On one occasion, after he spoke to a Nazi official near Nuremberg, Helmuth told Friedhelm that the man’s anti-Semitic beliefs were “appalling” and “sickening.” Friedhelm begged his brother to stay quiet.
Not that there weren't Germans who opposed Natzi leadership at the time, but I've noticed that this book has a habit of making some of it's spotlit subjects out to be more saintly than they might otherwise be.