeded, Hitler would become a martyr, whereas if one were to fail, it would expose those few individuals among the German leadership who could be counted on to build a democratic state after the collapse of the Third Reich. On July 20, 1944 there was an attempt on Hitler's life, which the Gestapo used as a pretext to eliminate perceived opponents to the Nazi regime. In the aftermath of the plot some 5,000 of Hitler's opponents were executed.[2]

[edit] Arrest, trial and execution by the Gestapo

Memorial stone to Moltke and his brother at Kreisau (Krzyżowa)
Memorial stone to Moltke and his brother at Kreisau (Krzyżowa)

Von Moltke's mindset and his objections to orders that were at odds with international law were not without danger, and in January 1944, he was arrested by the Gestapo. A year later, in January 1945, he stood, along with several of his fellow régime opponents, before the People's Court, over which presided Roland Freisler. Because no evidence could be found that von Moltke had participated in any conspiracy to bring about a coup d'état, Freisler had to invent a charge de novo.

Since von Moltke and his friends had discussed a Germany based on moral and democratic principles that could develop after Hitler, Freisler deemed this discussion as treason, a crime worthy of death. Hanns Lilje writes in his autobiography that as von Moltke stood before the Volksgerichtshof, he had "possessed, in the face of clear recognition of the fact that the death penalty had already been decided, the moral courage for an attack on Freisler and the whole institution". In two letters written to his wife in January 1945 while imprisoned at Tegel, von Moltke noted with considerable pride that he was to be executed for his ideas, not his actions, a point that had been underlined a number of times by Freisler. In one letter, Moltke noted "Thus it is documented, that not plans, not preparations, but the spirit as such shall be persecuted. Vivat Freisler!"[4] In the second letter, von Moltke claimed that he stood before the court "...not as a Protestant, not as a great landowner, not as an aristocrat, not as a Prussian, not as a German...but as a Christian and nothing else".[4] He wrote: "But what the Third Reich is so terrified of ... is ultimately the following: a private individual, your husband, of whom it is established that he discussed with 2 clergymen of both denominations [Protestant and Catholic] ... questions of the practical, ethical demands of Christianity. Nothing else; for that alone we are condemned.... I just wept a little, not because I was sad or melancholy ... but because I am thankful and moved by this proof of God's presence."[2]

Von Moltke was sentenced to death on 11 January 1945 and executed twelve days later at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin. In a letter written while in custody, he revealed his motivation for resistance to his two sons: "Since National Socialism came to power, I have striven to make its consequences milder for its victims and to prepare the way for a change. In that, my conscience drove me – and in the end, that is a man's duty."

[edit] Recognition

Von Moltke has been honoured with a bust at Walhalla temple.

In 1989, von Moltke was posthumously awarded the Geschwister-Scholl-Preis for his work, Briefe an Freya 1939–1945.

In 2001 the German Section of the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War established the Helmuth-James-von-Moltke-Preis for outstanding judicial works in the field of security policy.[1]

As Germany persists in shedding light on the internal dynamics of the Nazi era, von Moltke has become a prominent symbol of moral opposition to the Nazi regime. On 11 March 2007, von Moltke's centenary was commemorated in the French Huguenot church in Berlin, where he was described by German chancellor Angela Merkel as a symbol of "European courage". His life was the subject of a 1992 documentary film nominated for an Oscar, The Restless Conscience, and a biography by Gűnter Brakelmann compiles von Moltke's letters, diary, and other papers shared by his wife.[2]

Von Moltke's opinion advocating adherence to the Geneva and Hague Conventions, notwithstanding the opponent's not being a signatory, was cited by Scott Horton, chair of the New York City bar committee on international law, who said "The arguments in his memorandum are close to identical to the arguments that are made by General Colin Powell, in the letter he sent to Alberto Gonzales" in 2002, regarding prisoners taken in Afghanistan and Iraq.[2]

[edit] Endnotes

  1. ^ Regarding personal names: Graf is a title, translated as Count, not a first or middle name. The female form is Gräfin.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Marquand, Robert. "Moral legacy of Nazi resister takes root in Germany - and abroad", The Christian Science Monitor, 2007-03-12. Retrieved on 2007-03-13. 
  3. ^ a b c von Moltke, Helmuth James (1990), Translator: von Oppen, Beata Ruhm, ed., Letters to Freya—1939–1945, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0-394-57923-2 
  4. ^ a b c d Rothfels, Hans (1961). The German Opposition to Hitler. London: Oswald Wolff, pages 112, 114, 122. 
  5. ^ a b von Moltke, Freya (2003), Translator: Winter, Julie M., ed., Memories of Kreisau & The German Resistance, Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-4669-2 

[edit] See also

List of members of the July 20 plot

[edit] Publications

  • Bericht aus Deutschland im Jahre 1943 ("Report from Germany in the Year 1943").
  • Letzte Briefe aus dem Gefängnis Tegel ("Last Letters from Tegel Prison"). Letters to his wife Freya and his two sons from the time of the trial against him, first published in 1951, later published together with Bericht in many editions (latest: Diogenes, Zürich 1997 ISBN 3-257-22975-5).
  • Briefe an Freya. 1939-1945, ed. Beate Ruhm von Oppen. 2. Auflage, Beck, München 1991 ISBN 3-406-35279-0. English edition: Letters to Freya: 1939–1945, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0-394-57923-2

[edit] Literature

  • Balfour, Michael, and Frisby, Julian, "Helmuth von Moltke: A Leader Against Hitler", London: Macmillan, 1972.
  • Rothfels, Hans, "The German Opposition to Hitler", London: Oswald Wolff, pages 112, 114, 122.
  • von Moltke, Freya (2003), Translator: Winter, Julie M., ed., Memories of Kreisau & The German Resistance, Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-4669-2
  • von Moltke, Helmuth James, Transl. and ed. by von Oppen, Beata Ruhm, "Letters to Freya: 1939–1945", New York: Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0-394-57923-2

German language sources:

  • Finker, Kurt: Graf Moltke und der Kreisauer Kreis. Dietz, Berlin 1993 ISBN 3-320-01816-7
  • Lilje, Hanns: Im finsteren Tal, Reihe Stundenbücher Bd. 25, Furche Verlag, Hamburg
  • von Moltke, Freya, "Die Verteidigung europäischer Menschlichkeit", in: Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte, Beilage zur Wochenzeitschrift "Das Parlament", Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung, Heft B27/2004
  • von Moltke, Freya, "Erinnerungen an Kreisau 1930-1945", München 1987/2001
  • von Schwerin, Franz: Helmuth James Graf von Moltke. Im Widerstand die Zukunft denken. Zielvorstellungen für ein neues Deutschland. Schöningh, Paderborn u. a. 1999 ISBN 3-506-73387-7

[edit] External links

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