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Traudl Junge

Gertraud "Traudl" Junge (née Humps; 16 March 1920 – 10 February 2002) was a German editor who worked as Adolf Hitler's last private secretary from December 1942 to April 1945. After typing Hitler's will, she remained in the Berlin Führerbunker until his death. Following her arrest and imprisonment in June 1945, both the Soviet and the U.S. militaries interrogated her. Later, in post-war West Germany, she worked as a secretary. In her old age, she decided to publish her memoirs, claiming ignorance of the Nazi atrocities during the war, but blaming herself for missing opportunities to investigate reports about them. Her story, based partly on her book Until the Final Hour, formed a part of several dramatizations, in particular the 2004 German film Downfall about Hitler's final ten days.

Traudl Junge
Junge in 1945
Born
Gertraud Humps

(1920-03-16)16 March 1920
Died10 February 2002(2002-02-10) (aged 81)
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Occupation(s)Secretary, sub-editor, science reporter[1]
Known forAdolf Hitler's personal secretary during World War II
Spouse
(m. 1943; died 1944)

Early life and education edit

Gertraud "Traudl" Humps was born in Munich, the daughter of a master brewer and lieutenant in the Reserve Army, Max Humps and his wife Hildegard (née Zottmann). She had a sister, Inge, born in 1923. She once expressed her desire to become a ballerina as a teenager but was not accepted by a dance school.[2] She then trained as a secretary. When she heard about an opening on the Chancellery staff, she applied for it.[3]

Work for Hitler edit

Traudl Humps began working for Hitler in December 1942. She was the youngest of his private secretaries.[4] "I was 22 and I didn't know anything about politics; it didn't interest me," Junge said decades later, adding that she felt great guilt for "liking the greatest criminal ever to have lived".

She said: "I admit, I was fascinated by Adolf Hitler. He was a pleasant boss and a fatherly friend. I deliberately ignored all the warning voices inside me and enjoyed the time by his side, almost until the bitter end. It wasn't what he said, but the way he said things and how he did things."[5]

Encouraged by Hitler, in June 1943, Traudl married Waffen-SS officer Hans Hermann Junge (1914–1944), who had been a valet and orderly to Hitler. He died in combat in France in August 1944.[6][7] She worked at Hitler's side in Berlin, the Berghof in Berchtesgaden, at Wolfsschanze in East Prussia, and back again in Berlin in the Führerbunker.

Berlin, 1945 edit

In 1945, Junge was with Hitler in Berlin. During Hitler's last days in Berlin, he would regularly eat lunch with his secretaries Junge and Gerda Christian.[8] After the war, Junge recalled Gerda asking Hitler if he would leave Berlin. This was firmly rejected by Hitler.[9] Both women recalled that Hitler in conversation made it clear that his body must not fall into the hands of the Soviets. He would shoot himself.[9] Junge typed Hitler's last private and political will and testament in the Führerbunker the day before his suicide.[10] Junge later wrote that while she was playing with the Goebbels children on 30 April, "Suddenly [...] there is the sound of a shot, so loud, so close, that we all fall silent. It echoes on through all the rooms. 'That was a bull's-eye,' cried Helmut [Goebbels] with no idea how right he is. The Führer is dead now."

On 1 May, Junge left the Führerbunker with a group led by Waffen-SS general Wilhelm Mohnke. Also in the group were Hitler's personal pilot Hans Baur, chief of Hitler's Reichssicherheitsdienst (RSD) bodyguard Hans Rattenhuber, secretaries Gerda Christian and Else Krüger, Hitler's dietician Constanze Manziarly, and physician Ernst-Günther Schenck. Junge, Christian and Krüger made it out of Berlin to the River Elbe. The remainder of the group were found by Soviet Red Army troops on 2 May while hiding in a cellar off the Schönhauser Allee. The Soviet troops handed over those who had been in the Führerbunker to SMERSH for interrogation, to reveal what had occurred in the bunker during the closing weeks of the war.[11]

Post-war edit

Although Junge had reached the Elbe, she was unable to reach the western Allied lines, and so she went back to Berlin. Getting there about a month after she had left, she had hoped to take a train to the west when they began running again. On 9 July, after living there for about a week under the alias Gerda Alt, she was arrested by two civilian members of the Soviet military administration and was kept in Berlin for interrogation. While in prison, she heard harrowing tales from her Soviet guards about what the German military had done to members of their families in the Soviet Union and came to realise that much of what she thought she knew about the war in the east was only what the Nazi propaganda ministry had told the German people, and that the treatment meted out to Germans by the Soviets was a response to what the Germans had done in the Soviet Union.[12]

Junge was held in multiple jails, where she was often interrogated about her role in Hitler's entourage and the events surrounding Hitler's suicide. By December 1945, she had been released from prison but was restricted to the Soviet sector of Berlin. On New Year's Eve 1945, she was admitted to a hospital in the British sector for diphtheria, and remained there for two months. While she was there, her mother was able to secure for her the paperwork required to allow her to move from the British sector in Berlin to Bavaria. Receiving these on 2 February 1946, she travelled from Berlin and across the Soviet occupation zone (which was to become East Germany) to the British zone, and from there south to Bavaria in the American Zone. Junge was held by the Americans for a short time during the first half of 1946, and interrogated about her time in the Führerbunker. She was then freed, and allowed to live in post-war West Germany.[13]

Later life and death edit

After the war, Junge appeared in two episodes of the Thames Television (ITV) 1973 television documentary series The World at War – No. 16, "Inside the Reich" (1940–1944), and No. 21, "Nemesis: Germany (February – May 1945)". She was also interviewed for the 1975 book The Bunker by James P. O'Donnell and Uwe Bahnsen. She worked in secretarial jobs and for many years as chief secretary of the editorial staff of the weekly illustrated magazine Quick. Junge twice resided briefly in Australia, where her younger sister lived, although her application for permanent residence was denied owing to her past Nazi association.[14]

In 1989, Junge's manuscript about her life throughout the war was published by G.P. Putnam's Sons (New York) as part of the book Voices from the Bunker by Pierre Galante and Eugene Silianoff. Also in that year, she was interviewed in the BBC documentary The Fatal Attraction of Adolf Hitler, in which she discussed at length her impressions of Hitler and the final days with him in the Führerbunker. In 1991, she appeared in the documentary series Hitler's Henchmen produced by German television channel ZDF. The 2002 release of her memoirs Until the Final Hour, co-written with author Melissa Müller, describing the time she worked for Hitler, brought media coverage.[citation needed] She was also interviewed for the 2002 documentary film Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary, which drew much attention.[citation needed]

Junge died from cancer in Munich on 10 February 2002 at the age of 81,[15] reportedly having said shortly before her death, "Now that I've let go of my story, I can let go of my life." She is buried at Nordfriedhof München.

Further attention came two years later,[citation needed] when some of Junge's experiences with Hitler were portrayed in the Academy Award-nominated film Downfall, wherein she is portrayed by actress Alexandra Maria Lara. Excerpts from her interviews are seen at the beginning and at the end of the film. At the end of the film, she states:

Of course, the horrors, of which I heard in connection of the Nuremberg trials; the fate of the 6 million Jews, their killing and those of many others who represented different races and creeds, shocked me greatly, but, at that time, I could not see any connection between these things and my own past. I was only happy that I had not personally been guilty of these things and that I had not been aware of the scale of these things. However, one day, I walked past a plaque on the Franz-Joseph Straße (in Munich), on the wall in memory of Sophie Scholl. I could see that she had been born the same year as I, and that she had been executed the same year I entered into Hitler's service. And, at that moment, I really realised that it was no excuse that I had been so young. I could perhaps have tried to find out about things.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Compare: Taylor, Charles (31 January 2003). "Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary". Salon. Retrieved 14 March 2016. [...] she worked as an editor and science journalist, living in a one-room apartment in suburban Munich from the '50s onward.
  2. ^ Junge, Traudl (14 June 2004). Melissa Muller (ed.). Until the Final Hour: Hitler's Last Secretary. Phoenix. ISBN 0753817926.
  3. ^ "Traudl Junge". The Daily Telegraph. 14 February 2002. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  4. ^ Hooper, John (14 February 2002). "Obituary:Traudl Junge". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  5. ^ "Hitler's final witness". BBC. 4 February 2002. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  6. ^ Hamilton 1984, p. 155.
  7. ^ Galante & Silianoff 1989, pp. 39, 124–125.
  8. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 131, 169, 170.
  9. ^ a b Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 169, 170.
  10. ^ Beevor 2002, pp. 343.
  11. ^ Beevor 2002, pp. 382, 383, 388, 389.
  12. ^ Junge, pp. 219–222
  13. ^ Junge, pp. 223–230
  14. ^ "Hitler's secretary lived in Australia". The Age. 6 August 2005. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
  15. ^ Hooper, obituary

General sources edit

  • Beevor, Antony (2002). Berlin: The Downfall 1945. Viking-Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-670-03041-5.
  • Childs, David (18 February 2002). "Obituary". The Independent.
  • Galante, Pierre; Silianoff, Eugene (1989). Voices from the Bunker. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 978-0-3991-3404-3.
  • Hamilton, Charles (1984). Leaders & Personalities of the Third Reich. Vol. 1. R. James Bender Publishing. ISBN 0-912138-27-0.
  • Hooper, John (14 February 2002). "Traudl Junge obituary". The Guardian.
  • Joachimsthaler, Anton (1999) [1995]. The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, the Evidence, the Truth. Trans. Helmut Bögler. London: Brockhampton Press. ISBN 978-1-86019-902-8.
  • Junge, Traudl; Müller, Melissa (editor). Until the Final Hour: Hitler's Last Secretary, Arcade Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1-55970-728-2.

External links edit

  • Traudl Junge at Find a Grave
  • Traudl Junge at IMDb
  • "The Line". A comic that juxtaposes Traudl Junge with Sophie Scholl
  • "Witness: The Death of Hitler" Interview in BBC Radio's oral history series "Witness". Speaking in English, Traudl Junge recalls her memories of working with Hitler, and of events in the bunker at the time of his death.

traudl, junge, gertraud, traudl, junge, née, humps, march, 1920, february, 2002, german, editor, worked, adolf, hitler, last, private, secretary, from, december, 1942, april, 1945, after, typing, hitler, will, remained, berlin, führerbunker, until, death, foll. Gertraud Traudl Junge nee Humps 16 March 1920 10 February 2002 was a German editor who worked as Adolf Hitler s last private secretary from December 1942 to April 1945 After typing Hitler s will she remained in the Berlin Fuhrerbunker until his death Following her arrest and imprisonment in June 1945 both the Soviet and the U S militaries interrogated her Later in post war West Germany she worked as a secretary In her old age she decided to publish her memoirs claiming ignorance of the Nazi atrocities during the war but blaming herself for missing opportunities to investigate reports about them Her story based partly on her book Until the Final Hour formed a part of several dramatizations in particular the 2004 German film Downfall about Hitler s final ten days Traudl JungeJunge in 1945BornGertraud Humps 1920 03 16 16 March 1920Munich Bavaria Weimar RepublicDied10 February 2002 2002 02 10 aged 81 Munich Bavaria GermanyOccupation s Secretary sub editor science reporter 1 Known forAdolf Hitler s personal secretary during World War IISpouseHans Hermann Junge m 1943 died 1944 wbr Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work for Hitler 3 Berlin 1945 4 Post war 5 Later life and death 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General sources 8 External linksEarly life and education editGertraud Traudl Humps was born in Munich the daughter of a master brewer and lieutenant in the Reserve Army Max Humps and his wife Hildegard nee Zottmann She had a sister Inge born in 1923 She once expressed her desire to become a ballerina as a teenager but was not accepted by a dance school 2 She then trained as a secretary When she heard about an opening on the Chancellery staff she applied for it 3 Work for Hitler editTraudl Humps began working for Hitler in December 1942 She was the youngest of his private secretaries 4 I was 22 and I didn t know anything about politics it didn t interest me Junge said decades later adding that she felt great guilt for liking the greatest criminal ever to have lived She said I admit I was fascinated by Adolf Hitler He was a pleasant boss and a fatherly friend I deliberately ignored all the warning voices inside me and enjoyed the time by his side almost until the bitter end It wasn t what he said but the way he said things and how he did things 5 Encouraged by Hitler in June 1943 Traudl married Waffen SS officer Hans Hermann Junge 1914 1944 who had been a valet and orderly to Hitler He died in combat in France in August 1944 6 7 She worked at Hitler s side in Berlin the Berghof in Berchtesgaden at Wolfsschanze in East Prussia and back again in Berlin in the Fuhrerbunker Berlin 1945 editIn 1945 Junge was with Hitler in Berlin During Hitler s last days in Berlin he would regularly eat lunch with his secretaries Junge and Gerda Christian 8 After the war Junge recalled Gerda asking Hitler if he would leave Berlin This was firmly rejected by Hitler 9 Both women recalled that Hitler in conversation made it clear that his body must not fall into the hands of the Soviets He would shoot himself 9 Junge typed Hitler s last private and political will and testament in the Fuhrerbunker the day before his suicide 10 Junge later wrote that while she was playing with the Goebbels children on 30 April Suddenly there is the sound of a shot so loud so close that we all fall silent It echoes on through all the rooms That was a bull s eye cried Helmut Goebbels with no idea how right he is The Fuhrer is dead now On 1 May Junge left the Fuhrerbunker with a group led by Waffen SS general Wilhelm Mohnke Also in the group were Hitler s personal pilot Hans Baur chief of Hitler s Reichssicherheitsdienst RSD bodyguard Hans Rattenhuber secretaries Gerda Christian and Else Kruger Hitler s dietician Constanze Manziarly and physician Ernst Gunther Schenck Junge Christian and Kruger made it out of Berlin to the River Elbe The remainder of the group were found by Soviet Red Army troops on 2 May while hiding in a cellar off the Schonhauser Allee The Soviet troops handed over those who had been in the Fuhrerbunker to SMERSH for interrogation to reveal what had occurred in the bunker during the closing weeks of the war 11 Post war editAlthough Junge had reached the Elbe she was unable to reach the western Allied lines and so she went back to Berlin Getting there about a month after she had left she had hoped to take a train to the west when they began running again On 9 July after living there for about a week under the alias Gerda Alt she was arrested by two civilian members of the Soviet military administration and was kept in Berlin for interrogation While in prison she heard harrowing tales from her Soviet guards about what the German military had done to members of their families in the Soviet Union and came to realise that much of what she thought she knew about the war in the east was only what the Nazi propaganda ministry had told the German people and that the treatment meted out to Germans by the Soviets was a response to what the Germans had done in the Soviet Union 12 Junge was held in multiple jails where she was often interrogated about her role in Hitler s entourage and the events surrounding Hitler s suicide By December 1945 she had been released from prison but was restricted to the Soviet sector of Berlin On New Year s Eve 1945 she was admitted to a hospital in the British sector for diphtheria and remained there for two months While she was there her mother was able to secure for her the paperwork required to allow her to move from the British sector in Berlin to Bavaria Receiving these on 2 February 1946 she travelled from Berlin and across the Soviet occupation zone which was to become East Germany to the British zone and from there south to Bavaria in the American Zone Junge was held by the Americans for a short time during the first half of 1946 and interrogated about her time in the Fuhrerbunker She was then freed and allowed to live in post war West Germany 13 Later life and death editAfter the war Junge appeared in two episodes of the Thames Television ITV 1973 television documentary series The World at War No 16 Inside the Reich 1940 1944 and No 21 Nemesis Germany February May 1945 She was also interviewed for the 1975 book The Bunker by James P O Donnell and Uwe Bahnsen She worked in secretarial jobs and for many years as chief secretary of the editorial staff of the weekly illustrated magazine Quick Junge twice resided briefly in Australia where her younger sister lived although her application for permanent residence was denied owing to her past Nazi association 14 In 1989 Junge s manuscript about her life throughout the war was published by G P Putnam s Sons New York as part of the book Voices from the Bunker by Pierre Galante and Eugene Silianoff Also in that year she was interviewed in the BBC documentary The Fatal Attraction of Adolf Hitler in which she discussed at length her impressions of Hitler and the final days with him in the Fuhrerbunker In 1991 she appeared in the documentary series Hitler s Henchmen produced by German television channel ZDF The 2002 release of her memoirs Until the Final Hour co written with author Melissa Muller describing the time she worked for Hitler brought media coverage citation needed She was also interviewed for the 2002 documentary film Blind Spot Hitler s Secretary which drew much attention citation needed Junge died from cancer in Munich on 10 February 2002 at the age of 81 15 reportedly having said shortly before her death Now that I ve let go of my story I can let go of my life She is buried at Nordfriedhof Munchen Further attention came two years later citation needed when some of Junge s experiences with Hitler were portrayed in the Academy Award nominated film Downfall wherein she is portrayed by actress Alexandra Maria Lara Excerpts from her interviews are seen at the beginning and at the end of the film At the end of the film she states Of course the horrors of which I heard in connection of the Nuremberg trials the fate of the 6 million Jews their killing and those of many others who represented different races and creeds shocked me greatly but at that time I could not see any connection between these things and my own past I was only happy that I had not personally been guilty of these things and that I had not been aware of the scale of these things However one day I walked past a plaque on the Franz Joseph Strasse in Munich on the wall in memory of Sophie Scholl I could see that she had been born the same year as I and that she had been executed the same year I entered into Hitler s service And at that moment I really realised that it was no excuse that I had been so young I could perhaps have tried to find out about things See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Germany portal Christa Schroeder Erna Flegel Johanna WolfReferences editCitations edit Compare Taylor Charles 31 January 2003 Blind Spot Hitler s Secretary Salon Retrieved 14 March 2016 she worked as an editor and science journalist living in a one room apartment in suburban Munich from the 50s onward Junge Traudl 14 June 2004 Melissa Muller ed Until the Final Hour Hitler s Last Secretary Phoenix ISBN 0753817926 Traudl Junge The Daily Telegraph 14 February 2002 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Hooper John 14 February 2002 Obituary Traudl Junge The Guardian Retrieved 21 October 2017 Hitler s final witness BBC 4 February 2002 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Hamilton 1984 p 155 Galante amp Silianoff 1989 pp 39 124 125 Joachimsthaler 1999 pp 131 169 170 a b Joachimsthaler 1999 pp 169 170 Beevor 2002 pp 343 Beevor 2002 pp 382 383 388 389 Junge pp 219 222 Junge pp 223 230 Hitler s secretary lived in Australia The Age 6 August 2005 Retrieved 1 July 2016 Hooper obituary General sources edit Beevor Antony 2002 Berlin The Downfall 1945 Viking Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 670 03041 5 Childs David 18 February 2002 Obituary The Independent Galante Pierre Silianoff Eugene 1989 Voices from the Bunker New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 978 0 3991 3404 3 Hamilton Charles 1984 Leaders amp Personalities of the Third Reich Vol 1 R James Bender Publishing ISBN 0 912138 27 0 Hooper John 14 February 2002 Traudl Junge obituary The Guardian Joachimsthaler Anton 1999 1995 The Last Days of Hitler The Legends the Evidence the Truth Trans Helmut Bogler London Brockhampton Press ISBN 978 1 86019 902 8 Junge Traudl Muller Melissa editor Until the Final Hour Hitler s Last Secretary Arcade Publishing 2004 ISBN 978 1 55970 728 2 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Traudl Junge Traudl Junge at Find a Grave Traudl Junge at IMDb The Line A comic that juxtaposes Traudl Junge with Sophie Scholl Witness The Death of Hitler Interview in BBC Radio s oral history series Witness Speaking in English Traudl Junge recalls her memories of working with Hitler and of events in the bunker at the time of his death Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traudl Junge amp oldid 1220857822, 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