fbpx
Wikipedia

Libertas Schulze-Boysen

Libertas "Libs" Schulze-Boysen, born Libertas Viktoria Haas-Heye (20 November 1913, Paris – 22 December 1942, Plötzensee Prison) was a German Prussian noblewoman, who became a resistance fighter against the Nazis. From the early 1930s to 1940, Schulze-Boysen attempted to build a literary career, first as a press officer and later as a writer and journalist. Initially sympathetic to the Nazis, she changed her mind after meeting and marrying Luftwaffe officer Harro Schulze-Boysen. As an aristocrat, Schulze-Boysen had contact with many different people in different strata of German society. Starting in 1935, she utilized her position to recruit left-leaning Germans into discussion groups which she hosted at her and Harro's apartment, where they sought to influence her guests. Through these discussions, resistance to the Nazi regime grew, and by 1936, she and Harro began to actively resist the Nazis. During the early 1940s, whilst working as a censor for the German Documentary Film Institute, Schulze-Boysen began to document atrocities committed by the Nazis from photographs of war crimes forwarded by soldiers of the Sonderbehandlungen task force to the Film Institute.

Libertas "Libs" Schulze-Boysen
Schulze-Boysen sitting at her desk at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Born
Libertas Viktoria Haas-Heye

(1913-11-20)20 November 1913
Paris, France
Died22 December 1942(1942-12-22) (aged 29)
Cause of deathExecution by guillotine
OccupationPress officer
MovementMember of the Red Orchestra ("Rote Kapelle")
SpouseHarro Schulze-Boysen

By 1940, the couple came into contact with other Berlin-based anti-fascist resistance groups and collaborated with them. The most important of these was run by Arvid Harnack. From April 1941, their underground resistance group became an espionage network that supplied military and economic intelligence to the Soviet Union. That organisation became known as the Red Orchestra ("Rote Kapelle") by the Abwehr. Schulze-Boysen was fully aware of her husband's espionage activities and became one of his most active agents, working as a courier, a writer of seditious pamphlets and a recruiter for the group. When Harro was not present she deputised as the groups leader. When her husband was arrested in August 1942 by the Gestapo, she made a valiant attempt to destroy evidence of their work and warn other members of the group, but it was to no avail. Schule-Boysen was arrested in September 1942, a month after her husband Harro, and both were executed on the same day in Plötzensee Prison.

Life edit

 
Bust of Libertas at Castle Liebenberg

Libertas Schulze-Boysen was the youngest of three children. Her father was the Heidelberg-born Otto Ludwig Haas-Heye (1879–1959), couturier to the aristocracy, and her mother was noted pianist Viktoria Ada Astrid Agnes Gräfin zu Eulenburg (1886–1967), Princess of Eulenberg and Hertefeld.[1] Libertas's parents married in Liebenberg Castle [de] on 13 May 1909 and lived for a time in London and Paris. They were Protestants who believed in providing a religious foundation for their children. Despite her upbringing, Libertas never became overtly religious, although many of her early poems and later letters show Christian roots.[2] Her sister was Countess Ottora Maria Douglas-Reimer (1910 -2001), who married Count Carl Ludvig Douglas (1908 - 1961), a Swedish diplomat. The couple had four children: Count Gustav Archibald Sigvart Douglas (1938–2023), a stockbroker, Princess Elisabeth Christina Douglas (b. 1940), Rosita Spencer-Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough (b. 1943), an artist, and their youngest son, Carl Philipp Morton, a civil engineer. Libertas's older brother, Johannes Haas-Heye [de] (1912 - 2008), was a journalist and diplomat.[1]

Her mother was known as "Thora"—spelled "Tora"—and came from an old Prussian noble family.[3] She was the youngest of the eight children of the Prussian diplomat and composer Prince Philipp zu Eulenburg and Swedish former Countess Augusta, Princess of Eulenburg. Philipp zu Eulenburg was a close friend of Kaiser Wilhelm Friedrich Ludwig and his Swedish wife, Augusta Gräfin Sandels (1853–1941). Eulenburg and William I were allegedly lovers.[4] This allegation was published as a series of articles by influential journalist Maximilian Harden in the Berlin newspapers between 1907 and 1909. It ran so long that it became known as the Eulenburg affair.[4]

In 1921, when Libertas was eight years old, her parents divorced (unusual at the time) and her grandfather died.[5] Libertas spent part of her childhood at Eulenburg's country estate, Liebenberg Castle (near Berlin).[6] She was taught initially by a governess.[1]

In 1922, she began attending a school in Berlin while living with her father, who headed the fashion department of the Kunstgewerbemuseum. Later, a co-worker of her father (artist Valerie Wolffenstein) supervised her during a summer in Switzerland in 1924, where Libertas learned to draw. Between 1926 and 1932, Schulze-Boysen was sent to be educated at boarding schools in Paris, London and Switzerland.[1]

Education edit

In 1932, Schulze-Boysen completed her Abitur at a girls' finishing school in Zurich,[7] followed by a 9-month stay in Ireland and the United Kingdom.[8] After returning in January 1933, Schulze-Boysen attended a Nazi torchlight procession that marched past the Reich Chancellery.[7] Though not totally understanding the new and powerful German Youth Movement,[9] she was impressed enough with them to join the Nazi Party with member number 1 551 344, in March 1933,[10] and at the same time the League of German Girls (German: Bund Deutscher Mädel).[11]

Career edit

As a press officer edit

In May of the same year, Schulze-Boysen moved to Berlin after being hired by the motion picture company Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) as a press officer. The position consisted of writing reviews to inform the media and public about new cinematic releases.[12][13] During the spring of 1933, the film studio had sacked all its Jewish employees,[12] leaving it short-staffed and making openings for non-Jewish workers. Initially, Libertas worked on press copy for the American films Sons of the Desert and Dancing Lady, both of which were immediate successes.[12] In May 1933, when the studio started to feel the effects of Nazi censorship, it was forced to drop Herman Mankiewicz's screenplay The Mad Dog of Europe, a film meant to illuminate the worsening treatment of Jews in Germany at that time.[14] Mankiewicz would later go on to write the screenplay for Citizen Kane.[14]

 
Liebenberg Castle

In April 1934,[15] Libertas met Harro Schulze-Boysen while they were both sailing on the Wannsee.[16] Harro Schulze-Boysen had been the publisher of the left-liberal magazine Der Gegner (English: "The Opponent") between 1932 and 1933. It was closed down when he was arrested by the Sturmabteilung in April 1933.[17] He was badly beaten and lost half his ear,[18] and was only released due to the influence of his mother.[19] Besides the mutilation of his ear, the attack left Harro with damaged kidneys.[17] His Jewish friend Henry Erlanger, who was arrested at the same time, did not survive the beating.[17]

Harro was in the habit of bringing his work friends from Der Gegner together with his other friends and colleagues for social evenings in his apartment, during which they discussed philosophical and political questions of the day.[20] To protect themselves from persecution, the couple surrounded themselves with a group of politically incorruptible friends who were left-leaning anti-fascists, among them artists, pacifists and communists.

In October 1934, the couple moved in together to an apartment in Hohenzollerndamm, in the Wilmersdorf district of Berlin. On 15 January 1935, Schulze-Boysen left to join the Reich Labour Service for female youth (Freiwilligen Arbeitsdienst für die weibliche Jugend) for six months' voluntary work near Glindow, close to Potsdam.[21] On 18 July 1935, she completed her six months of voluntary service, she returned to work at MGM. Her lack of enthusiasm for her voluntary service was such that she decided to write a book that was brutally honest, that described the daily fight for assertion, the status of women in the community and the fight for ideals. [22] She submitted the manuscript to the writer Ernst von Salomon, a family friend who worked at the Rowohlt publishing house[22] for review. Salomon believed it was good enough to publish, but had doubts as to whether the Reich Labour Service would allow it. Rowohlt wanted to publish it for precisely for that reason.[22] Libertas intended to submit the manuscript for review to the Reich Labour Service, but whether that actually happened, is unknown.[22] Salomon heard nothing further on that point.[22] The nature of her work at MGM—the tedious cycle of film promotion and censor work—made Libertas restless.[23][21]

Starting in July 1935, Schulze-Boysen began working on Harro's magazine Wille zum Reich ("Will to Empire") as an editor and translator. The magazine dealt with cultural and political issues, but with the goal of undermining the Nazi movement with the magazine's own themes.[15] In August 1935, Harro was given permission by the Ministry of Aviation (Luftfahrtministerium) to attend a series of lectures on the League of Nations in Geneva, and Libertas accompanied him.[15] On the way home, the couple stopped at the Château de Muzot to visit the last home of the Bohemian-Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke as well as visit his tomb.[15]

In the spring of 1936, Schulze-Boysen applied to leave the Nazi party by submitting a resignation request to the Reichsleitung der NSDAP in Munich.[24]

Marriage edit

During Easter in 1936, the couple were engaged[15] and lived together for a year before getting married on 26 July 1936.[25] The wedding took place in the chapel of Liebenberg Castle under a painting of Guido Reni,[16] with Hermann Göring giving away the bride.[26] For their honeymoon, the couple visited Stockholm in Sweden, where Harro was introduced to Libertas's Swedish relatives, her sister Ottora and her sister's husband Count Douglas.[27] Harro was on duty during the short honeymoon that the couple took between 27 July and 9 August 1936.[28] He had arranged a language study trip from his employer and he had submitted a confidential report upon his return, that detailed the description and the constitution of the crafts in the bays.[29][28] At the time, Libertas was unprepared for the fact that Harro spent more time looking at the military installations and the ships in the harbour than at her.[27] Schulze-Boysen considered herself a libertine and the couple had an open marriage.[30]

First mission edit

In August 1936, the journalist Evan James, an English friend of Libertas's from her 1933 stay in England, lodged with the couple to report on the 1936 Summer Olympics. At the time, Harro wanted to give James the details on prisoner numbers from the Spanish Civil War, compiled from situation reports his office received, so he could get them published by the BBC. However James refused, stating the source would be too easy to identify.[31] Instead, Libertas translated the bombastic words from the first page of Mein Kampf, to warn him, to show him, that there would be war.[32] However, James did not want to hear. Instead the couple showed James the anti-Jewish notices in the shops but what is so obvious to them, that the Nazi consolidation of power will lead to war, was not so obvious to James.[33] At the time Harro was dumbfounded at James' attitude but gradually realised that his position in the Air Ministry could give him access to valuable information but to access the most valuable and sensitive information, he would need to rise in the ranks. They decided to invite Göring to the Liebenberg estate, to hunt deer, on 6 September 1936. Göring's country estate of Carinhall was next to Liebenberg Castle.[34] In essence it was a charm offensive, led by Libertas, to get Harro noticed.[34] Libertas was successful as Göring made an enquiry to Hans-Jürgen Stumpff, who reported the Harro Schulze-Boysen was considered unreliable due to his political involvements before 1933.[35] Göring replied that the "...old things should be left alone" and that Harro should be sent on a pilots course, enabling his career advancement.[35]

On 1 October 1936, the couple moved into an apartment at 2 Waitzstraße in Charlottenburg.[36] At the same time, their marriage ran into trouble. Due to pain in Harro's kidneys and the Swastika carved into his leg when he was arrested, he found lovemaking difficult.[37] After sex, his urine would turn red.[37] Libertas realised the marriage was in trouble and influenced by the views of her husband, returned her Nazi membership booklet.[36]

Picnic meetings edit

During 1937, they held their first public picnic evenings and held further meetings every other week on Thursday nights.[38] Their first picnic evening of the year was held on 21 January 1937.[37] Among the 30 odd guests were Gisela von Pöllnitz and a doctor, Elfriede Paul who was the girlfriend of Walter Küchenmeister who had been invited on the advice of Elisabeth Schumacher—wife of Kurt Schumacher who also attended.[39][40] Among the other guests were Heinrich Karbe, a journalist for the Essen National Newspaper [de], the actor Werner Dissel and the Rowohlt editor Ernst von Salomon.[41]

Resistance edit

 
The Schulze-Boysen group in Germany

The Spanish Civil War galvanised the inner circle of the group in their discussions. Kurt Schumacher demanded that action should be taken and a plan, that took advantage of Harro's position at the ministry was formed. In February 1937, Harro compiled a short information document about a sabotage enterprise planned in Barcelona by the German Wehrmacht. The information was from "Special Staff W", an organisation established by Luftwaffe general Helmuth Wilberg to study and analyse the tactical lessons learned by the Legion Kondor during the Spanish Civil War.[42] The unit also directed the German relief operations that consisted of volunteers, weapons and ammunition for General Francisco Franco's FET y de las JONS.[42] The information that Schulze-Boysen collected included details about German transports, deployment of units and companies involved in the German defence.[42] The group around Schulze-Boysen did not know how to deliver the information, but discovered that Schulze-Boysen's cousin, Gisela von Pöllnitz, was planning to visit the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne that was held in Paris from 25 May to 25 November 1937.[43] In November, Pöllnitz fulfilled her mission and placed the letter in the mailbox of the Soviet Embassy on the Bois de Boulogne.[44] Unfortunately the Gestapo were watching the location and she was arrested.[45] The couple, fearing instant retribution from the Gestapo, decided to leave Berlin for several weeks.[43] On 27 September 1937, Harro left for a treatment for kidney stones at a sanatorium in Bad Wildungen, while Libertas arranged a sea trip via a friend, on the cargo ship SS Ilona Siemers (1923) that left from the Hamburg port of St. Pauli, transporting coal to the Black Sea.[43] During the journey, she filled her journal on stories of her travels.[46] She returned on Christmas Day 1937.[47]

In late 1937, Schulze-Boysen met the playwright Günther Weisenborn[48] who had been friends with Harro since 1932.[49] in what was their first illegal meeting that was attended by Kuchenmeister and Schumacher.[50] On 12 January 1938, Weisenborn was introduced to Libertas.[48] In February 1938, the Schulze-Boysens learnt that von Pöllnitz had been arrested the month before.[51] Their apartment at 2 Waitzstraße was searched by the Gestapo but nothing was found as the couple had spent several days feverishly clearing the place of any evidence of wrongdoing.[52] After Harro was cleared by the Air Ministry, their plans to flee to Amsterdam, where Johannes Haas-Heye was stationed, were abandoned.[52] As the year progressed Libertas and Weisenborn relationship blossomed and eventually consummated in an open affair.[53] In the same month, they collaborated in writing a play Die guten Feinde (The Good Enemies)[54] about the German physician Robert Koch and his competition with Max Pettenkofer and their search for the causes of tuberculosis .[55]

In July 1938, von Pöllnitz was released from prison and was seriously ill with a tuberculosis infection.[56] Libertas and Elfriede Paul began caring for her cousin, ensuring she was able to attend a sanatorium first in Sommerfeld in the Brandenberg sands and then later in Switzerland. The Gestapo visited and searched their apartment as they were associates of von Pöllnitz. The visits along with von Pöllnitz's illness led Schulze-Boysen to suffer from a general malaise that caused her to flee to Zurich, a city she felt safe in.[57] On 6 August 1938, she was introduced to the author Thomas Mann and spoke about her difficulties.[58] Mann recorded the meeting in his diary.[58] When Libertas returned in August, she worked with Weisenborn to arrange the premier of the play at a theatre in Bremen in November 1938, that was delated but finally held on 1 March 1939 at the Theater Bremen.[59] At the same time, Schulze-Boysen had signed a contract with Deutschlandsender for a production of a radio play that was broadcast on 3 March 1939.[59] On 9 November, the couple went on a 2-day holiday together to Venice Italy, the first time the couple had been together for months, that was due to the demanding need for overtime at the Air Ministry.[60] When the couple returned they witnessed Kristallnacht.[61] At the end of 1938, looking to determine her fortune, Schulze-Boysen became a client of Anna Krauss, a well-known clairvoyant and fortune-teller.[62] Through Krauss, Libertas met Toni Graudenz, a neighbour and they became friends. Her husband was John Graudenz. Schulze-Boysen introduced both Krauss and Graudenz into the resistance group.[63][64]

In April 1939, the couple moved into their new apartment at Altenburger Allee 19[59] in Charlottenburg, now the Westend. In the summer of 1939, Schulze-Boysen visited the town of Nidden on the Curonian Spit.[65] While there, she photographed a ship laden with Jewish passengers desperate to reach Latvia.[65] She was immediately arrested, but refused to say anything and was permitted to leave.[66]

Schulze-Boysen/Harnack group edit

In September 1939, the Schulze-Boysens met the writer and playwright Adam Kuckhoff and his wife, the socialist Greta Kuckhoff at a dinner party hosted by the film producer Herbert Engelsing and his wife Ingeborg at their house in Bettinstraße in Grunewald.[67][68] The free exchange of ideas and opinion was expected.[69] Herbert Engelsing was planning to produce a film on Adam's book, "Der Deutsche von Bayencourt (The German from Bayencourt) that had been published in 1937 and became prominent.[70] The party at the Engelsings, who were close friends of the Schulze-Boysens, was the ideal way to gauge the political stance of the Kuckhoff's. The Kuckhoffs were impressed by the Schulze-Boysens and shared the same political views.[71] Libertas and Greta Kuckhoff became close friends.[72] In 1939, Kuckhoff's decided that their close friends, the literary historian, translator Mildred and Marxist economist Arvid Harnack should be introduced to the Schulze-Boysens.[71] Greta decided that it would be the women who should meet first and in late 1939, brought Mildred and Libertas together while on holiday in Saxony.[71] The Harnak's also held group meetings with a preplanned agenda, where they debated the political and economic perspectives of the time[73] but were considered rather austere compared to Libertas and Shulze-Boysen's fun filled nights of music and dancing.[74]The initial meeting of the women gave rise to a licentious image of the group that persisted for decades after the war, based primarily on Gestapo and Abwehr reports.[74] In his 1967 book, L'orchestre rouge, Gilles Perrault states that Mildred and Libertas were lesbians, quoted from an unnamed source.[45][75] However, industrialist Hugo Buschmann, who was an informant and couples close friend, stated that the group lived dangerously, but there was no evidence for Perrault's conclusion[45] Certainly Libertas and Mildred were good friends.[72] Other friends who joined their parties and who became staunch anti-Nazis, included the actor Werner Dissel who they met in 1935 as well as Albrecht Haushofer, Kurt Schumacher and his wife Elisabeth Schumacher, Elfriede Paul, Walter Küchenmeister, the writer Günther Weisenborn, the dancer and sculptor Oda Schottmüller as well as the actor Marta Husemann and her husband, Walter Husemann who was an editor.[76]

In the same month, Schulze-Boysen was informed that her cousin, Gisela von Pöllnitz, had died on 14 September 1939 in a Swiss sanatorium.[77] In the following month, Harro fell ill with Kidney stone disease.[78] The couple spent their Christmas in 1939 apart. The stress of the war, combined with Harro's illness, the start of rationing and the double life they led, lead to what Shulze-Boysen considered the most desolate period in her life.[79]

At the beginning of 1940, the blackout led to the group meeting less often due to the difficulty of walking home in the darkness.[80] Schulze-Boysen arranged to drive their friends home for her apartment, although it involved a considerable risk to herself of being followed.[80] In early 1940, the group was joined by Heinrich Scheel along with Hans and Ina Lautenschläger.[81] Elfriede Paul stated that in early 1940, they discussed the opening of concentration camps in Poland and the military supply organisation known as Organisation Todt.[80] In the spring of 1940, Harro began to study foreign policy at the newly opened Institute of International Studies, part of the Deutsche Hochschule für Politik of the Humboldt University of Berlin for a doctorate,[82] in an attempt to attain the position of Regierungsrat or government councillor.[83]

Writer and journalist edit

From July 1940 to 13 November 1941, Libertas wrote film reviews for the culture section of the National-Zeitung.[84] The task was difficult as she could not write freely or criticize, as the paper was censored by Joseph Goebbels' propaganda ministry. Beginning in May 1939, on a weekly basis each editor received a copy of the Zeitschriften-Dienst,[85] a confidential newsletter from the ministry that described various directives as to what could be published and the particular theme the Nazi Party wanted to see in use.[84] Libs decided to cooperate in order to express herself and maintain influence.[86] To bypass the censors, she varied her tone, for films she liked, she would often write extravagantly, or in the form of a love letter. In other films that did not find favour, she would write in a strict and formal manner.[86] Originally a temporary position, it became permanent in the summer of 1941, but she became unsettled and decided to leave to try to achieve a film career.[87] Her last article Resurrection the mask in art dance introduced the dancer Oda Schottmüller, to the general public[88] and her successor as film critic was Adam Kuckhoff.[88] Both were her and Harro's friends and both resisted the Nazis.[88]

Espionage edit

In October 1940, Greta and Libertas finanlly managed to convince Harro Schulze-Boysen to meet with Arvid Harnack.[89] A meeting was held in Adam's and Greta Kuckhoff apartment at Wilhelmshöher Allee 19 in Friedenau.[89] At the meeting of the new combined political faction, Schulze-Boysen, Harnack and Kuckhoff discussed the current situation openly and what they could do to further resistance.[89] Harnack tells the group that he was introduced to Soviet agent Alexander Korotkov who used the alias Alexander Erdberg[90] and had already told Erdberg on 26 September 1940, that Germany was in the planning stages of an invasion of the Soviet Union.[91] By the end of that first meeting, both Schulze-Boysen and Kuckhoff had agreed to be informants to Harnack.[89] From that point forward, their combined undercover political faction, developed from a resistance organisation into an espionage network, from a small cadre of close friends, that began to collaborate with Soviet intelligence.[92]

In December 1940, Harro was put on a war footing in preparation for the invasaion of the Soviet Union, moving to a barracks in a forest in Potsdam.[93] At the beginning of 1941 (sources vary) Harro had begun an affair with Stella Mahlberg, a stage actress.[94][95] Harro informed Libertas of the affair.[96] As they had an open marriage they promised when they married not to deceive each other.[96] In January 1941, Schulze-Boysen attended the wedding of Günther and Joy Weisenborn.[97] While there she was surrounded by her friends but was deeply unhappy over the affair.[97] Their arguments led her friend Ingeborg, who viewed the marriage as being in a critical state, to see them less and less as the summer progressed.[98] In April 1941, Schulze-Boysen gave up the idea of turning her ship journal into a novel. This was a result of a shortage of paper, and the fact that novels were no longer published unless for propaganda purposes.[99]

Hochverrat edit

In March 1941, Harro met with Korotkov directly in Harnack's apartment and he agreed to provide military information to Korotkov.[100] Korotkov asked Schulze-Boysen to curtail his resistance activities, he replied as a German patriot he wished to create a "counterpublic" to the Nazis and his resistance would work needed to continue.[100]

In April 1941, in an attempt to increase the influx of intelligence, the Soviets ordered Korotkov to create a Berlin espionage operation[101][102] and Harnack was asked by Korotkov to run it.[103] Korotkov was instructed by Soviet intelligence to provide a person in Berlin that could be contacted via radio in the event of war. Harnack refused to be contacted in that manner and agreed only to collect and encipher the material in his own apartment, but the transmission would take place somewhere else.[104] Instead Adam Kuckhoff would be the radio contact. In June 1941, with Harnack's approval, Korotkov delivered a wireless transmitter to Greta Kuckhoff during a meeting at an underground railway station.[105] However the radio was damaged by Erdberg before delivery.[106] Adam Kuckhoff arranged with Harnack to return the damaged radio back to Erdberg.[107] A Luftwaffe report consisting of the Russian city names and their railway stations that were to be bombed during the initial attack of Operation Barbarossa had to be manually transcribed to Erdberg, instead of being transmitted. Greta Kuckhoff was unable to accurately remember the place names written in the Cyrillic alphabet, so instead Libertas along with Adam Kuckhoff met Erdberg in the Potsdamer Platz station to manually whisper the list of cities to Erdberg, repeating the names to Erdberg so he would remember them while they walked back and forward along the station, over several hours.[107]

In August 1941, during a dinner party that Karbe and his wife held with the Schule-Boysens, he described how Libertas had blurted out the fact they were in the resistance, while they were discussing Harro working for Hermann Göring.[108] This led Karbe to describe the consequences of their actions should they be discovered, which made Libertas scream. At the time. the daily fear of discovery was palpable and made the days run slow. They knew that the groups actions were considered treasonous, specifically Hochverrat or "High Treason" and punishable by death, but could do little to change it.[108] Karbe was never part of the resistance and he believed that Libertas has little understanding of the danger they were currently in.[109] In the same month, Karbe put the couple in touch with Anna Krauss, a fortune-teller, who became an important part of the group.[110]

In September 1941, Schulze-Boysen met Cato Bontjes van Beek while on an assignement at the Leipzig Trade Fair and became friends.[111] Van Beek was an ardent anti-Nazi [112] [113] and agreed to collaborate with her, by helping her write up the Nazi crimes in her archive.[112] In the autumn of 1941, Cato rented two rooms from Schulze-Boyson that were part of her very large apartment at 2 Waitzstrasse. Van Beek's lover, the journalist and poet Heinz Strelow rented on the rooms directly from Van Beek.[114]

Documenting war crimes edit

In August 1940, the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda created the Deutsche KulturfilmZentrale (German Documentary Film Institute)[115] whose purpose was to organise the production of ten to twenty minute long cultural films, that were to be shown in German film theatres, before the start of the main film, for the purpose of propaganda [116] Libertas applied for a position in the department of Kunst, deutsches Land und Volk, Völker und Länder (Art, German Land and People, Peoples and Countries) and was appointed on 1 November 1941.[87] In the position she acted as a censor, reviewing film scripts to determine if they adhered to Nazi Party ideology.[116] Those that did not she would reject; filmmakers who she found to be trying to be innovative were passed.[116] On her first day at work, she found her desk piled high with envelopes filled with photographs containing images of the work of the Sonderbehandlungen task forces.[117][118] Joseph Goebbels had ordered the collection of photographs from the front so they can be used by Libertas to define themes for new cultural films.[119] As part of her job, she had to continue requesting pictures from soldiers on leave.[120]

For a long while Schulze-Boysen did not know how to react to the material as it was so shocking.[121] She decided to start gathering pictorial evidence of Nazi war crimes, in anticipation of using them after the war to show the extent of the genocide.[121]

AGIS leaflets edit

In December 1941, the Schulze-Boysens met the psychoanalyst John Rittmeister and his wife Eva.[122] Through Rittmeister, several people who attended the Heil'schen Abendschule Abendgymnasium ("Berliner Städtische Abendgymnasium für Erwachsene") (BAG) in Schöneberg including Rittmeister's wife, Eva, who became part of the espionage group. This included the lawyer Maria Terwiel and her fiancée, the dentist Helmut Himpel as well as the factory worker Friedrich Rehmer and the student Ursula Goetze.[123] Rittmeister was happy to hear from the reports that informed him of the German military setback on the Eastern Front and convinced Schulze-Boysen that the reports should be shared with the German people, which would destroy the myth of German propaganda.[124] The group decide to write a series of reports known as "AGIS", a name chosen by Libertas[125] who named in reference to the Spartan King Agis IV, who was a social reformer who fought against corruption.[122] Rittmeister, Schulze-Boysen, Heinz Strelow, and Küchenmeister among others, wrote them with titles like The becoming of the Nazi movement, Call for opposition, Freedom and violence and Appeal to All Callings and Organisations to resist the government.[126]

By 15 February 1942, Schulze-Boysen had written a six-page pamphlet titled Die Sorge Um Deutschlands Zukunft geht durch das Volk! ("The Concern for Germany's Future Goes Through the People!"). Co-authored by Rittmeister,[127] the master copy was arranged by Van Beek, and the pamphlet was written up by Terwiel on her typewriter.[128] One copy survives today.[129][130] The pamphlet posited the idea of active defeatism, which was a compromise between principled pacifism and practical political resistance.[127] It stated the future for Germany lay in establishing a socialist state that would form alliances with the USSR and progressive forces in Europe. It also offered advice to the individual resistor: "do the opposite of what is asked of you".[127] The group produced hundreds of pamphlets that were spread over Berlin, left in phone boxes, in eating establishments and sent to selected addresses, for example universities. Producing the leaflets required a small army of people and a complex approach to organisation to avoid being discovered.[131]

Fears and protests edit

 
Adhesive stickers that were posted on top of The Soviet Paradise posters

The couple spent Christmas holidays 1941 apart with Libertas spending Christmas in Liebenberg Castle with her cousin Ingeborg von Schoenebeck, who had a strong dislike of Harro and tried to convince Libertas that she should divorce.[132] By 1942, the unrelenting stress of the resistance work began to tell. In early 1942, Van Beek and Strelow realised the terrible danger they were in, and began to withdraw from the group and their resistance activities.[133] In the spring of 1942, Schulze-Boysen confided in Günther Weisenborn that for five years she had worked to resist the Nazis on behalf of Harro, but she found that she could not face the fear any longer.[134] She yearned simply to live, in love and peace.[134]

On 16 May 1942, she visited Vienna for four days to conduct a meeting with the Wien-Film film company.[135][136] While she was away, the group protested the Nazi propaganda exhibition called The Soviet Paradise (German original title "Das Sowjet-Paradies")[137] in Lustgarten, that had the express purpose of justifying the invasion of the Soviet Union to the German people.[134] The protest took the form of small stickers with a message Permanent Exhibition, The Nazi Paradise, War, Hunger, Lies, Gestapo, How much longer? that were pasted up in several German neighbourhoods.[134] On 18 May 1942, Herbert Baum led a group to commit an arson attack on the exhibition.[135] While the arson attack was not reported, 500 Berlin based Jewish men were rounded up and deported to concenctration camps in a reprisal.[135]

When she returned from Vienna, she discovered Harro in flagrante with the actor Stella Mahlberg[136] with whom he had been having an affair since April 1941.[138] She immediately demanded a divorce stating she would seek legal advice from Herbert Engelsing but Harro convinced her to stay, informing her that they knew too much about the resistance effort.[136] Harro Schulze-Boysen continued the affair until August 1942. Libertas found the lack of emotional support highly distressing.[139]

Letters from the Eastern Front edit

Through 1941 and 1942, Schulze-Boysen continued working with the Deutsche KulturfilmZentrale.[140] In January 1942, she wrote to her mother-in-law Marie Louise, where she described the work, which she completes at home and spoke of how it made her deeply unhappy and melancholic.[141] In May 1942, Schulze-Boysen met Alexander Spoerl [de] who held similar political views. Spoerl was the son of the German author Heinrich Spoerl. At a party at the Engelsings and in an open conversation, she suggested that Spoerl become her assistant at the KulturfilmZentrale, to help her organise the pictures into an archive. [140][142] However, the number of pictures in envelopes continued to increase.[143] Schulze-Boysen decided to answer some of the letters she received, in an effort to collect more details for after the war.[143] In one photograph she archives, it contains an image of a little girl next to her older brother, mother and a baby. All of them are to be shot.[141] In another letter she received, a soldier spoke in lyrical terms of certain insects that he loved and could not harm, one was the potato beetle and included a photograph of him about to hurl a small baby against the wall.[144] Libertas along with Adam Kuckhoff and the journalist John Sieg use some of the letters material to write a fictional letter to fictional police captain that stated:

"Would I otherwise write to you if I did not assume that you have not lost the ability and courage to follow the compulsion of conscience where it comes into conflict with such an obviously bestial "duty" as the ordered assassination of the Soviet population? In the state hospital in [...] I recently visited some police comrades who had been brought in from the East because of nervous breakdowns, all of them. You know the hospital atmosphere, this special kind of peace, the room was also enlivened with flowers, the sick were allowed to listen to music, and this ridiculously simple requiem of emotional healing was joined by, almost novelistic, literally, a few rays of sunshine. By the way, there is a department there about which my comrades told me with almost shy relief that the even worse nervous breakdowns were there: the powerful police officers from the past just keep moving along hopping, like kangaroos, you know, and others crawl on all fours, shaking carefully as they do so their heads, their hair falls disheveled over their faces, and their gaze is, someone repeated imploringly, “like a St. Bernard dog". I experienced many terrible things from my comrades; the calm in the room was deceptive, the furies were raging in it. In whispers, with eyes wide open and hoping for a word of redeeming justification from me, I was told about mass shootings of the civilian population in Russia, selected atrocities, about blood and tears without measure, the ultimate character of the beastly SS orders, the incomprehensible equanimity of helpless victims, yes, and of course there was a lot about the partisan struggle, which interested me immensely politically and tactically. Of course, I didn't say a word of consolation to any of the sick people that would have been of help to them in the horror-tormented twilight hours of their evenings, which made them all the more eager to reveal their deeds. Should I of all people give a kind of absolution to someone who subsequently, albeit in agony confess that he shot 50 people morning after morning on orders, so to speak, as a daily routine for months"[145]

The letter was duplicated in a hectograph machine. Kurt Schumacher took several copies when he returned to his unit in Poznan and the group hoped for a snowball effect in its distribution, to see the letter pass up the chain of command.[146]

Discovery edit

The discovery of the illegal radio transmissions by Soviet agent Johann Wenzel by the German radio counterintelligence organization Funkabwehr and his capture by the Gestapo on 29–30 June 1942 eventually exposed the group[147] and led to the arrest of the Schulze-Boyzen's. Wenzel decided to cooperate after he was tortured. His exposure of the radio codes enabled Referat 12, the cipher bureaux of the Funkabwehr, to decipher Red Orchestra message traffic. The unit had been tracking Red Orchestra radio transmissions since June 1941 and had located Wenzel's house in Brussels.[148] When it was raided by the Gestapo it was found to contain a large number of coded messages.[149] When Wilhelm Vauck, principal cryptographer of the Funkabwehr, the radio counterintelligence department of the Abwehr,[148] received the ciphers from Wenzel, he was able to decipher some of the older messages.[148] On 15 July 1942, Vauck managed to decrypt a message dated 10 October 1941[148]that gave the locations of the Kuckhoff's and the Schulze-Boysen's apartments.[150]

Arrest edit

 
Libs and Harro. The picture was taken in 1935

On 31 August 1942, Harro Schulze-Boysen was arrested in his office in the Ministry of Aviation. Libertas had received a puzzling phone call from his office several days before.[151] She was also warned by the women who delivered her mail that the Gestapo were monitoring it.[17] Libertas's assistant Alexander Spoerl also noticed that Adam Kuckhoff had gone missing while working in Prague.[151] On 7 September 1942, the Harnacks were arrested while on holiday.[150]

On the same day Libertas returned to an empty apartment after a short business trip and called Harro's secretary to try and locate him.[152] She suspected that Schulze-Boysen was arrested and contacted the Engelsings. Herbert Engelsing tried to contact Kuckhoff without result.[153] Libertas and Spoerl both started to panic and frantically tried to warn others.[17] They destroyed the darkroom at the Kulurefilm center and Libertas destroyed her meticulously collected archive. At home, she packed a suitcase with all Harro Schulze-Boysen's papers and then tried to fabricate evidence of loyalty to the Nazi state by writing fake letters.[153] She sent the suitcase to Günther Weisenborn in the vain hope that it could be hidden, and he tried to contact Harro Schulze-Boysen in vain.[153] On the same day, she was informed by Horst Heilmann that Harro had been arrested.[154]

On 8 September, while on a train to visit friends in the Moselle Valley, Libertas was arrested.[155] She was taken to the basement cells (German:Hausgefängnis) in the most dreaded address in all of German-occupied Europe, Reich Security Main Office headquarters at 8 Prinz-Albert-Straße (Prince Albert street) containing department AMT IV, the Gestapo and put into protective custody (Schutzhäftlinge) by them.[156]

In prison, Libertas met Gertrude Breiter, the secretary for Libertas's interrogator, Kommissar Alfred Göpfert. Libertas believed that Breiter was hostile to her superiors, seeing her more as a friend than an agent provocateur[157] Breiter told Libertas that Göpfert did not have any serious evidence against her and due to her family connections with Hermann Göring, her life would be safe. Libertas decided to confide in Breiter and talked with her more than a dozen times.[158] In the course of their furtive conversations, Libertas told Breiter what she knew of the other prisoners, asked Breiter to deliver letters to her mother[159] and asked for additional favours, primarily in the form of a typewriter to write poetry.[160] In the three months Libertas was in prison, she wrote a number of remarkable letters and poems to her mother and friends.[161]

When the Gestapo informed her of Breiter's betrayal, Libertas was overwhelmed with remorse, stating in a letter to her mother, "I had to drink the bitter cup for now I learn that the person whom I had given my complete trust Gertrude Breiter had betrayed me." Her mother believed that Libertas had betrayed a number of the Schulze-Boysen/Harnack group.[157] However, in an unpublished interview with David Dallin after the war, Manfred Roeder, the advocate who prosecuted the Schulze-Boysens in the Reichskriegsgericht, stated that Libertas never betrayed anybody. Roeder credited the Funkspiel operation the Abwehr ran against the Red Orchestra radio operators for providing the necessary clues to identify the resistance members.[162]

On 15 November 1942, Gurevich was brought back to Berlin where he was asked by the Gestapo on 22 November 1942 to identify the name of a woman in a picture. He identified her immediately as Libertas Schulze-Boysen. This provided definitive proof to the investigators that she was actively involved in the work of her husband.[163]

Trial and execution edit

She and her husband were brought before trial in the Reichskriegsgericht ("Reich Court Martial"). She was charged with "preparation" to commit high treason, helping the enemy and espionage. Her husband was charged with preparation to commit high treason, wartime treason, military sabotage and espionage.[164] The trial ended on 19 December 1942 with death sentences for both her husband and her. Libertas Schulze-Boysen was executed by guillotine about 90 minutes after her husband on 22 December 1942 at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin.[6][165][166]

Honours edit

  • The German writer Alexander Spoerl [de] dedicated his 1950 novel, Memoiren eines mittelmässigen Schülers (Memoirs of a Mediocre Student) to Libertas Schulze-Boysen.[167]
  • In the Berlin borough of Lichtenberg in 1972, a street was named after the Schulze-Boysens.[166]
  • The Libertas Chapel[168] in Liebenberg Castle, where she married her husband Harro, is dedicated to her. Since 2004, a special exhibition by the Memorial to the German Resistance on the life of Libertas and the joint resistance within the Red Orchestra against Nazism has been on display here – documented with photographs and extensive writings.[169]
  • In 2017, two Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) each for Libertas and her husband Harro were laid in front of the steps of the entrance to the Liebenberg Castle.[170][171]
Memorials to the Schulze-Boysen's
 
Stolperstein for the Schulze-Boysens in the castle courtyard of Liebenberg Castle
 
Memorial plaque for the couple at Haus Altenburger Allee 19 in Westend of Berlin

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 35.
  2. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, pp. 36, 39.
  3. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 32.
  4. ^ a b Beachy 2010, pp. 801–838.
  5. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 4.
  6. ^ a b Libertas Schulze-Boysen & Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand.
  7. ^ a b Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 8.
  8. ^ Andresen 2005, p. 185.
  9. ^ Brysac 2002, p. 376.
  10. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, pp. 40–41.
  11. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 136.
  12. ^ a b c Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 60.
  13. ^ Petrescu 2010, p. 190.
  14. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 61.
  15. ^ a b c d e Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 12.
  16. ^ a b Brysac 2002, p. 427, Ref 39.
  17. ^ a b c d e Brysac 2002, p. 112.
  18. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 31.
  19. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 19.
  20. ^ Petrescu 2010, p. 189.
  21. ^ a b Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 45.
  22. ^ a b c d e Kettelhake 2008, p. 111.
  23. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 97.
  24. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 171.
  25. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 96.
  26. ^ Hastings 2015, p. 29.
  27. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 146.
  28. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 145.
  29. ^ Schulze-Boysen 1936.
  30. ^ Hellman 2002, p. 229.
  31. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 149.
  32. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 150.
  33. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 151–152.
  34. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 64.
  35. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 158.
  36. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 66.
  37. ^ a b c Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 67.
  38. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 69.
  39. ^ Coppi 1995, p. 183.
  40. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, pp. 67–69.
  41. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 176.
  42. ^ a b c Höhne 1968.
  43. ^ a b c Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 74.
  44. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 157.
  45. ^ a b c Brysac 2000, p. 237.
  46. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 76.
  47. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 77.
  48. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 78.
  49. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 105.
  50. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 201.
  51. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 203.
  52. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 204.
  53. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 80.
  54. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 125.
  55. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 54.
  56. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 81.
  57. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 221–223.
  58. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 82.
  59. ^ a b c Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 55.
  60. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 231.
  61. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 233–236.
  62. ^ Schulze-Boysen 1999, p. 412.
  63. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 216.
  64. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 60.
  65. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 248.
  66. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 249.
  67. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 131.
  68. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 262.
  69. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 252–254.
  70. ^ Nelson 2009, pp. 123.
  71. ^ a b c Brysac 2000, p. 232.
  72. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 269.
  73. ^ Juchler, Ambauen & Arnold 2017, p. 102.
  74. ^ a b Brysac 2000, p. 236.
  75. ^ Perrault 1969, p. 209.
  76. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 18.
  77. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 101.
  78. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 273.
  79. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 274–275.
  80. ^ a b c Kettelhake 2008, p. 276.
  81. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 277.
  82. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 281.
  83. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 282–283.
  84. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 104.
  85. ^ Bytwerk 2004.
  86. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 105.
  87. ^ a b Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 57.
  88. ^ a b c Coppi & Tuchel 2013, p. 58.
  89. ^ a b c d Kettelhake 2008, p. 290.
  90. ^ Brysac 2002, pp. 200–202.
  91. ^ Brysac 2000, p. 266.
  92. ^ Kesaris 1979, p. 140.
  93. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 110.
  94. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 215.
  95. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 149.
  96. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 300.
  97. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 301.
  98. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 302.
  99. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 116.
  100. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 113.
  101. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 196.
  102. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 307.
  103. ^ Dallin 1955, p. 247.
  104. ^ Brysac 2000, p. 286.
  105. ^ Kesaris 1979, p. 147.
  106. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 315.
  107. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 317.
  108. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, pp. 327.
  109. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 325–326.
  110. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 326.
  111. ^ Geyken 2015, pp. 72–76.
  112. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 144.
  113. ^ Vinke 2007, p. 70.
  114. ^ Geyken 2014, p. 79.
  115. ^ Echternkamp 1990, p. 107.
  116. ^ a b c Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 131.
  117. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 132.
  118. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 335–337.
  119. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 335.
  120. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 337.
  121. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 135.
  122. ^ a b Nelson 2009, p. 242.
  123. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 351.
  124. ^ Cocks 1985, p. 331.
  125. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 331.
  126. ^ Petrescu 2010, p. 199.
  127. ^ a b c Geyer & Tooze 2015, pp. 718–720.
  128. ^ Terwiel & Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand.
  129. ^ Schulze-Boysen et al. 1942.
  130. ^ Petrescu 2010, p. 219.
  131. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 243.
  132. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 352.
  133. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 143.
  134. ^ a b c d Brysac 2000, p. 300.
  135. ^ a b c Kettelhake 2008, p. 360.
  136. ^ a b c Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 162.
  137. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 254.
  138. ^ Coppi & Tuchel 2013, pp. 49–50.
  139. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 172.
  140. ^ a b Kettelhake 2008, p. 361.
  141. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 139.
  142. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 148.
  143. ^ a b Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 138.
  144. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 364.
  145. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 365–366.
  146. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 366.
  147. ^ Tyas 2017, p. 384.
  148. ^ a b c d West 2007, p. 205.
  149. ^ Perrault 1969, p. 83.
  150. ^ a b Nelson 2009, p. 266.
  151. ^ a b Nelson 2009, p. 263.
  152. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 370.
  153. ^ a b c Nelson 2009, p. 264.
  154. ^ Kettelhake 2008, p. 371.
  155. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 268.
  156. ^ Brysac 2002, p. 278.
  157. ^ a b Brysac 2000, p. 338.
  158. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 271.
  159. ^ Nelson 2009, p. 271.
  160. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 272.
  161. ^ Kettelhake 2008, pp. 378, 382, 385, 389, 390, 391, 393, 395, 397, 407–412.
  162. ^ Brysac 2000, p. 339.
  163. ^ Ohler, Mohr & Yarbrough 2020, p. 306.
  164. ^ . Nazi "field" verdict sentencing the Schulze-Boysens and other members of the Red Orchestra. Retrieved 13 April 2010 (in German)
  165. ^ Retrieved 13 April 2010 (in German)
  166. ^ a b Background on Schulze-Boysen-Straße Retrieved 13 April 2010. (in German)
  167. ^ Pučan 2008, p. 28.
  168. ^ . Deutschland Internet. Augusta Presse- und Verlags GmbH. Archived from the original on 28 September 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  169. ^ . Deutsche Kreditbank AG. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  170. ^ Bergt 2017.
  171. ^ "Stolpersteine in Liebenberg – Unsichtbares sichtbar machen". DKB STIFTUNG (in German). Retrieved 12 August 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • Andresen, Geertje (1 November 2005). Oda Schottmüller: Die Tänzerin, Bildhauerin und Nazigegnerin Oda Schottmüller (1905–1943). Lukas Verlag. ISBN 978-3-936872-58-3. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  • Beachy, Robert (December 2010). "The German Invention of Homosexuality". The Journal of Modern History. 82 (4). The University of Chicago Press: 801–838. doi:10.1086/656077. JSTOR 10.1086/656077. S2CID 142605226. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  • Bergt, Heike (8 September 2017). "Pfarrer im Unruhestand" (in German). Märkische Verlags- und Druckgesellschaft mbH Potsdam. Märkische Allgemeine. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  • Brysac, Shareen Blair (2000). Resisting Hitler: Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513269-4.
  • Brysac, Shareen Blair (23 May 2002). Resisting Hitler: Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-992388-5. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  • Bytwerk, Randall L. (2004). . German Propaganda Archive. Grand Rapids: Calvin University. Archived from the original on 14 February 2024. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  • Cocks, Geoffrey (1985). Psychotherapy in the Third Reich : the Göring Institute. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195034619.
  • Coppi, Hans (1995). Harro Schulze-Boysen, Wege in den Widerstand : eine biographische Studie [Harro Schulze-Boysen, Paths to Resistance: a biographical study] (in German) (2nd ed.). Koblenz: D. Fölbach. ISBN 3-923532-28-8. OCLC 243801569.
  • Coppi, Hans; Tuchel, Johannes (2013). Libertas Schulze-Boysen und die Rote Kapelle (PDF). Berlin: Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand Berlinauf Schloss & Gut Liebenberg. ISBN 978-3-926082-55-8. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  • Dallin, David J. (1955). Soviet Espionage. Yale University Press. p. 247. ISBN 978-0-598-41349-9.
  • Jörg Echternkamp; Zentrum für Militärgeschichte und Sozialwissenschaften der Bundeswehr (Potsdam, Allemagne) (1990). Germany and the Second World War. Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg. Vol. 9. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199542963. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  • Geyken, Frauke (2015). "Etwas Furchtbares wird passieren" [Something terrible will happen]. Damals (in German). 47 (5). Leinfelden-Echterdingen: Konradin Mediengruppe: 72–76. ISSN 0011-5908.
  • Geyken, Frauke (9 May 2014). Wir standen nicht abseits: Frauen im Widerstand gegen Hitler (in German). C.H.Beck. p. 79. ISBN 978-3-406-65903-4.
  • Hastings, Max (2015). The Secret War: Spies, Codes and Guerrillas 1939–1945. London: William Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-750374-2.
  • Geyer, Michael; Tooze, Adam (23 April 2015). The Cambridge History of the Second World War: Volume 3, Total War: Economy, Society and Culture. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-29880-0.
  • Hellman, John (15 November 2002). Communitarian Third Way: Alexandre Marc and Ordre Nouveau, 1930-2000. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-2376-0.
  • Höhne, Heinz (16 June 1968). "ptx ruft moskau". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  • Juchler, Ingo; Ambauen, Ladina; Arnold, Maren (25 October 2017). Mildred Harnack und die Rote Kapelle in Berlin. Universitätsverlag Potsdam. ISBN 978-3-86956-407-4.
  • Kettelhake, Silke (2008). "Erzähl allen, allen von mir!" : das schöne kurze Leben der Libertas Schulze-Boysen 1913-1942 [Tell everyone, everyone about me!' – The beautiful, short life of Libertas Schulze-Boysen, 1913–1942] (in German). Münich: Droemer. ISBN 9783426274378. OCLC 221130666.
  • Kesaris, Paul. L, ed. (1979). The Rote Kapelle: the CIA's history of Soviet intelligence and espionage networks in Western Europe, 1936–1945. Washington DC: University Publications of America. ISBN 978-0-89093-203-2.
  • Nelson, Anne (7 April 2009). Red Orchestra: The Story of the Berlin Underground and the Circle of Friends Who Resisted Hitler. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-58836-799-0. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  • Ohler, Norman; Mohr, Tim; Yarbrough, Marshall (14 July 2020). The Bohemians : the lovers who led Germany's resistance against the Nazis. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 9781328566232.
  • Perrault, Gilles (1969). The Red Orchestra. New York: Schocken Books. ISBN 0805209522.
  • Petrescu, Corina L. (2010). Against All Odds: Models of Subversive Spaces in National Socialist Germany. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-03911-845-8. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  • Pučan, Lukáš (2008). Bakalarska's works (PDF) (Thesis). Faculty of Arts Department of German, Nordic and Dutch Studies, Masaryk University.
  • Schulze-Boysen, Harro (1999). Dieser Tod paßt zu mir [This death suits me] (in German). Aufbau-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-351-02493-2. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  • Schulze-Boysen, Harro; Rittmeister, John; van Beek, Cato Bontjes; Terwiel, Maria; Schulze-Boysen, Libertas; Küchenmeister, Walter (6 March 1942). Die Sorge um Deutschlands Zukunft geht durch das Volk (PDF). Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand: AGIS.
  • Schulze-Boysen, Harro (13 August 1936). Schulze-Boysen: Bericht über Sprachstudienreise nach Schweden vom 13 August 1936 [Report on language study trip to Sweden] (Report). Munich: Institute of Contemporary History. p. Archive: ED 335/2.
  • "Libertas Schulze-Boysen". Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand (in German). German Resistance Memorial Center. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  • "Maria Terwiel". Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand. German Resistance Memorial Center. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  • Tyas, Stephen (2017). SS-Major Horst Kopkow : from the Gestapo to British intelligence. Stroud: Fonthill. ISBN 9781781555989. OCLC 1013591260.
  • Vinke, Hermann (2007). Cato Bontjes van Beek - "Ich habe nicht um mein Leben gebettelt" ein Porträt ["I didn't beg for my life" a portrait]. Btb, 73672 (in German) (Genehmigte Taschenbuchausg., 1. Aufl ed.). München: Goldmann. ISBN 9783442736720.
  • West, Nigel (12 November 2007). Historical Dictionary of World War II Intelligence. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6421-4. Retrieved 1 March 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Aurich, Rolf (2008). Jacobsen, Wolfgang (ed.). Libertas Schulze-Boysen : Filmpublizistin [Libertas Schulze-Boysen: film publicist]. Film & Schrift, Bd. 7. Munich: Edition text + kritik. ISBN 978-3-88377-925-6. OCLC 237239951.
  • Boysen, Elsa (1992). Harro Schulze-Boysen : das Bild eines Freiheitskämpfers [Harro Schulze-Boysen : the image of a freedom fighter] (in German) (3rd ed.). Koblenz: Fölbach. ISBN 3-923532-17-2. OCLC 75288953.
  • Hürter, Johannes (2007). Schulze-Boysen, Libertas (in German). Neue Deutsche Biographie 23. pp. 730–731.
  • Rosiejka, Gert (1986). Die Rote Kapelle : "Landesverrat" als antifaschist. Widerstand. Ergebnisse, 33. (in German) (1st ed.). Hamburg: Ergebnisse-Verl. ISBN 3-925622-16-0. OCLC 74741321.

External links edit

  • Douglas family archive
  • Digitorial on Libertas Schulze-Boysen
  • Stolpersteine

libertas, schulze, boysen, libertas, libs, schulze, boysen, born, libertas, viktoria, haas, heye, november, 1913, paris, december, 1942, plötzensee, prison, german, prussian, noblewoman, became, resistance, fighter, against, nazis, from, early, 1930s, 1940, sc. Libertas Libs Schulze Boysen born Libertas Viktoria Haas Heye 20 November 1913 Paris 22 December 1942 Plotzensee Prison was a German Prussian noblewoman who became a resistance fighter against the Nazis From the early 1930s to 1940 Schulze Boysen attempted to build a literary career first as a press officer and later as a writer and journalist Initially sympathetic to the Nazis she changed her mind after meeting and marrying Luftwaffe officer Harro Schulze Boysen As an aristocrat Schulze Boysen had contact with many different people in different strata of German society Starting in 1935 she utilized her position to recruit left leaning Germans into discussion groups which she hosted at her and Harro s apartment where they sought to influence her guests Through these discussions resistance to the Nazi regime grew and by 1936 she and Harro began to actively resist the Nazis During the early 1940s whilst working as a censor for the German Documentary Film Institute Schulze Boysen began to document atrocities committed by the Nazis from photographs of war crimes forwarded by soldiers of the Sonderbehandlungen task force to the Film Institute Libertas Libs Schulze BoysenSchulze Boysen sitting at her desk at Metro Goldwyn MayerBornLibertas Viktoria Haas Heye 1913 11 20 20 November 1913Paris FranceDied22 December 1942 1942 12 22 aged 29 Plotzensee Prison Berlin Nazi GermanyCause of deathExecution by guillotineOccupationPress officerMovementMember of the Red Orchestra Rote Kapelle SpouseHarro Schulze Boysen By 1940 the couple came into contact with other Berlin based anti fascist resistance groups and collaborated with them The most important of these was run by Arvid Harnack From April 1941 their underground resistance group became an espionage network that supplied military and economic intelligence to the Soviet Union That organisation became known as the Red Orchestra Rote Kapelle by the Abwehr Schulze Boysen was fully aware of her husband s espionage activities and became one of his most active agents working as a courier a writer of seditious pamphlets and a recruiter for the group When Harro was not present she deputised as the groups leader When her husband was arrested in August 1942 by the Gestapo she made a valiant attempt to destroy evidence of their work and warn other members of the group but it was to no avail Schule Boysen was arrested in September 1942 a month after her husband Harro and both were executed on the same day in Plotzensee Prison Contents 1 Life 2 Education 3 Career 3 1 As a press officer 4 Marriage 5 First mission 6 Picnic meetings 7 Resistance 7 1 Schulze Boysen Harnack group 8 Writer and journalist 9 Espionage 9 1 Hochverrat 10 Documenting war crimes 11 AGIS leaflets 12 Fears and protests 13 Letters from the Eastern Front 14 Discovery 15 Arrest 16 Trial and execution 17 Honours 18 See also 19 References 20 Bibliography 21 Further reading 22 External linksLife edit nbsp Bust of Libertas at Castle Liebenberg Libertas Schulze Boysen was the youngest of three children Her father was the Heidelberg born Otto Ludwig Haas Heye 1879 1959 couturier to the aristocracy and her mother was noted pianist Viktoria Ada Astrid Agnes Grafin zu Eulenburg 1886 1967 Princess of Eulenberg and Hertefeld 1 Libertas s parents married in Liebenberg Castle de on 13 May 1909 and lived for a time in London and Paris They were Protestants who believed in providing a religious foundation for their children Despite her upbringing Libertas never became overtly religious although many of her early poems and later letters show Christian roots 2 Her sister was Countess Ottora Maria Douglas Reimer 1910 2001 who married Count Carl Ludvig Douglas 1908 1961 a Swedish diplomat The couple had four children Count Gustav Archibald Sigvart Douglas 1938 2023 a stockbroker Princess Elisabeth Christina Douglas b 1940 Rosita Spencer Churchill Duchess of Marlborough b 1943 an artist and their youngest son Carl Philipp Morton a civil engineer Libertas s older brother Johannes Haas Heye de 1912 2008 was a journalist and diplomat 1 Her mother was known as Thora spelled Tora and came from an old Prussian noble family 3 She was the youngest of the eight children of the Prussian diplomat and composer Prince Philipp zu Eulenburg and Swedish former Countess Augusta Princess of Eulenburg Philipp zu Eulenburg was a close friend of Kaiser Wilhelm Friedrich Ludwig and his Swedish wife Augusta Grafin Sandels 1853 1941 Eulenburg and William I were allegedly lovers 4 This allegation was published as a series of articles by influential journalist Maximilian Harden in the Berlin newspapers between 1907 and 1909 It ran so long that it became known as the Eulenburg affair 4 In 1921 when Libertas was eight years old her parents divorced unusual at the time and her grandfather died 5 Libertas spent part of her childhood at Eulenburg s country estate Liebenberg Castle near Berlin 6 She was taught initially by a governess 1 In 1922 she began attending a school in Berlin while living with her father who headed the fashion department of the Kunstgewerbemuseum Later a co worker of her father artist Valerie Wolffenstein supervised her during a summer in Switzerland in 1924 where Libertas learned to draw Between 1926 and 1932 Schulze Boysen was sent to be educated at boarding schools in Paris London and Switzerland 1 Education editIn 1932 Schulze Boysen completed her Abitur at a girls finishing school in Zurich 7 followed by a 9 month stay in Ireland and the United Kingdom 8 After returning in January 1933 Schulze Boysen attended a Nazi torchlight procession that marched past the Reich Chancellery 7 Though not totally understanding the new and powerful German Youth Movement 9 she was impressed enough with them to join the Nazi Party with member number 1 551 344 in March 1933 10 and at the same time the League of German Girls German Bund Deutscher Madel 11 Career editAs a press officer edit In May of the same year Schulze Boysen moved to Berlin after being hired by the motion picture company Metro Goldwyn Mayer MGM as a press officer The position consisted of writing reviews to inform the media and public about new cinematic releases 12 13 During the spring of 1933 the film studio had sacked all its Jewish employees 12 leaving it short staffed and making openings for non Jewish workers Initially Libertas worked on press copy for the American films Sons of the Desert and Dancing Lady both of which were immediate successes 12 In May 1933 when the studio started to feel the effects of Nazi censorship it was forced to drop Herman Mankiewicz s screenplay The Mad Dog of Europe a film meant to illuminate the worsening treatment of Jews in Germany at that time 14 Mankiewicz would later go on to write the screenplay for Citizen Kane 14 nbsp Liebenberg Castle In April 1934 15 Libertas met Harro Schulze Boysen while they were both sailing on the Wannsee 16 Harro Schulze Boysen had been the publisher of the left liberal magazine Der Gegner English The Opponent between 1932 and 1933 It was closed down when he was arrested by the Sturmabteilung in April 1933 17 He was badly beaten and lost half his ear 18 and was only released due to the influence of his mother 19 Besides the mutilation of his ear the attack left Harro with damaged kidneys 17 His Jewish friend Henry Erlanger who was arrested at the same time did not survive the beating 17 Harro was in the habit of bringing his work friends from Der Gegner together with his other friends and colleagues for social evenings in his apartment during which they discussed philosophical and political questions of the day 20 To protect themselves from persecution the couple surrounded themselves with a group of politically incorruptible friends who were left leaning anti fascists among them artists pacifists and communists In October 1934 the couple moved in together to an apartment in Hohenzollerndamm in the Wilmersdorf district of Berlin On 15 January 1935 Schulze Boysen left to join the Reich Labour Service for female youth Freiwilligen Arbeitsdienst fur die weibliche Jugend for six months voluntary work near Glindow close to Potsdam 21 On 18 July 1935 she completed her six months of voluntary service she returned to work at MGM Her lack of enthusiasm for her voluntary service was such that she decided to write a book that was brutally honest that described the daily fight for assertion the status of women in the community and the fight for ideals 22 She submitted the manuscript to the writer Ernst von Salomon a family friend who worked at the Rowohlt publishing house 22 for review Salomon believed it was good enough to publish but had doubts as to whether the Reich Labour Service would allow it Rowohlt wanted to publish it for precisely for that reason 22 Libertas intended to submit the manuscript for review to the Reich Labour Service but whether that actually happened is unknown 22 Salomon heard nothing further on that point 22 The nature of her work at MGM the tedious cycle of film promotion and censor work made Libertas restless 23 21 Starting in July 1935 Schulze Boysen began working on Harro s magazine Wille zum Reich Will to Empire as an editor and translator The magazine dealt with cultural and political issues but with the goal of undermining the Nazi movement with the magazine s own themes 15 In August 1935 Harro was given permission by the Ministry of Aviation Luftfahrtministerium to attend a series of lectures on the League of Nations in Geneva and Libertas accompanied him 15 On the way home the couple stopped at the Chateau de Muzot to visit the last home of the Bohemian Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke as well as visit his tomb 15 In the spring of 1936 Schulze Boysen applied to leave the Nazi party by submitting a resignation request to the Reichsleitung der NSDAP in Munich 24 Marriage editDuring Easter in 1936 the couple were engaged 15 and lived together for a year before getting married on 26 July 1936 25 The wedding took place in the chapel of Liebenberg Castle under a painting of Guido Reni 16 with Hermann Goring giving away the bride 26 For their honeymoon the couple visited Stockholm in Sweden where Harro was introduced to Libertas s Swedish relatives her sister Ottora and her sister s husband Count Douglas 27 Harro was on duty during the short honeymoon that the couple took between 27 July and 9 August 1936 28 He had arranged a language study trip from his employer and he had submitted a confidential report upon his return that detailed the description and the constitution of the crafts in the bays 29 28 At the time Libertas was unprepared for the fact that Harro spent more time looking at the military installations and the ships in the harbour than at her 27 Schulze Boysen considered herself a libertine and the couple had an open marriage 30 First mission editIn August 1936 the journalist Evan James an English friend of Libertas s from her 1933 stay in England lodged with the couple to report on the 1936 Summer Olympics At the time Harro wanted to give James the details on prisoner numbers from the Spanish Civil War compiled from situation reports his office received so he could get them published by the BBC However James refused stating the source would be too easy to identify 31 Instead Libertas translated the bombastic words from the first page of Mein Kampf to warn him to show him that there would be war 32 However James did not want to hear Instead the couple showed James the anti Jewish notices in the shops but what is so obvious to them that the Nazi consolidation of power will lead to war was not so obvious to James 33 At the time Harro was dumbfounded at James attitude but gradually realised that his position in the Air Ministry could give him access to valuable information but to access the most valuable and sensitive information he would need to rise in the ranks They decided to invite Goring to the Liebenberg estate to hunt deer on 6 September 1936 Goring s country estate of Carinhall was next to Liebenberg Castle 34 In essence it was a charm offensive led by Libertas to get Harro noticed 34 Libertas was successful as Goring made an enquiry to Hans Jurgen Stumpff who reported the Harro Schulze Boysen was considered unreliable due to his political involvements before 1933 35 Goring replied that the old things should be left alone and that Harro should be sent on a pilots course enabling his career advancement 35 On 1 October 1936 the couple moved into an apartment at 2 Waitzstrasse in Charlottenburg 36 At the same time their marriage ran into trouble Due to pain in Harro s kidneys and the Swastika carved into his leg when he was arrested he found lovemaking difficult 37 After sex his urine would turn red 37 Libertas realised the marriage was in trouble and influenced by the views of her husband returned her Nazi membership booklet 36 Picnic meetings editDuring 1937 they held their first public picnic evenings and held further meetings every other week on Thursday nights 38 Their first picnic evening of the year was held on 21 January 1937 37 Among the 30 odd guests were Gisela von Pollnitz and a doctor Elfriede Paul who was the girlfriend of Walter Kuchenmeister who had been invited on the advice of Elisabeth Schumacher wife of Kurt Schumacher who also attended 39 40 Among the other guests were Heinrich Karbe a journalist for the Essen National Newspaper de the actor Werner Dissel and the Rowohlt editor Ernst von Salomon 41 Resistance edit nbsp The Schulze Boysen group in Germany The Spanish Civil War galvanised the inner circle of the group in their discussions Kurt Schumacher demanded that action should be taken and a plan that took advantage of Harro s position at the ministry was formed In February 1937 Harro compiled a short information document about a sabotage enterprise planned in Barcelona by the German Wehrmacht The information was from Special Staff W an organisation established by Luftwaffe general Helmuth Wilberg to study and analyse the tactical lessons learned by the Legion Kondor during the Spanish Civil War 42 The unit also directed the German relief operations that consisted of volunteers weapons and ammunition for General Francisco Franco s FET y de las JONS 42 The information that Schulze Boysen collected included details about German transports deployment of units and companies involved in the German defence 42 The group around Schulze Boysen did not know how to deliver the information but discovered that Schulze Boysen s cousin Gisela von Pollnitz was planning to visit the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne that was held in Paris from 25 May to 25 November 1937 43 In November Pollnitz fulfilled her mission and placed the letter in the mailbox of the Soviet Embassy on the Bois de Boulogne 44 Unfortunately the Gestapo were watching the location and she was arrested 45 The couple fearing instant retribution from the Gestapo decided to leave Berlin for several weeks 43 On 27 September 1937 Harro left for a treatment for kidney stones at a sanatorium in Bad Wildungen while Libertas arranged a sea trip via a friend on the cargo ship SS Ilona Siemers 1923 that left from the Hamburg port of St Pauli transporting coal to the Black Sea 43 During the journey she filled her journal on stories of her travels 46 She returned on Christmas Day 1937 47 In late 1937 Schulze Boysen met the playwright Gunther Weisenborn 48 who had been friends with Harro since 1932 49 in what was their first illegal meeting that was attended by Kuchenmeister and Schumacher 50 On 12 January 1938 Weisenborn was introduced to Libertas 48 In February 1938 the Schulze Boysens learnt that von Pollnitz had been arrested the month before 51 Their apartment at 2 Waitzstrasse was searched by the Gestapo but nothing was found as the couple had spent several days feverishly clearing the place of any evidence of wrongdoing 52 After Harro was cleared by the Air Ministry their plans to flee to Amsterdam where Johannes Haas Heye was stationed were abandoned 52 As the year progressed Libertas and Weisenborn relationship blossomed and eventually consummated in an open affair 53 In the same month they collaborated in writing a play Die guten Feinde The Good Enemies 54 about the German physician Robert Koch and his competition with Max Pettenkofer and their search for the causes of tuberculosis 55 In July 1938 von Pollnitz was released from prison and was seriously ill with a tuberculosis infection 56 Libertas and Elfriede Paul began caring for her cousin ensuring she was able to attend a sanatorium first in Sommerfeld in the Brandenberg sands and then later in Switzerland The Gestapo visited and searched their apartment as they were associates of von Pollnitz The visits along with von Pollnitz s illness led Schulze Boysen to suffer from a general malaise that caused her to flee to Zurich a city she felt safe in 57 On 6 August 1938 she was introduced to the author Thomas Mann and spoke about her difficulties 58 Mann recorded the meeting in his diary 58 When Libertas returned in August she worked with Weisenborn to arrange the premier of the play at a theatre in Bremen in November 1938 that was delated but finally held on 1 March 1939 at the Theater Bremen 59 At the same time Schulze Boysen had signed a contract with Deutschlandsender for a production of a radio play that was broadcast on 3 March 1939 59 On 9 November the couple went on a 2 day holiday together to Venice Italy the first time the couple had been together for months that was due to the demanding need for overtime at the Air Ministry 60 When the couple returned they witnessed Kristallnacht 61 At the end of 1938 looking to determine her fortune Schulze Boysen became a client of Anna Krauss a well known clairvoyant and fortune teller 62 Through Krauss Libertas met Toni Graudenz a neighbour and they became friends Her husband was John Graudenz Schulze Boysen introduced both Krauss and Graudenz into the resistance group 63 64 In April 1939 the couple moved into their new apartment at Altenburger Allee 19 59 in Charlottenburg now the Westend In the summer of 1939 Schulze Boysen visited the town of Nidden on the Curonian Spit 65 While there she photographed a ship laden with Jewish passengers desperate to reach Latvia 65 She was immediately arrested but refused to say anything and was permitted to leave 66 Schulze Boysen Harnack group edit In September 1939 the Schulze Boysens met the writer and playwright Adam Kuckhoff and his wife the socialist Greta Kuckhoff at a dinner party hosted by the film producer Herbert Engelsing and his wife Ingeborg at their house in Bettinstrasse in Grunewald 67 68 The free exchange of ideas and opinion was expected 69 Herbert Engelsing was planning to produce a film on Adam s book Der Deutsche von Bayencourt The German from Bayencourt that had been published in 1937 and became prominent 70 The party at the Engelsings who were close friends of the Schulze Boysens was the ideal way to gauge the political stance of the Kuckhoff s The Kuckhoffs were impressed by the Schulze Boysens and shared the same political views 71 Libertas and Greta Kuckhoff became close friends 72 In 1939 Kuckhoff s decided that their close friends the literary historian translator Mildred and Marxist economist Arvid Harnack should be introduced to the Schulze Boysens 71 Greta decided that it would be the women who should meet first and in late 1939 brought Mildred and Libertas together while on holiday in Saxony 71 The Harnak s also held group meetings with a preplanned agenda where they debated the political and economic perspectives of the time 73 but were considered rather austere compared to Libertas and Shulze Boysen s fun filled nights of music and dancing 74 The initial meeting of the women gave rise to a licentious image of the group that persisted for decades after the war based primarily on Gestapo and Abwehr reports 74 In his 1967 book L orchestre rouge Gilles Perrault states that Mildred and Libertas were lesbians quoted from an unnamed source 45 75 However industrialist Hugo Buschmann who was an informant and couples close friend stated that the group lived dangerously but there was no evidence for Perrault s conclusion 45 Certainly Libertas and Mildred were good friends 72 Other friends who joined their parties and who became staunch anti Nazis included the actor Werner Dissel who they met in 1935 as well as Albrecht Haushofer Kurt Schumacher and his wife Elisabeth Schumacher Elfriede Paul Walter Kuchenmeister the writer Gunther Weisenborn the dancer and sculptor Oda Schottmuller as well as the actor Marta Husemann and her husband Walter Husemann who was an editor 76 In the same month Schulze Boysen was informed that her cousin Gisela von Pollnitz had died on 14 September 1939 in a Swiss sanatorium 77 In the following month Harro fell ill with Kidney stone disease 78 The couple spent their Christmas in 1939 apart The stress of the war combined with Harro s illness the start of rationing and the double life they led lead to what Shulze Boysen considered the most desolate period in her life 79 At the beginning of 1940 the blackout led to the group meeting less often due to the difficulty of walking home in the darkness 80 Schulze Boysen arranged to drive their friends home for her apartment although it involved a considerable risk to herself of being followed 80 In early 1940 the group was joined by Heinrich Scheel along with Hans and Ina Lautenschlager 81 Elfriede Paul stated that in early 1940 they discussed the opening of concentration camps in Poland and the military supply organisation known as Organisation Todt 80 In the spring of 1940 Harro began to study foreign policy at the newly opened Institute of International Studies part of the Deutsche Hochschule fur Politik of the Humboldt University of Berlin for a doctorate 82 in an attempt to attain the position of Regierungsrat or government councillor 83 Writer and journalist editFrom July 1940 to 13 November 1941 Libertas wrote film reviews for the culture section of the National Zeitung 84 The task was difficult as she could not write freely or criticize as the paper was censored by Joseph Goebbels propaganda ministry Beginning in May 1939 on a weekly basis each editor received a copy of the Zeitschriften Dienst 85 a confidential newsletter from the ministry that described various directives as to what could be published and the particular theme the Nazi Party wanted to see in use 84 Libs decided to cooperate in order to express herself and maintain influence 86 To bypass the censors she varied her tone for films she liked she would often write extravagantly or in the form of a love letter In other films that did not find favour she would write in a strict and formal manner 86 Originally a temporary position it became permanent in the summer of 1941 but she became unsettled and decided to leave to try to achieve a film career 87 Her last article Resurrection the mask in art dance introduced the dancer Oda Schottmuller to the general public 88 and her successor as film critic was Adam Kuckhoff 88 Both were her and Harro s friends and both resisted the Nazis 88 Espionage editIn October 1940 Greta and Libertas finanlly managed to convince Harro Schulze Boysen to meet with Arvid Harnack 89 A meeting was held in Adam s and Greta Kuckhoff apartment at Wilhelmshoher Allee 19 in Friedenau 89 At the meeting of the new combined political faction Schulze Boysen Harnack and Kuckhoff discussed the current situation openly and what they could do to further resistance 89 Harnack tells the group that he was introduced to Soviet agent Alexander Korotkov who used the alias Alexander Erdberg 90 and had already told Erdberg on 26 September 1940 that Germany was in the planning stages of an invasion of the Soviet Union 91 By the end of that first meeting both Schulze Boysen and Kuckhoff had agreed to be informants to Harnack 89 From that point forward their combined undercover political faction developed from a resistance organisation into an espionage network from a small cadre of close friends that began to collaborate with Soviet intelligence 92 In December 1940 Harro was put on a war footing in preparation for the invasaion of the Soviet Union moving to a barracks in a forest in Potsdam 93 At the beginning of 1941 sources vary Harro had begun an affair with Stella Mahlberg a stage actress 94 95 Harro informed Libertas of the affair 96 As they had an open marriage they promised when they married not to deceive each other 96 In January 1941 Schulze Boysen attended the wedding of Gunther and Joy Weisenborn 97 While there she was surrounded by her friends but was deeply unhappy over the affair 97 Their arguments led her friend Ingeborg who viewed the marriage as being in a critical state to see them less and less as the summer progressed 98 In April 1941 Schulze Boysen gave up the idea of turning her ship journal into a novel This was a result of a shortage of paper and the fact that novels were no longer published unless for propaganda purposes 99 Hochverrat edit In March 1941 Harro met with Korotkov directly in Harnack s apartment and he agreed to provide military information to Korotkov 100 Korotkov asked Schulze Boysen to curtail his resistance activities he replied as a German patriot he wished to create a counterpublic to the Nazis and his resistance would work needed to continue 100 In April 1941 in an attempt to increase the influx of intelligence the Soviets ordered Korotkov to create a Berlin espionage operation 101 102 and Harnack was asked by Korotkov to run it 103 Korotkov was instructed by Soviet intelligence to provide a person in Berlin that could be contacted via radio in the event of war Harnack refused to be contacted in that manner and agreed only to collect and encipher the material in his own apartment but the transmission would take place somewhere else 104 Instead Adam Kuckhoff would be the radio contact In June 1941 with Harnack s approval Korotkov delivered a wireless transmitter to Greta Kuckhoff during a meeting at an underground railway station 105 However the radio was damaged by Erdberg before delivery 106 Adam Kuckhoff arranged with Harnack to return the damaged radio back to Erdberg 107 A Luftwaffe report consisting of the Russian city names and their railway stations that were to be bombed during the initial attack of Operation Barbarossa had to be manually transcribed to Erdberg instead of being transmitted Greta Kuckhoff was unable to accurately remember the place names written in the Cyrillic alphabet so instead Libertas along with Adam Kuckhoff met Erdberg in the Potsdamer Platz station to manually whisper the list of cities to Erdberg repeating the names to Erdberg so he would remember them while they walked back and forward along the station over several hours 107 In August 1941 during a dinner party that Karbe and his wife held with the Schule Boysens he described how Libertas had blurted out the fact they were in the resistance while they were discussing Harro working for Hermann Goring 108 This led Karbe to describe the consequences of their actions should they be discovered which made Libertas scream At the time the daily fear of discovery was palpable and made the days run slow They knew that the groups actions were considered treasonous specifically Hochverrat or High Treason and punishable by death but could do little to change it 108 Karbe was never part of the resistance and he believed that Libertas has little understanding of the danger they were currently in 109 In the same month Karbe put the couple in touch with Anna Krauss a fortune teller who became an important part of the group 110 In September 1941 Schulze Boysen met Cato Bontjes van Beek while on an assignement at the Leipzig Trade Fair and became friends 111 Van Beek was an ardent anti Nazi 112 113 and agreed to collaborate with her by helping her write up the Nazi crimes in her archive 112 In the autumn of 1941 Cato rented two rooms from Schulze Boyson that were part of her very large apartment at 2 Waitzstrasse Van Beek s lover the journalist and poet Heinz Strelow rented on the rooms directly from Van Beek 114 Documenting war crimes editIn August 1940 the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda created the Deutsche KulturfilmZentrale German Documentary Film Institute 115 whose purpose was to organise the production of ten to twenty minute long cultural films that were to be shown in German film theatres before the start of the main film for the purpose of propaganda 116 Libertas applied for a position in the department of Kunst deutsches Land und Volk Volker und Lander Art German Land and People Peoples and Countries and was appointed on 1 November 1941 87 In the position she acted as a censor reviewing film scripts to determine if they adhered to Nazi Party ideology 116 Those that did not she would reject filmmakers who she found to be trying to be innovative were passed 116 On her first day at work she found her desk piled high with envelopes filled with photographs containing images of the work of the Sonderbehandlungen task forces 117 118 Joseph Goebbels had ordered the collection of photographs from the front so they can be used by Libertas to define themes for new cultural films 119 As part of her job she had to continue requesting pictures from soldiers on leave 120 For a long while Schulze Boysen did not know how to react to the material as it was so shocking 121 She decided to start gathering pictorial evidence of Nazi war crimes in anticipation of using them after the war to show the extent of the genocide 121 AGIS leaflets editIn December 1941 the Schulze Boysens met the psychoanalyst John Rittmeister and his wife Eva 122 Through Rittmeister several people who attended the Heil schen Abendschule Abendgymnasium Berliner Stadtische Abendgymnasium fur Erwachsene BAG in Schoneberg including Rittmeister s wife Eva who became part of the espionage group This included the lawyer Maria Terwiel and her fiancee the dentist Helmut Himpel as well as the factory worker Friedrich Rehmer and the student Ursula Goetze 123 Rittmeister was happy to hear from the reports that informed him of the German military setback on the Eastern Front and convinced Schulze Boysen that the reports should be shared with the German people which would destroy the myth of German propaganda 124 The group decide to write a series of reports known as AGIS a name chosen by Libertas 125 who named in reference to the Spartan King Agis IV who was a social reformer who fought against corruption 122 Rittmeister Schulze Boysen Heinz Strelow and Kuchenmeister among others wrote them with titles like The becoming of the Nazi movement Call for opposition Freedom and violence and Appeal to All Callings and Organisations to resist the government 126 By 15 February 1942 Schulze Boysen had written a six page pamphlet titled Die Sorge Um Deutschlands Zukunft geht durch das Volk The Concern for Germany s Future Goes Through the People Co authored by Rittmeister 127 the master copy was arranged by Van Beek and the pamphlet was written up by Terwiel on her typewriter 128 One copy survives today 129 130 The pamphlet posited the idea of active defeatism which was a compromise between principled pacifism and practical political resistance 127 It stated the future for Germany lay in establishing a socialist state that would form alliances with the USSR and progressive forces in Europe It also offered advice to the individual resistor do the opposite of what is asked of you 127 The group produced hundreds of pamphlets that were spread over Berlin left in phone boxes in eating establishments and sent to selected addresses for example universities Producing the leaflets required a small army of people and a complex approach to organisation to avoid being discovered 131 Fears and protests edit nbsp Adhesive stickers that were posted on top of The Soviet Paradise posters The couple spent Christmas holidays 1941 apart with Libertas spending Christmas in Liebenberg Castle with her cousin Ingeborg von Schoenebeck who had a strong dislike of Harro and tried to convince Libertas that she should divorce 132 By 1942 the unrelenting stress of the resistance work began to tell In early 1942 Van Beek and Strelow realised the terrible danger they were in and began to withdraw from the group and their resistance activities 133 In the spring of 1942 Schulze Boysen confided in Gunther Weisenborn that for five years she had worked to resist the Nazis on behalf of Harro but she found that she could not face the fear any longer 134 She yearned simply to live in love and peace 134 On 16 May 1942 she visited Vienna for four days to conduct a meeting with the Wien Film film company 135 136 While she was away the group protested the Nazi propaganda exhibition called The Soviet Paradise German original title Das Sowjet Paradies 137 in Lustgarten that had the express purpose of justifying the invasion of the Soviet Union to the German people 134 The protest took the form of small stickers with a message Permanent Exhibition The Nazi Paradise War Hunger Lies Gestapo How much longer that were pasted up in several German neighbourhoods 134 On 18 May 1942 Herbert Baum led a group to commit an arson attack on the exhibition 135 While the arson attack was not reported 500 Berlin based Jewish men were rounded up and deported to concenctration camps in a reprisal 135 When she returned from Vienna she discovered Harro in flagrante with the actor Stella Mahlberg 136 with whom he had been having an affair since April 1941 138 She immediately demanded a divorce stating she would seek legal advice from Herbert Engelsing but Harro convinced her to stay informing her that they knew too much about the resistance effort 136 Harro Schulze Boysen continued the affair until August 1942 Libertas found the lack of emotional support highly distressing 139 Letters from the Eastern Front editThrough 1941 and 1942 Schulze Boysen continued working with the Deutsche KulturfilmZentrale 140 In January 1942 she wrote to her mother in law Marie Louise where she described the work which she completes at home and spoke of how it made her deeply unhappy and melancholic 141 In May 1942 Schulze Boysen met Alexander Spoerl de who held similar political views Spoerl was the son of the German author Heinrich Spoerl At a party at the Engelsings and in an open conversation she suggested that Spoerl become her assistant at the KulturfilmZentrale to help her organise the pictures into an archive 140 142 However the number of pictures in envelopes continued to increase 143 Schulze Boysen decided to answer some of the letters she received in an effort to collect more details for after the war 143 In one photograph she archives it contains an image of a little girl next to her older brother mother and a baby All of them are to be shot 141 In another letter she received a soldier spoke in lyrical terms of certain insects that he loved and could not harm one was the potato beetle and included a photograph of him about to hurl a small baby against the wall 144 Libertas along with Adam Kuckhoff and the journalist John Sieg use some of the letters material to write a fictional letter to fictional police captain that stated Would I otherwise write to you if I did not assume that you have not lost the ability and courage to follow the compulsion of conscience where it comes into conflict with such an obviously bestial duty as the ordered assassination of the Soviet population In the state hospital in I recently visited some police comrades who had been brought in from the East because of nervous breakdowns all of them You know the hospital atmosphere this special kind of peace the room was also enlivened with flowers the sick were allowed to listen to music and this ridiculously simple requiem of emotional healing was joined by almost novelistic literally a few rays of sunshine By the way there is a department there about which my comrades told me with almost shy relief that the even worse nervous breakdowns were there the powerful police officers from the past just keep moving along hopping like kangaroos you know and others crawl on all fours shaking carefully as they do so their heads their hair falls disheveled over their faces and their gaze is someone repeated imploringly like a St Bernard dog I experienced many terrible things from my comrades the calm in the room was deceptive the furies were raging in it In whispers with eyes wide open and hoping for a word of redeeming justification from me I was told about mass shootings of the civilian population in Russia selected atrocities about blood and tears without measure the ultimate character of the beastly SS orders the incomprehensible equanimity of helpless victims yes and of course there was a lot about the partisan struggle which interested me immensely politically and tactically Of course I didn t say a word of consolation to any of the sick people that would have been of help to them in the horror tormented twilight hours of their evenings which made them all the more eager to reveal their deeds Should I of all people give a kind of absolution to someone who subsequently albeit in agony confess that he shot 50 people morning after morning on orders so to speak as a daily routine for months 145 dd The letter was duplicated in a hectograph machine Kurt Schumacher took several copies when he returned to his unit in Poznan and the group hoped for a snowball effect in its distribution to see the letter pass up the chain of command 146 Discovery editThe discovery of the illegal radio transmissions by Soviet agent Johann Wenzel by the German radio counterintelligence organization Funkabwehr and his capture by the Gestapo on 29 30 June 1942 eventually exposed the group 147 and led to the arrest of the Schulze Boyzen s Wenzel decided to cooperate after he was tortured His exposure of the radio codes enabled Referat 12 the cipher bureaux of the Funkabwehr to decipher Red Orchestra message traffic The unit had been tracking Red Orchestra radio transmissions since June 1941 and had located Wenzel s house in Brussels 148 When it was raided by the Gestapo it was found to contain a large number of coded messages 149 When Wilhelm Vauck principal cryptographer of the Funkabwehr the radio counterintelligence department of the Abwehr 148 received the ciphers from Wenzel he was able to decipher some of the older messages 148 On 15 July 1942 Vauck managed to decrypt a message dated 10 October 1941 148 that gave the locations of the Kuckhoff s and the Schulze Boysen s apartments 150 Arrest edit nbsp Libs and Harro The picture was taken in 1935 On 31 August 1942 Harro Schulze Boysen was arrested in his office in the Ministry of Aviation Libertas had received a puzzling phone call from his office several days before 151 She was also warned by the women who delivered her mail that the Gestapo were monitoring it 17 Libertas s assistant Alexander Spoerl also noticed that Adam Kuckhoff had gone missing while working in Prague 151 On 7 September 1942 the Harnacks were arrested while on holiday 150 On the same day Libertas returned to an empty apartment after a short business trip and called Harro s secretary to try and locate him 152 She suspected that Schulze Boysen was arrested and contacted the Engelsings Herbert Engelsing tried to contact Kuckhoff without result 153 Libertas and Spoerl both started to panic and frantically tried to warn others 17 They destroyed the darkroom at the Kulurefilm center and Libertas destroyed her meticulously collected archive At home she packed a suitcase with all Harro Schulze Boysen s papers and then tried to fabricate evidence of loyalty to the Nazi state by writing fake letters 153 She sent the suitcase to Gunther Weisenborn in the vain hope that it could be hidden and he tried to contact Harro Schulze Boysen in vain 153 On the same day she was informed by Horst Heilmann that Harro had been arrested 154 On 8 September while on a train to visit friends in the Moselle Valley Libertas was arrested 155 She was taken to the basement cells German Hausgefangnis in the most dreaded address in all of German occupied Europe Reich Security Main Office headquarters at 8 Prinz Albert Strasse Prince Albert street containing department AMT IV the Gestapo and put into protective custody Schutzhaftlinge by them 156 In prison Libertas met Gertrude Breiter the secretary for Libertas s interrogator Kommissar Alfred Gopfert Libertas believed that Breiter was hostile to her superiors seeing her more as a friend than an agent provocateur 157 Breiter told Libertas that Gopfert did not have any serious evidence against her and due to her family connections with Hermann Goring her life would be safe Libertas decided to confide in Breiter and talked with her more than a dozen times 158 In the course of their furtive conversations Libertas told Breiter what she knew of the other prisoners asked Breiter to deliver letters to her mother 159 and asked for additional favours primarily in the form of a typewriter to write poetry 160 In the three months Libertas was in prison she wrote a number of remarkable letters and poems to her mother and friends 161 When the Gestapo informed her of Breiter s betrayal Libertas was overwhelmed with remorse stating in a letter to her mother I had to drink the bitter cup for now I learn that the person whom I had given my complete trust Gertrude Breiter had betrayed me Her mother believed that Libertas had betrayed a number of the Schulze Boysen Harnack group 157 However in an unpublished interview with David Dallin after the war Manfred Roeder the advocate who prosecuted the Schulze Boysens in the Reichskriegsgericht stated that Libertas never betrayed anybody Roeder credited the Funkspiel operation the Abwehr ran against the Red Orchestra radio operators for providing the necessary clues to identify the resistance members 162 On 15 November 1942 Gurevich was brought back to Berlin where he was asked by the Gestapo on 22 November 1942 to identify the name of a woman in a picture He identified her immediately as Libertas Schulze Boysen This provided definitive proof to the investigators that she was actively involved in the work of her husband 163 Trial and execution editShe and her husband were brought before trial in the Reichskriegsgericht Reich Court Martial She was charged with preparation to commit high treason helping the enemy and espionage Her husband was charged with preparation to commit high treason wartime treason military sabotage and espionage 164 The trial ended on 19 December 1942 with death sentences for both her husband and her Libertas Schulze Boysen was executed by guillotine about 90 minutes after her husband on 22 December 1942 at Plotzensee Prison in Berlin 6 165 166 Honours editThe German writer Alexander Spoerl de dedicated his 1950 novel Memoiren eines mittelmassigen Schulers Memoirs of a Mediocre Student to Libertas Schulze Boysen 167 In the Berlin borough of Lichtenberg in 1972 a street was named after the Schulze Boysens 166 The Libertas Chapel 168 in Liebenberg Castle where she married her husband Harro is dedicated to her Since 2004 a special exhibition by the Memorial to the German Resistance on the life of Libertas and the joint resistance within the Red Orchestra against Nazism has been on display here documented with photographs and extensive writings 169 In 2017 two Stolpersteine stumbling stones each for Libertas and her husband Harro were laid in front of the steps of the entrance to the Liebenberg Castle 170 171 Memorials to the Schulze Boysen s nbsp Stolperstein for the Schulze Boysens in the castle courtyard of Liebenberg Castle nbsp Memorial plaque for the couple at Haus Altenburger Allee 19 in Westend of BerlinSee also editArvid Harnack Hans Coppi List of Germans who resisted Nazism Resistance during World War IIReferences edit a b c d Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 35 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 pp 36 39 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 32 a b Beachy 2010 pp 801 838 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 4 a b Libertas Schulze Boysen amp Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand a b Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 8 Andresen 2005 p 185 Brysac 2002 p 376 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 pp 40 41 Nelson 2009 p 136 a b c Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 60 Petrescu 2010 p 190 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 61 a b c d e Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 12 a b Brysac 2002 p 427 Ref 39 a b c d e Brysac 2002 p 112 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 31 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 19 Petrescu 2010 p 189 a b Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 45 a b c d e Kettelhake 2008 p 111 Kettelhake 2008 p 97 Kettelhake 2008 p 171 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 96 Hastings 2015 p 29 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 146 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 145 Schulze Boysen 1936 Hellman 2002 p 229 Kettelhake 2008 p 149 Kettelhake 2008 p 150 Kettelhake 2008 pp 151 152 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 64 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 158 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 66 a b c Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 67 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 69 Coppi 1995 p 183 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 pp 67 69 Kettelhake 2008 p 176 a b c Hohne 1968 a b c Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 74 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 157 a b c Brysac 2000 p 237 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 76 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 77 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 78 Nelson 2009 p 105 Kettelhake 2008 p 201 Kettelhake 2008 p 203 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 204 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 80 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 125 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 54 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 81 Kettelhake 2008 pp 221 223 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 82 a b c Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 55 Kettelhake 2008 p 231 Kettelhake 2008 pp 233 236 Schulze Boysen 1999 p 412 Nelson 2009 p 216 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 60 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 248 Kettelhake 2008 p 249 Nelson 2009 p 131 Kettelhake 2008 p 262 Kettelhake 2008 pp 252 254 Nelson 2009 pp 123 a b c Brysac 2000 p 232 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 269 Juchler Ambauen amp Arnold 2017 p 102 a b Brysac 2000 p 236 Perrault 1969 p 209 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 18 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 101 Kettelhake 2008 p 273 Kettelhake 2008 pp 274 275 a b c Kettelhake 2008 p 276 Kettelhake 2008 p 277 Kettelhake 2008 p 281 Kettelhake 2008 pp 282 283 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 104 Bytwerk 2004 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 105 a b Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 57 a b c Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 p 58 a b c d Kettelhake 2008 p 290 Brysac 2002 pp 200 202 Brysac 2000 p 266 Kesaris 1979 p 140 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 110 Nelson 2009 p 215 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 149 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 300 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 301 Kettelhake 2008 p 302 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 116 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 113 Nelson 2009 p 196 Kettelhake 2008 p 307 Dallin 1955 p 247 Brysac 2000 p 286 Kesaris 1979 p 147 Kettelhake 2008 p 315 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 317 a b Kettelhake 2008 pp 327 Kettelhake 2008 pp 325 326 Kettelhake 2008 p 326 Geyken 2015 pp 72 76 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 144 Vinke 2007 p 70 Geyken 2014 p 79 Echternkamp 1990 p 107 a b c Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 131 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 132 Kettelhake 2008 pp 335 337 Kettelhake 2008 p 335 Kettelhake 2008 p 337 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 135 a b Nelson 2009 p 242 Kettelhake 2008 p 351 Cocks 1985 p 331 Kettelhake 2008 p 331 Petrescu 2010 p 199 a b c Geyer amp Tooze 2015 pp 718 720 Terwiel amp Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand Schulze Boysen et al 1942 Petrescu 2010 p 219 Nelson 2009 p 243 Kettelhake 2008 p 352 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 143 a b c d Brysac 2000 p 300 a b c Kettelhake 2008 p 360 a b c Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 162 Nelson 2009 p 254 Coppi amp Tuchel 2013 pp 49 50 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 172 a b Kettelhake 2008 p 361 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 139 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 148 a b Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 138 Kettelhake 2008 p 364 Kettelhake 2008 pp 365 366 Kettelhake 2008 p 366 Tyas 2017 p 384 a b c d West 2007 p 205 Perrault 1969 p 83 a b Nelson 2009 p 266 a b Nelson 2009 p 263 Kettelhake 2008 p 370 a b c Nelson 2009 p 264 Kettelhake 2008 p 371 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 268 Brysac 2002 p 278 a b Brysac 2000 p 338 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 271 Nelson 2009 p 271 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 272 Kettelhake 2008 pp 378 382 385 389 390 391 393 395 397 407 412 Brysac 2000 p 339 Ohler Mohr amp Yarbrough 2020 p 306 Nazi Feldurteil Nazi field verdict sentencing the Schulze Boysens and other members of the Red Orchestra Retrieved 13 April 2010 in German Official Nazi document of execution Retrieved 13 April 2010 in German a b Background on Schulze Boysen Strasse Retrieved 13 April 2010 in German Pucan 2008 p 28 Kaiserjagden in Liebenberg Deutschland Internet Augusta Presse und Verlags GmbH Archived from the original on 28 September 2010 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Sonderausstellung Libertas Schulze Boysen und die Rote Kapelle Deutsche Kreditbank AG Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Bergt 2017 Stolpersteine in Liebenberg Unsichtbares sichtbar machen DKB STIFTUNG in German Retrieved 12 August 2021 Bibliography editAndresen Geertje 1 November 2005 Oda Schottmuller Die Tanzerin Bildhauerin und Nazigegnerin Oda Schottmuller 1905 1943 Lukas Verlag ISBN 978 3 936872 58 3 Retrieved 5 September 2020 Beachy Robert December 2010 The German Invention of Homosexuality The Journal of Modern History 82 4 The University of Chicago Press 801 838 doi 10 1086 656077 JSTOR 10 1086 656077 S2CID 142605226 Retrieved 27 August 2021 Bergt Heike 8 September 2017 Pfarrer im Unruhestand in German Markische Verlags und Druckgesellschaft mbH Potsdam Markische Allgemeine Retrieved 12 August 2021 Brysac Shareen Blair 2000 Resisting Hitler Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513269 4 Brysac Shareen Blair 23 May 2002 Resisting Hitler Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 992388 5 Retrieved 26 December 2018 Bytwerk Randall L 2004 Zeitschriften Dienst German Propaganda Archive Grand Rapids Calvin University Archived from the original on 14 February 2024 Retrieved 14 February 2024 Cocks Geoffrey 1985 Psychotherapy in the Third Reich the Goring Institute Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0195034619 Coppi Hans 1995 Harro Schulze Boysen Wege in den Widerstand eine biographische Studie Harro Schulze Boysen Paths to Resistance a biographical study in German 2nd ed Koblenz D Folbach ISBN 3 923532 28 8 OCLC 243801569 Coppi Hans Tuchel Johannes 2013 Libertas Schulze Boysen und die Rote Kapelle PDF Berlin Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand Berlinauf Schloss amp Gut Liebenberg ISBN 978 3 926082 55 8 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Dallin David J 1955 Soviet Espionage Yale University Press p 247 ISBN 978 0 598 41349 9 Jorg Echternkamp Zentrum fur Militargeschichte und Sozialwissenschaften der Bundeswehr Potsdam Allemagne 1990 Germany and the Second World War Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg Vol 9 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199542963 Retrieved 27 August 2021 Geyken Frauke 2015 Etwas Furchtbares wird passieren Something terrible will happen Damals in German 47 5 Leinfelden Echterdingen Konradin Mediengruppe 72 76 ISSN 0011 5908 Geyken Frauke 9 May 2014 Wir standen nicht abseits Frauen im Widerstand gegen Hitler in German C H Beck p 79 ISBN 978 3 406 65903 4 Hastings Max 2015 The Secret War Spies Codes and Guerrillas 1939 1945 London William Collins ISBN 978 0 00 750374 2 Geyer Michael Tooze Adam 23 April 2015 The Cambridge History of the Second World War Volume 3 Total War Economy Society and Culture Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 29880 0 Hellman John 15 November 2002 Communitarian Third Way Alexandre Marc and Ordre Nouveau 1930 2000 McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 2376 0 Hohne Heinz 16 June 1968 ptx ruft moskau Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 19 September 2023 Juchler Ingo Ambauen Ladina Arnold Maren 25 October 2017 Mildred Harnack und die Rote Kapelle in Berlin Universitatsverlag Potsdam ISBN 978 3 86956 407 4 Kettelhake Silke 2008 Erzahl allen allen von mir das schone kurze Leben der Libertas Schulze Boysen 1913 1942 Tell everyone everyone about me The beautiful short life of Libertas Schulze Boysen 1913 1942 in German Munich Droemer ISBN 9783426274378 OCLC 221130666 Kesaris Paul L ed 1979 The Rote Kapelle the CIA s history of Soviet intelligence and espionage networks in Western Europe 1936 1945 Washington DC University Publications of America ISBN 978 0 89093 203 2 Nelson Anne 7 April 2009 Red Orchestra The Story of the Berlin Underground and the Circle of Friends Who Resisted Hitler Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 58836 799 0 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Ohler Norman Mohr Tim Yarbrough Marshall 14 July 2020 The Bohemians the lovers who led Germany s resistance against the Nazis Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 9781328566232 Perrault Gilles 1969 The Red Orchestra New York Schocken Books ISBN 0805209522 Petrescu Corina L 2010 Against All Odds Models of Subversive Spaces in National Socialist Germany Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 03911 845 8 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Pucan Lukas 2008 Bakalarska s works PDF Thesis Faculty of Arts Department of German Nordic and Dutch Studies Masaryk University Schulze Boysen Harro 1999 Dieser Tod passt zu mir This death suits me in German Aufbau Verlag ISBN 978 3 351 02493 2 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Schulze Boysen Harro Rittmeister John van Beek Cato Bontjes Terwiel Maria Schulze Boysen Libertas Kuchenmeister Walter 6 March 1942 Die Sorge um Deutschlands Zukunft geht durch das Volk PDF Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand AGIS Schulze Boysen Harro 13 August 1936 Schulze Boysen Bericht uber Sprachstudienreise nach Schweden vom 13 August 1936 Report on language study trip to Sweden Report Munich Institute of Contemporary History p Archive ED 335 2 Libertas Schulze Boysen Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand in German German Resistance Memorial Center Retrieved 3 September 2020 Maria Terwiel Gedenkstatte Deutscher Widerstand German Resistance Memorial Center Retrieved 21 July 2019 Tyas Stephen 2017 SS Major Horst Kopkow from the Gestapo to British intelligence Stroud Fonthill ISBN 9781781555989 OCLC 1013591260 Vinke Hermann 2007 Cato Bontjes van Beek Ich habe nicht um mein Leben gebettelt ein Portrat I didn t beg for my life a portrait Btb 73672 in German Genehmigte Taschenbuchausg 1 Aufl ed Munchen Goldmann ISBN 9783442736720 West Nigel 12 November 2007 Historical Dictionary of World War II Intelligence Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6421 4 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Further reading editAurich Rolf 2008 Jacobsen Wolfgang ed Libertas Schulze Boysen Filmpublizistin Libertas Schulze Boysen film publicist Film amp Schrift Bd 7 Munich Edition text kritik ISBN 978 3 88377 925 6 OCLC 237239951 Boysen Elsa 1992 Harro Schulze Boysen das Bild eines Freiheitskampfers Harro Schulze Boysen the image of a freedom fighter in German 3rd ed Koblenz Folbach ISBN 3 923532 17 2 OCLC 75288953 Hurter Johannes 2007 Schulze Boysen Libertas in German Neue Deutsche Biographie 23 pp 730 731 Rosiejka Gert 1986 Die Rote Kapelle Landesverrat als antifaschist Widerstand Ergebnisse 33 in German 1st ed Hamburg Ergebnisse Verl ISBN 3 925622 16 0 OCLC 74741321 External links editDouglas family archive Digitorial on Libertas Schulze Boysen Stolpersteine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Libertas Schulze Boysen amp oldid 1219399386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.