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Straight Dope Classic from Cecil's storehouse of human knowledge09-Apr-1993
Dear Cecil:
I and a number of my friends were raised Jewish. In different
Sunday and Hebrew schools, we all heard myths that Hitler was
Jewish, and some said that his heritage, not the impending allied
victory, caused him to commit suicide. One stubborn boy insists
that Hitler's father was at least half Jewish, and that young Adolf
hated his father, causing him to translate his hatred into mass
slaughter as an adult. Secular teachers, history books, and
encyclopedias make no mention of Hitler having any Jewish blood. I
hope you, Cecil the all-knowing, can set the record straight. --
Anonymous, Dallas
Cecil replies:
Wish I could oblige, bubeleh. But while Hitler probably didn't have
any Jewish blood, it can't be completely ruled out. Hitler's father
was illegitimate and to this day there is some question about who
his grandfather was. Throughout his career he was dogged by rumors
about his pedigree, some of them circulated by his fellow Nazis. In
1933 the London Daily Mirror published a picture of a gravestone in
a Jewish cemetery in Bucharest inscribed with some Hebrew
characters and the name Adolf Hitler. It's now known the Bucharest
Hitler could not have been grandfather to our Adolf, but Hitler was
sufficiently worried about the whole business that, according to
the historian John Toland, he had the Nazi law defining Jewishness
written to exclude Jesus Christ and himself.
Here's what we know: Hitler's paternal grandmother, Maria
Schicklgruber, gave birth to Alois, Hitler's father, in 1837. She
was 42 and unmarried at the time and apparently never revealed the
father's identity. Five years later she married Johann Georg
Hiedler or Hitler (spelling was a bit casual in those days). But
Alois kept the surname Schicklgruber until he was 39 years old.
In 1876 a new baptismal certificate was issued declaring that
Alois's stepfather J.G. Hiedler was in fact his real father. By
this time both Maria and J.G. were dead. Why the name change so
late in the day nobody really knows, but there is speculation that
Alois did it so he could come into an inheritance. At any rate, few
researchers today believe J.G. was really Alois's father.
Now for the weird stuff. After the war Hitler's former lawyer, Hans
Frank, claimed that Adolf told him in 1930 that one of his
relatives was trying to blackmail him by threatening to reveal his
alleged Jewish ancestry. Hitler asked Frank to find out the facts.
Frank says he determined that at the time Maria Schicklgruber gave
birth to Alois, she was working as a household cook in the town of
Graz. Her employers were a Jewish family named Frankenberger, who
had a 19-year-old son. The son, according to Frank, was Alois's
father and Hitler's grandfather--which would make the man who
inspired the Holocaust one-quarter Jewish.
Frank's allegations have vexed historians ever since. The
distinguished Hitler scholar Werner Maser was so irritated he
claimed Frank made the whole thing up. Others think Frank was
telling the truth but that the research he did for Hitler was
faulty. It turns out that all Jews had been expelled from Graz in
the 15th century and were not allowed to return until the 1860s;
what's more, so far as can be determined, Maria Schicklgruber never
lived in Graz. Frank's source for the Frankenberger yarn was a
distant relation of Hitler's, who supposedly had letters exchanged
by the Frankenbergers and Maria Schicklgruber. (It's claimed they
gave her child support.) But neither the relative nor the letters
have ever surfaced, and chances are it's all a crock.
So who really was Hitler's grandfather? Werner Maser thinks it was
the brother of his legal grandfather, one Johann Nepomuk Hiedler.
But that's not all. J. Nepomuk was also the grandfather of Klara
Poelzl, Hitler's mom. In other words, J.N. was both Adolph's
paternal grandfather and his maternal great-grandfather. I'm not
about to tell you any of this was the proximate cause of Hitler's
persecution of the Jews, his suicide, or anything else. Still, if
you believe Maser, not only was Hitler twisted, so was his family
tree.
--CECIL ADAMS
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