While many historians have spent a great deal of time on the various aspects of the Third Reich, few have taken the time to see how the terrible power of science and its manipulation in order to set the foundations for and to justify some of the worst atrocities of the Holocaust. Heather Pringle's easy to read and fascinating look at the shadowy organization that propagated the various racial theories that formed the basis of Nazi science.
On July 1, 1935, in a spacious, sunlit office in SS Headquarters in Berlin, Himmler convened a meeting to discuss a new organization- Studiengesellschaft für Geistesurgeschichte‚ Deutsches Ahnenerbe. Or the Study Society for Primordial Intellectual history, German Ancestral Heritage. It is also known by it's 1937 name- Forschungs- und Lehrgemeinschaft des Ahnenerbe. Or Research and Teaching Community of the Ancestral Heritage, better known by its shortened version- the Ahnenerbe. The formally stated goal of the Ahnenerbe was "to promote the science of ancient intellectual history". Reality would be rather different.
The book studies the various programs run by the Ahnenerbe from the expeditions sent out to Tibet, to racial studies carried out in Concentration camps on "Jewishness", to searching for clues on the original Aryans and using that history to support the Nazi racial theories.
It is a fascinating and chilling look into how some scientists and academics, by no means were all of these people kooks-some were brilliant in their fields, worked closely with the Nazi government. To be fair, many of these scientists and academics were Nazi's themselves- by choice. Others were morally deficient and ignored whom they were working for in order to forward their scientific research. I won't spend this review talking about the various theories and atrocities. This is a book worth reading.
The Master Plan does a very good job of presenting the history of the Ahnenerbe in an easily read format. The writing is smooth and keeps your interest. Pringle does an excellent job of prefacing the entire story with a look into Heinrich Himmler, his upbringing and beliefs. It also shows the history of the Aryan argument, the actual historical basis of these historical facts and how the Nazi's perverted them to their own use. The book never bogs down into deeply technical jargon, rather the reader is kept fascinated by the series of events, fanciful imaginings and some downright scary scientific realities that represent the legacy of the Ahnenerbe.
At the end of the day, setting aside the kooks-and there were plenty of those, there were some seriously brilliant and talented scholars who worked in the Ahnenerbe. The final chapter of the book traces the final outcomes of these luminaries and it is rather interesting. In the months following the German surrender, Allied forces had attempted arresting all leading Nazi party and government officials. Not surprisingly- schools were left without teachers, telephone exchanges without operators, post offices without postal workers, well you get the drift- life ground to a halt. So the Allies quickly changed the policy and established local denazification tribunals. These tribunals handed down one of five categories of complicity- from "exonerated" and "fellow traveller", to "lesser activist," "activist," and "major offender". Not surprisingly the system had its flaws and Nazi's manged to filter through the holes. It had become such a running joke amongst Germans about Nazi's who "had a Jewish friend that they saved" that a new term- Persilscheine (White Washing Certificates) was coined for the tribunal's paperwork. In fact the tribunals themselves were called Mitläuferfabriken or factories for mass producing "fellow travellers". To be fair to the Germans with the onset of the Cold War, the Allies lost much of their fervor for finding and prosecuting Nazi war criminals since the Soviets were busy snatching up ex-GESTAPO and SS men to recreate the STASI. As a result many important Nazis escaped virtually unscathed from denazification. They assumed their former jobs and picked up the pieces of their lives again, as if nothing had ever happened. This seems to be the case for the senior Ahnenerbe's researchers.
Dr. Herman Wirth, who helped Himmler create the Ahnenerbe, was arrested by the Americans. But they were unaware of who he really was (he was calling himself Wirth-Roeper Bosch) until he was denounced by a neighbor. But his Nazi disavowal was masterful and he was deemed a "political victim of the Third Reich" and released. Strangely, visitors to his home in Lund mention above the fireplace a large oil painting of Wirth dressed in his SS uniform (he was a SS-Hauptsturmfuhrer in the RuSHA) hung in his private library. Hmm. Nothing to see here. Perfectly normal. Move along. Dr. Wirth nearly did- he rehabilitated his image to the point where officials in Rhineland-Palatinate drew up plans in the late 1970s for a new museum to be installed in the small castle of the town of Thallichtenberg at a cost of 1.1 million marks. But a Spiegel reporter dug up his Nazi past and dashed any hopes of a comeback. Stubbornly his admirers have refused to let his ideas die. German publishers continue to publish pseudo-science books on ancient symbol research and some kooky German filmakers have floated the idea of a primeval high civilization in Northern Europe. Today in the small Austiran town of Spital am Pyhrn one can see in their museum, in a bright, well-lit room an exhibit of Dr. Wirth's fourteen plasts of rock art he took for the Ahnenerbe.
Yrjo von Gronhagen, the scholar who recorded the magical spells of Finnish shamans for Himmler, was deemed to have worked as an "extraordinary representative of the Finnish government furthering German-Finnish cultural exchange". Ok then. Gronghagen went on to live in Lapland. He bought a tourist hotel, became the general secretary for the Order of St. Constantine the Great-a Christian ecumenical organization dedicated to keeping alive the intellectual heritage of the ancient Greek and Byzantine civilizations. For more than 30 years he spent his summers in Lapland and winters in Greece. Finally returning to Helsinki in 2000, he dies at the age of 92 in 2003.
Dr. Franz Altheim, close friend of Goring, and former SD agent stuck to the "I'm just a historian" line. He manged to find two instances of him using his former Ahnenerbe contacts to help save two former colleagues at the University of Oslo as enough an excuse to have the Soviet authorities release him. Dr. Altheim escaped to the west in 1949 and started a professorship at the Free University in Berlin. Altheim went on to a brilliant academic career at the Free University and an equally brilliant retirement in Munster.
I could go on but I have no desire to write a book. You get the point. It is a bit creepy. This is a very interesting book. I also enjoy the final post script chapter where the author was finally allowed to interview with former Nazi racial expert Bruno Berger in Konigstein in 2002. His strident beliefs in the Jews as a "mongrel race" and his "amnesia" regarding the Ahnenerbe work at Natzweiler Concentration Camp, not to mention his bizarre collection of "historical artifacts", is downright Kafkaesque.
Good book. Well written. Interesting and easy to read. It's about a really interesting organization and some really out there theories were the foundation and impetus for the Holocaust. During the Holocaust the Ahnenerbe actively participated in many of the medical experimentation on Jewish prisoners. It founded expeditions into areas as diverse as Finland to Tibet. A very interesting read. If you are interested in World War II-then you will like this.