Warning from the past: The Gestapo is Born
Although the Gestapo is generally associated with SS Leader
Heinrich Himmler, it was actually founded by Hermann Göring in April 1933.
Upon becoming Chancellor of Germany, Adolf Hitler had
appointed Göring as Minister of the Interior for the State of Prussia,
Germany's biggest and most important state, which controlled two thirds of the
country, including the capital, Berlin, and the big industrial centers. As
Minister of the Interior, Göring thereby had control of the police.
The first thing he did was to prohibit regular uniformed
police from interfering with Nazi Brownshirts out in the streets. This meant
that innocent German citizens had no one to turn to as they were being beaten
up by rowdy young storm troopers drunk with their newfound power and quite
often drunk on beer. These young Nazi toughs took full advantage of police
leniency to loot shops at will and terrorize Jews or anyone else unfortunate
enough to be caught in the wrong place at the wrong time.
German citizens are stopped and searched by plain-clothes
and uniformed police in March 1933 under the pretext they might be concealing
weapons. Below: Gestapo Headquarters in Berlin, located at No. 8
Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse - a frightful address from 1933 onward.
Next, Göring purged the Berlin police department of
politically unreliable cops and had 50,000 storm troopers sworn in as special
police auxiliaries (Hilfspolizei). Now the storm troopers had actual power of
arrest and they relished its use. Jails were soon overflowing with people taken
into "protective custody" resulting in the need for large outside
prison camps, the birth of the concentration camp system.
Having compromised the uniformed divisions, Göring next
turned his attention to the plain-clothes police. On April 26, 1933, a decree
was issued creating the Secret Police Office (Geheime Polizei Amt) which
quickly became known as the GPA. But this abbreviation was far too similar to
the GPU abbreviation used by the Soviet Political Police in Russia. Thus, the
name was changed to Secret State Police (Geheime Staats Polizei). The actual
term 'Gestapo' was supposedly created by a Berlin postal official who wanted a
name that would fit on a regulation-sized postal rubber stamp. Gestapo was
derived from seven letters within the full name Geheime Staats Polizei.
Unknowingly, the postal official had invented one of the most notorious names
in history.”
Göring promptly began using the Gestapo to silence Hitler's
political opponents in Berlin and surrounding areas and also to enhance his own
personal power. Much to his delight, Göring discovered that the old Prussian
state police had kept many secret files on the private lives of top Nazis,
which he studied with delight.
Göring appointed Rudolf Diels as the first Gestapo chief.
Although Diels was not a Party member, he had been a member of the Prussian
Ministry of the Interior since 1930 and had served as a senior adviser in the
police. Göring took full advantage of Diels' knowledge on how to operate a
political police force. He also encouraged Diels to maintain and expand the
secret files on Nazi leaders. The cunning and ambitious Göring would use that
information to help solidify his own position within the Nazi Party.
Another ambitious Nazi, SS-Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler,
soon set his sights on the Gestapo. A fierce rivalry then developed between
Himmler and Göring, with both men working against each other to curry favor
with Hitler as to who would actually run the Gestapo. On April 20, 1934, after
much infighting, Göring decided to cede the Gestapo to Himmler and his
associate, Reinhard Heydrich, who took over as Gestapo chief two days later.
The ever-ambitious Göring had set his sights on something
much bigger than being a policeman. The former World War I flying ace and
recipient of the prestigious Pour le Mérite medal fancied himself as a military
leader. He wanted to take charge of a rejuvenated German Air Force. His
interest in police matters and the Gestapo had diminished as Hitler's plans for
a huge military buildup became apparent.
Within a few years, Himmler became Chief of the German
Police in addition to his duties as SS leader. Heydrich, his number two man,
proved to be something of a genius in creating a hugely efficient national
intelligence system that kept tabs on everyone. No one was exempt from Gestapo
snooping, no matter how high up in the Nazi hierarchy.
On February 10, 1936, the Nazi Reichstag passed the 'Gestapo
Law' which included the following paragraph: "Neither the instructions nor
the affairs of the Gestapo will be open to review by the administrative
courts." This meant the Gestapo was now above the law and there could be
no legal appeal regarding anything it did.
Indeed, the Gestapo became a law unto itself. It was
entirely possible for someone to be arrested, interrogated and sent to a
concentration camp for incarceration or summary execution, without any outside
legal procedure.
Justice in Hitler's Germany was completely arbitrary,
depending on the whim of the man in power, the man who had you in his grip. The
legal policy as proclaimed by Hitler in 1938 was: "All means, even if they
are not in conformity with existing laws and precedents, are legal if they
subserve the will of the Führer."
Surprisingly, the Gestapo was never actually a very big
organization. At its peak it employed only about 40,000 individuals, including
office personnel and the plain-clothes agents. But each Gestapo agent operated
at the center of a large web of spies and informants. The problem for the
average citizen was that no one ever knew for sure just who those informants
were. It could be anyone, your milkman, the old lady across the street, a quiet
co-worker, even a schoolboy. As a result, fear ruled the day. Most people
realized the necessity of self-censorship and generally kept their mouths shut
politically, unless they had something positive to say.
Anyone foolish enough to say something risky or tell an
anti-Nazi joke in mixed company might get a knock on the door in the middle of
the night or a tap on the shoulder while walking along the street. Letters were
also sent out demanding an appearance at No. 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, the
Gestapo headquarters in Berlin, to answer a few questions. The Gestapo prison
center in Berlin (the Columbia-Haus) became notorious as a place where
pedestrians strolling outside the building could hear screaming coming from
inside.
Gestapo interrogation methods included: repeated near
drownings of a prisoner in a bathtub filled with ice-cold water; electric
shocks by attaching wires to hands, feet, ears and genitalia; crushing a man's
testicles in a special vice; securing a prisoner's wrists behind his back then
hanging him by the arms causing shoulder dislocation; beatings with rubber
nightsticks and cow-hide whips; and burning flesh with matches or a soldering
iron.
As the SS organization rapidly expanded in the late 1930s,
the super-ambitious Heydrich acquired immense powers and responsibilities. One
of his main accomplishments was the reorganization and bureaucratic
streamlining of the entire Nazi police state. In September 1939, just after the
outbreak of war, he created the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA). This new
organization had seven main branches. The Gestapo was designated as the fourth
branch and was now headed by Heinrich Müller (nicknamed as Gestapo Müller).
Back in 1931, as a member of the Munich police, Müller had successfully
hushed-up the scandal surrounding the suicide of Hitler's niece Geli Raubal.
Thus he had proven himself to be a very dependable man.
Section B4 of the Gestapo dealt exclusively with the
"Jewish question" and came under the permanent control of Adolf
Eichmann. This energetic and efficient organizer would keep the trains running
on time from all over Europe to Nazi death camps located in occupied Poland
during the Final Solution of the Jewish question.
The Gestapo followed Hitler's armies into every country
during the conquest of Europe. By pitting neighbor against neighbor, Gestapo
agents established the same kind of terror mechanism in each occupied country
that had worked so well back in Germany.
In 1942, the Gestapo took things a step further via Hitler's
Night and Fog Decree. Suspected anti-Nazis would now vanish without a trace
into the misty night never to be seen again. The desired effect as stated by
Himmler was to "leave the family and the population uncertain as to the
fate of the offender." The victims were mostly from France, Belgium and
Holland. They were usually arrested in the middle of the night and whisked off
to far away prisons for torture-interrogation, eventually arriving at a
concentration camp in Germany if they survived.
From the very beginning of Hitler's regime, the ever-present
threat of arrest and indefinite confinement in a concentration camp robbed the
German people of their personal freedom and left them as inhibited, dutifully
obedient subjects.
But even this was not
enough. The Nazis wanted to change people's thinking. And so, just as they had
purged their hated political enemies, they began a campaign to purge hated
"unGerman" ideas. That effort started in May 1933 with the worst of
all crimes against human thought and culture – the burning of books.
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