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"PROTEST OF YOUTH"
The White Rose

by ANTON GILL
[from: Gill, Anton. AN HONOURABLE
DEFEAT. New York: Henry Holt & Co.,
1994. pp. 183-195]
Today, the main square outside the University of
Munich is called Geschwister-Scholl-Platz. The name commemorates a small group
of students who, operating independently, managed to create one of the few
single protests of great significance outside the main body of the Resistance,
in the town which had, throughout the mid-thirties, advertised itself on tourist
brochures as 'The Birthplace of the Party'.
Hans and Sophie Scholl were the second and fourth of
the five children of Robert Scholl, the liberal and independent mayor of the
little town of Forchtenberg on the River Kocher to the east of Heilbronn. He was
a big, warm-hearted man, rarely without a cigar smoking away below his luxuriant
mustache. Hans and Sophie were born in 1918 and 1921, and in those days
Forchtenberg's only contact with the outside world was a yellow post-coach that
connected it with the nearest railway station. The children loved it, but Robert
had ambitions for his town. He managed to get the railway extended to
Forchtenberg, and had a community sports center and a warehouse built. These
improvements were not without their critics: Robert was far too progressive for
some, and in 1930 he was voted out of office. The family moved first to
Ludwigsburg and then to Ulm, where they settled. Robert, who had a tendency to
live beyond his means, rented a large apartment for his family on the Cathedral
Square. He set himself up as a business and tax consultant.
The five children, Inge, Hans, Elisabeth, Sophie and
Werner, were free to enjoy, as compensation for the loss of the countryside, the
large palace park nearby. Hans, according to his brother-in-law, was more like
his father--impulsive, generous and extrovert. Sophie, no less strong a
personality, had her mother's quiet sensitivity. What she shared with Hans was
an absolute sense of human rights, something which all the children had
inherited from their father, who exerted a strong but benign influence on them.
Sophie also developed a mystical feeling for nature. She loved dancing. She was
a good pianist and she could have become a professional artist - her drawings
for Peter Pan, for example, glow with life; but when she went to university in
Munich she opted to read the unusual combination of biology and philosophy.
The happy family life did not end with Hitler's
seizure of power. The arrival of National Socialism was the first impact of
politics on the children's thought. Hans was fifteen, Sophie, twelve.
Inge Aicher-Scholl was sixteen. She remembers that
on 30 January I933 the radio and the newspapers were full of the news, 'Now
everything will be better in Germany. Hitler is at the tiller."
We heard a great deal spoken about the Fatherland, of
comradeship, the union of the Germanic people and love of the homeland. It
impressed us, and we listened eagerly when such things were talked about on
the streets or in school--for indeed we loved our homeland... And everywhere
we heard that Hitler wanted to help the homeland back to greatness, happiness
and security. He would see to it that everyone had a job to go to and enough
to eat. He wouldn't rest until every single German enjoyed independence,
freedom and happiness...
The children were keen to join the Hitler Youth, and
their parents, though they had given them a liberal upbringing, did not forbid
it. But never for an instant had Robert been fooled by Hitler, and he said to
them, 'Have you considered how he's going to manage it? He's expanding the
armaments industry, and building barracks. Do you know where that's all going to
end?' The children argued that Hitler had solved the problem of unemployment,
and pointed to the new motorways being built throughout the land. Robert
wondered aloud if material security would ever make happy a people which had
been robbed of its right to free speech.
At first his arguments fell on deaf ears. His
children were enthusiastic members of the Hitler Youth and its female branch,
the League of German Girls. They became group leaders. Only Sophie was a little
less enthusiastic than the others. She was already worried by the fact that her
Jewish school friends could not join. She listened more attentively to her
father's arguments. He and Hans, on the other hand, were barely on speaking
terms some of the time.
But then Hans attended the 1935 Party Rally at
Nuremberg. He had been selected to carry the flag of Ulm--Standort at the
Rally--a great honour. But he came back a changed man. He did not say much at
first, but gradually new ideas emerged. The endless, senseless drilling, the
hate-filled aggressive speeches, the stupid conversation, the vulgar jokes--a
concentration of all this at Nuremberg had finally focused his mind on what
Nazism really meant.
There had been signs of Hans's disaffection before
this. He was annoyed when he was told that the Hitler Youth was not interested
in his collection of international folksongs--foreign, especially Russian, songs
were strictly forbidden. And the special flag of his group was forbidden
too--all groups were expected to carry a swastika banner. When finally his
twelve-year-old standard bearer was threatened by a senior Hitler Youth official
for refusing to give up the group flag, Hans hit the official. That was the end
of the Hitler Youth for him. Soon afterwards he heard that a young schoolteacher
had been picked up by a gang of SA and spat upon to order; the schoolteacher's
crime was failure to join the Party. Gradually, news of the concentration camps
seeped through.
Sophie was quick to pick up his mood. The first
cracks had appeared in the cement which bound their allegiance to Hitler. Hans
began to show more of an interest in another kind of youth group--the dj.1.11,,
so-called because it had been founded as Deutsche Jugend on 1 November I 929.
The dj.1.11 was now illegal--all youth groups and organisations had been banned
under the Nazis or amalgamated with the Hitler Youth--but it still existed
underground. Its spirit was the open-minded, liberal, easy-going one of the
Weimar Republic at its best. Its members would organise hitch-hiking expeditions
as far as Finland and Sweden, or travel south to Calabria and Sicily. It
represented cosmopolitanism, not nationalism. Its members did not wear uniforms
or salute each other. They read 'illegal' books--works by George Bernard Shaw
(who the Nazis thought was a Jew on account of his red hair), Stefan Zweig and
Paul Claudel. It was for culture and against militarism, for the individual and
not the mob. Sophie might have joined it too, but for the fact that it was open
only to boys from age of twelve upwards. Nevertheless, she and her oldest sister
Inge caught its mood.
One day in late November 1937 there was a ring at
the door of the Scholls' apartment and two men from the Gestapo stood there. The
secret police had had the dj.1.11 group under observation for some time and now
they were ready to pounce. The men said they were there to search the flat and
arrest the children. With great presence of mind, Frau Scholl told them that
they could do so by all means, but that, if the gentlemen would excuse her, she
had to go to the baker's. The policemen didn't object--women in the Third Reich
were consigned to three areas of life: church, kitchen and children. Even female
Nazi leaders were never given much status or publicity by the regime.
Frau Scholl left the flat and went up to the attic
floor where Hans's and Werner's--the younger brother was also a determined
anti-Nazi--bedrooms were to be found. Quickly she packed any potentially
incriminating literature into a basket and took it round the corner to trusted
friends. The Gestapo search turned nothing up, and the officials took Inge,
Sophie and Werner--the three children who were at home at the time--away with
them. Sophie was released almost immediately, but Inge and Werner were taken to
Stuttgart and detained for a week, interrogated about what they might know of
Ernst Niekisch and his Widerstand (Resistance) magazine, and about dj.1.11. They
managed to play dumb, and were finally released. Hans, who had been arrested
subsequently, was held for five weeks. Luckily for him he had been conscripted
by then, and sympathetic commanding officer had him released, telling the
Gestapo that as Hans was a soldier, he was in the Army's jurisdiction, not
theirs.
The Scholls--who were a well-known family in the
smallish of Ulm--failed to stay out of trouble. Werner had taken an early
decision to leave the Hitler Youth. It was a gesture of solidarity towards his
friend Oti Aicher (who later married Inge Scholl), who had refused to join it
and as a result was not allowed to take his final school examinations, thus
cutting off any hope of university. Aicher later remembered how Werner had tied
a swastika scarf round the eyes of the bust of Justice in front of the Ulm Law
Courts.
Werner was a keen photographer, and most of the
surviving pictures of Sophie were taken by him. He died on the Russian Front,
aged twenty-one. At a meeting of the League of German Girls to discuss suitable
material for home reading, Sophie suggested Heinrich Heine, the brilliant
nineteenth-century revolutionary German poet who was also a Jew. Replying to
appalled objections at her suggestion, she said, 'The person who doesn't know
Heine, doesn't know German literature.' Robert Scholl himself was later arrested
and imprisoned briefly for anti-Nazi activities.
The children read a great deal: Socrates, Aristotle,
St. Augustine, Pascal; Maritain and Bernanos. The influence of these thinkers
went deep, strengthening their resolve against the regime. The question was what
to do, and how to do it? Meanwhile, for Sophie, school continued. She met Fritz
Hartnagel, a career soldier four years her senior, and they went for tours in
the country occasionally in his father's car, together with her older sister
Elisabeth. For the innocent Sophie friendship with Hartnagel began to tum into
something more. But it never quite became love. After the war Hartnagel married
Elisabeth. They still live in Stuttgart, where before his retirement he was a
judge.
If she was moving away from Nazism through the late
thirties, Sophie Scholl turned actively against it as a result of two
experiences: Kristallnacht, which she lived through in Ulm, and the outbreak of
war on 1 September I939--She extracted a promise from each of her male friends
that they would never fire their guns, but she was well aware of how unrealistic
such a promise was. She wrote to Hartnagel with uncharacteristic bitterness:
You'll have your hands full from now on. I just can't
accept that now people will be in peril of their lives
because of other people. I can't accept it and I find it
horrifying. Never tell me that it's for the sake of the
Fatherland.
Her subsequent letters express increasing disgust and
anger at the war. 'I think I know you and that you're not much in favour of this
war,' she wrote to him later. 'So how can you spend your time training people
for it?' And in September I940 she wrote a letter of which Beck and Oster would
have approved:
For me the relationship between a soldier and his people
is roughly like that of a son who swears to stand by his
father and his family through thick and thin. If it turns
out that the father harms another family and then gets hurt
as a consequence, must the son still stick by him? I can't
accept it. justice is more important than sentimental
loyalty.
Hartnagel himself remembers:
It was striking to see with what incisiveness and logic
Sophie saw how things would develop, for she was
warm-hearted and full of feeling, not cold and calculating.
Here is an example: in winter 1941-42 there was a big
propaganda campaign in Germany to get the people to give
sweaters and other warm woolen clothing to the Army. German
soldiers were at the gates of Leningrad and Moscow in the
middle of a winter war for which they weren't prepared ...
Sophie said, 'We're not giving anything.' I had just got
back from the Russian Front ... I tried to describe to her
how conditions were for the men, with no gloves, pullovers
or warm socks. She stuck to her viewpoint relentlessly and
justified it by saying, 'It doesn't matter if it's German
soldiers who are freezing to death or Russians, the case is
equally terrible. But we must lose the war. If we
contribute warm clothes, we'll be extending it.'
After matriculation from school in 1940 she took a
one-year course in kindergarten supervision, in the hope of avoiding State Work
Duty - a kind of civil national service which all would-be students had to
fulfill. But not only did the authorities refuse to accept the kindergarten
training as a replacement for the State Duty, but with the acceleration of the
war in 1941 they added to it State War Work. For another year, therefore, Sophie
endured barrack life and manual labour before she could finally start her course
at Munich University. She traveled there from Ulm early in May 1942. It was just
before her twenty-first birthday--her last.
Hans was at the station to meet her. He was reading
medicine at the university - the semesters alternating with service at the
Front. Through him she quickly gained an entree to university life. Among the
first people she met was Professor Carl Muth, whose library Hans had been
cataloguing. Muth was a pillar of the literary Resistance. His Roman Catholic
magazine High Land had been banned finally in June 1941, having managed for
eight years never once to mention Hitler's name. By now Hans had read the
sermons of Bishop Galen. He had not given up his own ideas of making some kind
of stand against the regime, and had become markedly politicised. From his
writing it is clear that had he lived he would have chosen politics, not
medicine, as his career.
He was already at the centre of a group of young
medical students--Willi Graf, Christoph Probst and Alexander Schmorell--who had
decided to launch a leaflet campaign against the war, encouraging passive
Resistance to the regime. They were joined by the popular philosophy lecturer
Kurt Huber, who had already attracted the suspicion of the Nazis. He was
considerably older than the others, but had no wish to lead the group. He guided
his younger comrades' thoughts, and edited the last two of the six leaflets they
produced. His lectures were always packed, because he managed to introduce
veiled criticism of the regime into them.

The group had no wish to throw bombs, or to cause
any injury to human life. They wanted to influence people's minds against Nazism
and militarism. Already a sympathetic architect had lent them his studio in a
rear courtyard for their clandestine activities, and the relatively well-off
Schmorell had been able to buy a typewriter and a duplicating machine. They
called their group the 'White Rose'. Sophie was not brought into it initially,
but she had a shrewd idea of what her brother was up to from early on. She would
find books in his rooms--which smelt of jasmine and cigarettes--with significant
passages marked.
The choice of the name 'White Rose' is not easily
explained. The rose as a symbol of secrecy might have occurred to them, and
'white' might have reflected the fact that their leaflets were not inspired by
any colour of political thought, but by broad humanism. It's also possible that
the name was taken from B. Traven's eponymous novel, in which a Mexican farmer
fights a tyrannical oil company. Whatever the reason the symbol is still a
powerful one in Germany.
The first four leaflets of the White Rose appeared
in quick succession in June and July 1942. They were written jointly by Hans
Scholl with Alexander Schmorell and Christoph Probst, who was the only married
member of the group apart from Huber and who was already, at twenty-three, the
father of two children (a third, whom he would never see, was born after his
arrest).
The first leaflet begins uncompromisingly: 'Nothing
is less worthy of a cultivated people: than to allow itself to be governed by a
clique of irresponsible bandits of dark ambition, without "Resistance.' The
four issues, each covering two sides of the paper, draw on Goethe, Schiller and
Aristotle, among others, to make their point, which is contained effectively in
the sentence quoted. They refer to the murder of Jews in Poland, encourage the
idea of sabotage in the armaments industry, and criticize the anti-Christian and
anti-social nature of the war. 'We are all guilty. We will not be silenced. We
are your bad conscience. The White Rose will not leave you in peace!'
Sophie soon joined. Fear for the safety of her
family was overridden by her desire to do something to fight Hitler. It was hard
for them all: hard to swim against the current, and harder still to wish defeat
upon their own country. Worst of all was the isolation in which they worked.
Tirelessly the group distributed the leaflets by the
suitcase-load throughout towns in southern Germany, either traveling with them
(a very dangerous undertaking) and delivering them by hand at night, or using
the mail. They were so successful that the movement spread, notably to Hamburg,
where a branch of the White Rose was set up which survived its originator.
The White Rose went into temporary abeyance during
the summer of I942 as Hans, Willi and Alexander were ordered to the Russian
Front, but they returned to Munich in October. The period had been of special
significance to Schmorell. His mother, whom he had lost in infancy, was Russian.
Meanwhile Sophie had spent the vacation working in an arms factory, and Robert
Scholl had been in a Gestapo prison.
Hans had seen the maltreatment of Jews and Russian
prisoners at first hand. One day he gave his tobacco to an old man, and his iron
rations to a girl. The girl had thrown the rations back at him, but he had
picked them up, plucked a daisy, placed it on the pile of rations, and laid them
at her feet. After a moment's hesitation, she had accepted them, and put the
flower in her hair.
The group returned from the Front more determined
than ever to carry on the work of Resistance, and to make the White Rose into a
permanent Resistance cell. Hans and Alexander even managed to arrange a meeting
with Falk Harnack, the younger brother of Arvid Harnack of the Red Orchestra,
with the intention of making contact with the main Resistance in Berlin, though
death was to prevent this ever happening. In the meantime, postage and paper
cost money. Fritz Hartnagel gave Sophie 1000 Reichsmark, for what she told him
was 'a good purpose'. A generous source of support was the Stuttgart tax
consultant Eugen Grimminger, who was married to a Jewess and had looked after
Robert Scholl's business while he was in prison. A school friend of Sophie
remembers a meeting in Stuttgart in December 1942, when she told her, 'If I had
a pistol and I were to meet Hitler here in the street, I'd shoot him down. If
men can't manage it, then a woman should.' She replied, 'But then he'd be
replaced by Himmler, and after Himmler, another.' Sophie retorted: 'One's got to
do something to get rid of the guilt.'
They bought a new, less noisy, duplicating machine.
On trains, they took suitcases full of leaflets. If the police searched the
train, they would leave the suitcase on the rack and hide in the lavatory, or
spend the journey in another compartment. They became used to living on their
nerves, but they never considered that they had a choice. Sophie and Hans took
adjoining rooms in Franz-Josef-Strasse #13. In January 1943 a new White Rose
leaflet appeared, this time written in a more popular style. Several thousand
copies were made. Addresses were painstakingly copied out of telephone
directories. The conspirators had to ensure that the Gestapo could not trace the
source to Munich. Once again by train journeys, the group had to run the police
gauntlet and post their leaflets from neighbouring towns.
On 13 January, to mark the 470th anniversary of the
university, the Nazi Gauleiter--District Leader--of the city, Paul Giesler, gave
a speech in the course of which he told the female students that it would be
better for them to get on with giving the Fuhrer a child than wasting time on
books; he even offered to put his henchmen at their service. Several girls
immediately left the hall in protest, only to be arrested at the exit. This led
to a demonstration, in the course of which the Nazi Student Leader was dragged
from the podium, beaten up, and declared a hostage against the release of the
girls. The Nazis telephoned the police, who promptly arrived and broke up the
meeting. This was the first student demonstration against the Nazis in Munich,
and it stimulated the Gestapo to redouble its efforts to find the originators of
the White Rose.
Elisabeth Scholl spent a week at the end of January
and the beginning of February with her brother and sister in Munich. She found a
Russian blouse in a wardrobe and Sophie told her that Alexander liked to put it
on when he went to visit the Russian forced-labourers in their barracks.
Christoph Probst dropped in on his way between postings during a period of
military duty and, though he only stopped for an hour and a half, Elisabeth was
struck by the fact that he changed into civilian clothes. On 3 February news of
the defeat at Stalingrad (where Fritz Hartnagel was fighting) came through on
the radio. One evening soon after, Alexander and Hans said they were going over
to the Women's Hospital. Later on Willi Graf arrived and when Elisabeth told him
where his friends were, he laughed and said they would hardly go there without
him. All that evening Sophie was nervous, and kept talking about the need to
write anti-Nazi graffiti on walls. 'You'd need to use something that was hard to
get off,' she said, 'like bitumous paint.'
The following morning Hans, Sophie and Elisabeth
went to the university to attend a lecture by Huber on Leibniz. On a wall by the
entrance the word 'Freedom' had been written in huge letters. 'What bastard did
that?' snarled an older student. A large group of people were watching a handful
of Russian women Tabourers trying to clean it off. 'They'll have a hard job,'
said Sophie. 'That's bitumous paint.' Another friend, Traute Lafrenz, who was
one of the leaders of the Hamburg White Rose, and now works as a doctor in
Illinois, was in Munich too that day and saw Hans Scholl. 'I remember he was
smiling to himself. Some outraged student or other came up to him and said,
"Have you seen what's happened?" "No," said Hans.
"What?" But his smile broadened. From that moment on I began to be
terribly afraid for him.'
The significance of the defeat at Stalingrad, in
whatever light Goebbels presented it, could not be concealed from the German
people, and the group around Hans Scholl realised that they should follow up
with another leaflet immediately. This, the last from the White Rose, was
quickly prepared and addressed to their 'Fellow Students'. It was more strongly
and directly expressed than any of its predecessors.
The day of reckoning is come, the reckoning of German youth
with the most appalling tyranny that our people has ever
endured. In the name of the entire German people we demand
from Adolf Hitler the return of our personal freedom, the
most valuable possession of the Germans ...
Hans and Sophie decided to distribute it in the
university personally.
On Thursday 18 February 1943 the weather was
springlike--They hurried to the university at 10 a.m. before the first morning
lectures were over, carrying copies of the new leaflet in a small suitcase. They
hurried to spread them wherever they could--on windowsills, shelves, the tops of
walls--until their supply was almost exhausted.
They had already left the main building when they
decided to go back and get rid of the rest. They ran up the main staircase of
the university's central hall and emptied the remaining contents of the case
from a parapet into the courtyard. They were just in time. Immediately
afterwards the doors of the lecture halls opened and students poured out. But
the Scholls had been seen. The university's caretaker, Jakob Schmid, charged
towards them as they raced back down the staircase, seized them each by the arm
and bellowed, 'You're under arrest!'
Both the young people stayed calm. They remained
quiet and dignified as they were taken first to the bursar and then to the
rector, SS Oberfuhrer Dr Walter Wrist, lecturer in Aryan language and culture.
The doors of the university were sealed and all the students remaining inside
had to assemble in the courtyard. Those who had picked up leaflets had to
surrender them. The Scholls were taken to Gestapo Headquarters in handcuffs.
Secret police went immediately to the rooms at Franz-Josef-Strasse, where they
found several hundred new red 8-pfennig stamps. Very soon afterwards, the
Gestapo was on the trail of the rest of the group, though the Scholls betrayed
no one. Christoph Probst was arrested the following day and the others soon
after.
The Scholls had known the risk that they were
running. Sophie had even said shortly before: 'So many people have already died
for this regime that it's time someone died against it.' There had been plenty
of indications that the Gestapo investigation had been getting closer to them
every day. They failed to receive a warning at the eleventh hour: the previous
day, 17 February, Otl Aicher, who had been wounded on active service, was
staying with Carl Muth. He was in Munich with the intention of seeing Hans and
Sophie, but before he could make contact he received an urgent coded message
from Ulm by telephone, to the effect that Hans should be told personally that
the 'book called Totalitanian State and Utopia was out of print'. He had rung
Hans and told him that he had important news. They made a date for the following
day--18 February--at 11a.m. But when Aicher reached Franz-Josef-Strasse, it was
too late. The Gestapo were already there, and he, too, was arrested--luckily to
be released soon afterwards.
Hans and Sophie were not tortured, but they were
interrogated intensively for four days in Gestapo Headquarters at Wittelsbach
Palace in Munich. Otl Aicher and Traute Lafrenz took the bad news to their
parents, who tried to see if anything could be done to secure their release. It
was in vain. Throughout their ordeal, the brother and sister, who each shared
cells with one other political prisoner of their own sex, remained calm and
fatalistic. Neither of them was broken by the experience. The trial was set for
22 February. Roland Freisler, Hitler's hanging judge, flew down from Berlin
specially to preside. This was an indication of the importance the Nazi
leadership considered the White Rose to have. The war was lost; the Allies were
already bombing Munich; but protestors still had to be smashed.
The hearing started at 9 a.m. and lasted until 1
p.m. It was a closed trial, and those without passes, including Hans's and
Sophie's parents, were not admitted, though Robert was able to force an entrance
briefly. The Scholls were tried together with Christoph Probst. None of them
flinched under the sarcastic, hectoring onslaught of the judge. The verdict was
a foregone conclusion: death by the guillotine. They were taken from the court
to Stadelheim Prison immediately after judgement had been passed.
By a miracle the parents had a last opportunity to
see their children. They saw Hans first. Robert embraced him saying, 'You will
go down in history. There is another justice than this.' Hans asked them to say
farewell to his friends, and only when he mentioned one name very special to him
did he weep, bowing his head so that no one should see. Sophie, when her turn
came, accepted some little cakes that her brother had refused, saying, 'Lovely.
I didn't get anything to eat at lunchtime.' She looked wonderful, fresh and full
of life. Her mother said, 'I'll never see you come through the door again.' 'Oh
mother,' she answered, 'after all, it's only a few years' more life I'll miss.'
She was pleased and proud that they had betrayed no one, that they had taken all
the responsibility on themselves. Her main concern was that her mother should be
able to withstand the deaths of two children at the same time. But, for herself,
she was completely composed.
The parents left and returned to Ulm, thinking that
something might still be done to help--at least to get the sentence commuted.
But in the Nazi State, punishment normally followed sentence with terrifying
speed. By 6 p.m. Sophie and Hans were dead.
The following day, Inge Scholl was able to visit the
flat in Franz-Josef-Strasse and there she found Sophie's diary, which had been
overlooked by the Gestapo. Inge saw it as a gift from heaven. The family, in
accordance with Nazi custom, was placed under arrest for being related to the
malefactors. Kurt Huber, Willi Graf and Alexander Schmorell, who were arrested
later, were sentenced to death on 19 April.
Hans and Sophie were buried in Perlach Cemetery in
south Munich on 24 February. In the town, graffiti appeared on walls: 'Their
spirit lives.'

Residence of Hans and Sophie Scholl on
Franz-Josephs-Straße while they were students at Munich University.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

Geschwister-Scholl-Platz at
Ludwig-Maximilian University in memory of Hans and Sophie Scholl.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

The Justizpalast where Sophie, Hans, and
Christoph were tried. Judge Roland Freisler (Hitler's hanging judge) was flown
in from Berlin for the trial.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

Crosses marking the graves of Hans and
Sophie Scholl in Perlach Cemetery. The cemetery is adjacent to Stadelheim prison
where the White Rose members were executed.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

Stones marking the graves of Hans Scholl
(1918-1943) and Sophie Scholl (1921-1943) in Perlach Cemetery. The cemetery is
adjacent to Stadelheim prison where the White Rose members were executed.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

Relief sculpture in the central hall of
Ludwig-Maximilian University dedicated to the memory of the seven White Rose
members who were executed.
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology

Detail of memorial. The fourth leaflet
of the White Rose said, "We will not be silent. We are your bad conscience.
The White Rose will not leave you in peace."
Photo credit: Florida Center for Instructional Technology
"It is unbelievable to what extent one must
deceive a people in order to rule it"--Adolf Hitler
SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR HIGH TREASON: Christopher
Probst, age 24 Hans Scholl, age 25 Sophie Scholl, age 22
Gone were now the core leaders of the White Rose,
a group of college students who resisted the Nazis by disseminating pamphlets
calling for the demise of the fascist regime. Even more telling than their
deaths, were the lives that this group, the White Rose, led. What led Roland
Freisler, Chief Justice of the Peoples Court of the Greater German Reich to
sentence them to death by the guillotine? "Tuly, a devil has broken loose
from his leash in Germany--ah, and none of us know how we are going to get him
back on the chain again". The White Rose, formed by two students Hans and
Sophie Scholl, manifested itself in a loose association of friends,
theologians, and professors with common ideals banded together to fight the
German state by spreading leaflets. Setting up temporary base in a church in
Ulm; Sophie orchestrated a clandestine mailing operation behind a church
organ. Stuffing 2,000 leaflets at one setting, Sophie and her cohorts split up
riding in trains at often perilous expense to cities like Stuttgart,
Frankfort, Vienna, Freiburg, Saarbruecken, and Mannheim. Acting as couriers,
they carried letters as luggage and upon arriving at their destination, dumped
their contraband letters into the postbox, returning home that same night. The
letters were addressed from names chosen randomly from telephone directories.
In this way, no one would be singled out by having in their possession a
leaflet of the White Rose. The White Rose met and networked with others
outside of their own environment of Munich and Ulm. In Hamburg groups of
dissidents were many but unorganized in nature. In the movie "Swingkids",
the German youth listened to illicit jazz music at the Swingboys club. In
Hamburg, the Swingkids mixed with other dissident forces as Hamburg grew into
a hot-bed of opposition. Thus; the Hamburg branch of the White Rose was
born--further aiding in the distribution of White Rose literature. With the
far reaching effects of their leaflets, other sides of the White Rose can be
seen. In addition to their clandestine activities, the Scholl's discussed
areas of art, literature, poetry and music--often with friends at local cafes.
They went on skiing trips, long hikes in the woods, or concerts of classical
music maintaining a sense of themselves, a sense of their own being. The
loose-knit circle of friends that the Scholl's had maintained manifested
itself in an underground magazine circulated among the group known ad
Windlicht (literally meaning wind light, a hurricane or storm lamp.) There
were only hidden political tones to the magazine-most of the pieces dealt with
intellectual and cultural tones. The commentaries and essays of Windlicht
expressed a state of mind of the group-an outlet against the totalitarian
darkness of Nazi Germany.
From the fourth pamphlet of the White Rose:
"Every word that comes from Hitler's mouth is a lie. When he says peace,
he means war, and when he blasphemously uses the name of the Almighty, he
means the power of evil, the fallen angel Satan. His mouth is the
foul-smelling maw of hell, and his might is a bottom accursed. True, we must
continue the struggle against the National Socialistic terrorist state with
rational means, but whoever today still doubts the reality, the essence of
demonic powers, has failed by a wide margin to understand the metaphysical
background of this war. Behind the concrete, the visible elements, behind all
objective, logical considerations, we find the irrational element: the
struggle against the demon, against the servants of the Antichrist. Everywhere
and at all times demons have been lurking in the dark, waiting for the moment
when man was weak..."
The surface of the German society has begun to
crack.
"One can already hear the howls and whines of
the demons more clearly in their dread-filled phases. It is the last gasp of a
crazed man who runs amok; just before the end. An official call to hate! The
hate will certainly be found, all right, but it will not be the hate they
intend, and want, today. It will be different..."Theodore Hacker, journal
entry Ja. 1943. Finally, all three were manacled and led away by uniformed
police. As they were leaving the courtroom, Hans was heard to say, "Today
they're hanging us. Tomorrow it will be their turn".
"After two o'clock we receive the frightful
news from the headquarters: all three are sentenced to death! At 4:30 Mohr
comes in. I ask, "Herr Mohr, is it really true that all three will die?
" He only nods, himself still shaken by the experience. The words fall
like bludgeon blows upon all of us. We are stunned to earn that three good,
innocent persons have to die because they dared to rise against an organized
band of murderers; because they wanted to help end this senseless war. I
should like to scream these things at the top of my lungs; and I have to sit
there silent. "Lord, have mercy on them, Christ, have mercy on them,
Lord, have mercy on their souls", is all I can think. The minutes stretch
to an eternity. I want to push the hands of the clock ahead, faster, fast, so
that the heaviest task will be behind. But one minute creeps slowly after the
other. Finally it is 5:00, 5:04, 5:08....You have returned into the
Light".
"WE WILL NOT BE SILENT. WE ARE YOUR BAD
CONSCIENCE. THE WHITE ROSE WILL NOT LEAVE YOU IN PEACE"....from the
fourth leaflet of the White Rose by J.F. appeared in Talmidim #12,1994

The First Leaflet
| Nothing
is so unworthy of a civilized nation as allowing itself to be governed
without opposition by an irresponsible clique that has yielded to base
instinct. It is certain that today every honest German is ashamed of
his government. Who among us has any conception of the dimensions of
shame that will befall us and our children when one day the veil has
fallen from our eyes and the most horrible of crimes - crimes that
infinitely outdistance every human measure - reach the light of day?
If the German people are already so corrupted and spiritually crushed
that they do not raise a hand, frivolously trusting in a questionable
faith in lawful order of history; if they surrender man’s highest
principle, that which raises him above all other God’s creatures,
his free will; if they abandon the will to take decisive action and
turn the wheel of history and thus subject it to their own rational
decision; if they are so devoid of all individuality, have already
gone so far along the road toward turning into a spiritless and
cowardly mass - then, yes, they deserve their downfall. Goethe speaks
of the Germans as a tragic people, like the Jews and the Greeks, but
today it would appear rather that they are a spineless, will-less herd
of hangers-on, who now - the marrow sucked out of their bones, robbed
of their center of stability - are waiting to be hounded to their
destruction. So it seems - but it is not so. Rather, by means of
gradual, treacherous, systematic abuse, the system has put every man
into a spiritual prison. Only now, finding himself lying in fetters,
has he become aware of his fate. Only a few recognized the threat of
ruin, and the reward for their heroic warning was death. We will have
more to say about the fate of these persons. If everyone waits until
the other man makes a start, the messengers of avenging Nemesis will
come steadily closer; then even the last victim will have been cast
senselessly into the maw of the insatiable demon. Therefore every
individual, conscious of his responsibility as a member of Christian
and Western civilization, must defend himself as best he can at this
late hour, he must work against the scourges of mankind, against
fascism and any similar system of totalitarianism. Offer passive
resistance - resistance - wherever you may be, forestall the spread of
this atheistic war machine before it is too late, before the last
cities, like Cologne, have been reduced to rubble, and before the
nation’s last young man has given his blood on some battlefield for
the hubris of a sub-human. Do not forget that every people deserves
the regime it is willing to endure!
From
Freidrich Schiller’s The Lawgiving of Lycurgus and Solon:
Viewed
in relation to its purposes, the law code of Lycurgus is a
masterpiece of political science and knowledge of human nature. He
desired a powerful, unassailable start, firmly established on its
own principles. Political effectiveness and permanence were the goal
toward which he strove, and he attained this goal to the full extent
possible under possible under the circumstances. But if one compares
the purpose Lycurgus had in view with the purposes of mankind, then
a deep abhorrence takes the place of the approbation which we felt
at first glance. Anything may be sacrificed to the good of the state
except that end for which the State serves as a means. The state is
never an end in itself; it is important only as a condition under
which the purpose of mankind can be attained, and this purpose is
none other than the development of all man’s power, his progress
and improvement. If a state prevents the development of the
capacities which reside in man, if it interferes with the progress
of the human spirit, then it is reprehensible and injurious, no
matter how excellently devised, how perfect in its own way. Its very
permanence in that case amounts more to a reproach than to a basis
for fame; it be comes a prolonged evil, and the longer it endures,
the more harmful it is....
At
the price of all moral feeling a political system was set up, and
the resources of the state were mobilized to that end. In Sparta
there was no conjugal love, no mother love, no filial devotion, no
friendship; all men were citizens only, and all virtue was civic
virtue.
A
law of the state made it the duty of Spartans to be inhumane to
their slaves; in these unhappy victims of war humanity itself was
insulted and mistreated. In the Spartan code of law the dangerous
principle was promulgated that men are to be looked upon as means
and not as ends - and the foundation of natural law and of morality
were destroyed by that law....
What
an admirable sight is afforded, by contrast, by the rough soldier
Gaius Marcius in his camp before Rome, when he renounced vengeance
and victory because he could not endure to see a mother’s
tears!...
The
state [of Lycurgus] could endure only under the one condition: that
the spirit of the people remained quiescent. Hence it could be
maintained only if it failed to achieve the highest, the sole
purpose of a state.
From
Goethe’s The Awakening of Epimenides, Act II, Scene 4.
SPIRITS:
Though he who has boldly
risen from the abyss
Through an iron will and
cunning
May conquer half the world,
Yet to the abyss he must
return.
Already a terrible fear has
seized him;
In vain he will resist!
And all who still stand with
him
Must perish in his fall.
HOPE:
Now I find my good men
Are gathered in the night,
To wait in silence, not to
sleep.
And the glorious word of
liberty
They whisper and murmur,
Till in unaccustomed
strangeness,
On the steps of our temple
Once again in delight they
cry:
Freedom! Freedom!
Please make as many copies of
this leaflet as you can and distribute them. |
The second leaflet
| It
is impossible to engage in intellectual discourse with National
Socialist Philosophy, for if there were such an entity, one would have
to try by means of analysis and discussion either to prove its
validity or to combat it. In actuality, however, we face a totally
different situation. At it's very inception this movement depended on
the deception and betrayal of one's fellow man; even at that time it
was inwardly corrupt and could support itself only by constant lies.
After all, Hitler states in an early edition of "his" book
(a book written in the worst German I have ever read, in spite of the
fact that it has been elevated to the position of the Bible in this
nation of poets and thinkers): "It is unbelievable, to what
extent one must betray a people in order to rule it." If at
the start this cancerous growth in the nation was not particularly
noticeable, it was only because there were still enough forces at work
that operated for the good, so that it was kept under control. As it
grew larger, however, and finally in an ultimate spurt of growth
attained ruling power, the tumor broke open, as it were, and infected
the whole body. The greater part of its former opponents went into
hiding. The German intellectuals fled to their cellars, there, like
plants struggling in the dark, away from light and sun, gradually to
choke to death. Now the end is at hand. Now it is our task to find one
another again, to spread information from person to person, to keep a
steady purpose, and to allow ourselves no rest until the last man is
persuaded of the urgent need of his struggle against this system. When
thus a wave of unrest goes through the land, when "it is in the
air," when many join the cause, then in a great final effort this
system can be shaken off. After all, an end in terror is
preferable to terror without end.
We
are not in a position to draw up a final judgment about the meaning of
our history. But if this catastrophe can be used to further the public
welfare, it will be only by virtue of the fact that we are cleansed by
suffering; that we yearn for the light in the midst of deepest night,
summon our strength, and finally help in shaking off the yoke which
weighs on our world.
We
do not want to discuss here the question of the Jews, nor do we want
in this leaflet to compose a defense or apology. No, only by way of
example do we want to site the fact that since the conquest of Poland three
hundred thousand Jews have been murdered in this country in the
most bestial way. Here we see the most frightful crime against human
dignity, a crime that is unparalleled in the whole of history. For
Jews, too, are human beings - no matter what position we take with
respect to the Jewish question - and a crime of this dimension has
been perpetrated against human beings. Someone may say that the Jews
deserve their fate. This assertion would be a monstrous impertinence;
but let us assume that someone said this - what position has he then
taken toward the fact that the entire Polish aristocratic youth is
being annihilated? (May God grant that this program has not yet
fully achieved its aim as yet!) All male offspring of the houses of
the nobility between the ages of fifteen and twenty were transported
to concentration camps in Germany and sentenced to forced labor, and
all the girls of this age group were sent to Norway, into the
bordellos of the SS! Why tell you these things, since you are
fully aware of them - or if not of these, then of other equally grave
crimes committed by this frightful sub-humanity? Because here we touch
on a problem which involves us deeply and forces us all to take
thought. Why do German people behave so apathetically in the
face of all these abominable crimes, crimes so unworthy of the human
race? Hardly anyone thinks about that. It is accepted as fact
and put out of mind. The German people slumber on in their dull,
stupid sleep and encourage these fascist criminals; they give them the
opportunity to carry on their depredations; and of course they do so.
Is this a sign that the Germans are brutalized in their simplest human
feelings, that no chord within them cries out at the sight of such
deeds, that they have sunk into a fatal consciencelessness from which
they will never, never awake? It seems to be so, and will certainly be
so, if the German does not at last start up out of his stupor, if he
does not protest wherever and whenever he can against this clique of
criminal, if he shows no sympathy for these hundreds of thousands of
victims. He must evidence not only sympathy; no, much more: a sense of
complicity in guilt. For through his apathetic behavior he
gives these evil men the opportunity to act as they do; he tolerates
this "government" which has taken upon itself such an
infinitely great burden of guilt; indeed, he himself is to blame for
the fact that it came about at all! Each man wants to be exonerated of
a guilt of this kind, each one continues on his way with the most
placid, the calmest conscience. But he cannot be exonerated; he
is guilty, guilty, guilty! It is not too late, however, to do
away with this most reprehensible of all miscarriages of government,
so as to avoid being burdened with even greater guilt. Now, when in
recent years our eyes have been opened, when we know exactly who our
adversary is, it is high time to root out this brown horde. Up until
the outbreak of the war the larger part of the German people was
blinded; the Nazis did not show themselves in their true aspect. But
now, now that we have recognized them for what they are, it must be
the sole and first duty, the holiest duty of every German to destroy
these beasts.
If
the people are barely aware that the government exists, they are
happy. When the government is felt to be oppressive they are broken.
Good
fortune, alas! builds itself upon misery. Good fortune, alas! is the
mask of misery. What will come of this? We cannot foresee the end.
Order is upset and turns to disorder, good becomes evil. The people
are confused. Is it not so, day in, day out, from the beginning?
The
wise man is therefore angular, though he does not injure others; he
has sharp corners, though he does not harm; he is upright but not
gruff. He is clearminded, but he does not try to be brilliant.
Lao-Tzu
Whoever
undertakes to rule the kingdom and to shape it according to his whim
- I foresee that he will fail to reach his goal. That is all.
The
kingdom is a living being. It cannot be constructed, in truth! He
who tries to manipulate it will spoil it, he who tries to put it
under his power will lose it.
Therefore:
Some creatures go out in front, others follow, some have warm
breath, others cold, some are strong, some weak, some attain
abundance, others succumb.
The
wise man will accordingly forswear excess, he will avoid arrogance
and not overreach. Lao-Tzu
Please make as many copies as
possible of this leaflet and distribute them. |
The third leaflet
| Salus
publica suprema lex
All
ideal forms of government are utopias. A state cannot be constructed
on a purely theoretical basis; rather, it must grow and ripen in the
way an individual human being matures. But we must not forget that at
the starting point of every civilization the state was already there
in rudimentary form. The family is as old as man himself, and out of
this initial bond man, endowed with reason, created for himself a
state founded on justice, whose highest law was the common good. The
state should exist as a parallel to the divine order, and the highest
of all utopias, the civitas dei, is the model which in the end
it should approximate. Here we will not pass judgment on the many
possible forms of the state - democracy, constitutional monarchy, and
so on. But one matter needs to be brought out clearly and
unambiguously. Every individual human being has a claim to a useful
and just state, a state which secures freedom of the individual as
well as the good of the whole. For, according to God's will, man is
intended to pursue his natural goal, his earthly happiness, in
self-reliance and self-chosen activity, freely and independently
within the community of life and work of the nation.
But
our present "state" is the dictatorship of evil. "Oh,
we've known that for a long time," I hear you object, "and
it isn't necessary to bring that to our attention again." But, I
ask you, if you know that, why do you not bestir yourselves, why do
you allow these men who are in power to rob you step by step, openly
and in secret, of one domain of your rights after another, until one
day nothing, nothing at all will be left but a mechanized state system
presided over by criminals and drunks? Is your spirit already so
crushed by abuse that you forget it is your right - or rather, your moral
duty - to eliminate this system? But id a man no longer can summon
the strength to demand his right, then it is absolutely certain that
he will perish. We would deserve to be dispersed through the earth
like dust before the wind if we do not muster our powers at this late
hour and finally find the courage which up to now we have lacked. Do
not hide your cowardice behind a cloak of expediency, for with every
new day that you hesitate, failing to oppose this offspring of Hell,
your guilt, as in a parabolic curve, grows higher and higher.
Many, perhaps most, of the
readers of these leaflets do not see clearly how they can practice an
effective opposition. They do not see any avenues open to them. We
want to try to show them that everyone is in a position to contribute
to the overthrow of this system. It is not possible through solitary
withdrawal, in the manner of embittered hermits, to prepare the ground
for the overturn of this "government" or bring about the
revolution at the earliest possible moment. No, it can be done only by
the cooperation of many convinced, energetic people - people who are
agreed as to the means they must use to attain their goal. We have no
great number of choices as to these means. The only one available is passive
resistance. The meaning and the goal of passive resistance is to
topple National Socialism, and in this struggle we must not recoil
from any course, any action, whatever its nature. At all points
we must oppose National Socialism, wherever it is open to attack. We
must soon bring this monster of a state to an end. A victory of
fascist Germany in this war would have immeasurable, frightful
consequences. The military victory over Bolshevism dare not become the
primary concern of the Germans. The defeat of the Nazis must unconditionally
be the first order of business, the greater necessity of this latter
requirement will be discussed in one of our forthcoming leaflets.
And
now every convinced opponent of National Socialism must ask himself
how he can fight against the present "state" in the most
effective way, how he can strike it the most telling blows. Through
passive resistance, without a doubt. We cannot provide each man with
the blueprint for his acts, we can only suggest them in general terms,
and he alone will find the way of achieving this end:
Sabotage in armament plants and war industries, sabotage at
all gatherings, rallies, public ceremonies, and organizations of the
National Socialist Party. Obstruction of the smooth functioning of the
war machine (a machine for war that goes on solely to shore up and
perpetuate the National Socialist Party and its dictatorship). Sabotage
in all the areas of science and scholarship which further the
continuation of the war - whether in universities, technical schools,
laboratories, research institutes, or technical bureaus. Sabotage
in all cultural institutions which could potentially enhance the
"prestige" of the fascists among the people. Sabotage
in all branches of the arts which have even the slightest dependence
on National Socialism or render it service. Sabotage in all
publications, all newspapers, that are in the pay of the
"government" and that defend its ideology and aid in
disseminating the brown lie. Do not give a penny to public drives
(even when they are conducted under the pretense of charity). For this
is only a disguise. In reality the proceeds aid neither the Red Cross
nor the needy. The government does not need this money; it is not
financially interested in these money drives. After all, the presses
run continuously to manufacture any desired amount of paper currency.
But the populace must be kept constantly under tension, the pressure
of the bit must not be allowed to slacken! Do not contribute to the
collections of metal, textiles, and the like. Try to convince all your
acquaintances, including those in the lower social classes, of the
senselessness of continuing, of the hopelessness of this war; of our
spiritual and economic enslavement at the hands of the National
Socialists; of the destruction of all moral and religious values; and
urge them to passive resistance!
Aristotle,
Politics: "... and further, it is part [of the nature of tyranny]
to strive to see to it that nothing is kept hidden of that which any
subject says or does, but that everywhere he will be spied upon, ...
and further, to set man against the privileged and the wealthy. Also
it is part of these tyrannical measures, to keep the subjects poor, in
order to pay the guards and soldiers, and so that they will be
occupied with earning their livelihood and will have neither leisure
nor opportunity to engage in conspiratorial acts.... Further, [to
levy] such taxes on income as were imposed in Syracuse, for under
Dionysius the citizens gladly paid out their whole fortunes in taxes
within five years. Also, the tyrant is inclined constantly to forment
wars."
Please duplicate and
distribute!
|
The fourth leaflet
There
is an ancient maxim that we repeat to our children: "He who won't
listen will have to feel." But a wise child will not burn his
fingers the second time on a hot stove. In the past weeks Hitler has
choked up successes in Africa and in Russia. In consequence, optimism
on the one hand and distress and pessimism on the other have grown
within the German people with a rapidity quite inconsistent with
traditional German apathy. On all sides one hears among Hitler's
opponents - the better segments of the population - exclamations of
despair, words of disappointment and discouragement, often ending with
the question: "Will Hitler now, after all...?"
*
Meanwhile, the German offensive
against Egypt has ground to a halt. Rommel has to bide his time in a
dangerously exposed position. But the push into the East proceeds.
This apparent success has been purchased at the most horrible expense
of human life, and so it can no longer be counted an advantage.
Therefore we must warn against all optimism.
*
Neither Hitler nor Goebbels can
have counted the dead. In Russia thousands are lost daily. It is the
time of the harvest, and the reaper cuts into the ripe grain with wide
strokes. Mourning takes up her abode in the country cottages, and
there is no one to dry the tears of the mothers. Yet Hitler feeds with
lies those people whose most precious belongings he has stolen and
whom he has driven to a meaningless death.
*
Every word that comes from
Hitler's mouth is a lie. When he says peace, he means war, and when he
blasphemously uses the name of the Almighty, he means the power of
evil, the fallen angel, Satan. His mouth is the foul-smelling maw of
Hell, and his might is at bottom accursed. True, we must conduct a
struggle against the National Socialist terrorist state with rational
means; but whoever today still doublts the reality, the existence of
demonic powers, has failed by a wide margin to understand the
metaphysical background of this war. Behind the concrete, the visible events,
behind all objective, logical considerations, we find the irrational
element: The struggle against the demon, against the servants of the
Antichrist. Everywhere and at all times demons have been lurking in
the dark, waiting for the moment when man is weak; when of his own
volition he leaves his place in the order of Creation as founded for
him by God in freedom; when he yields to the force of evil, separates
himself from the powers of a higher order; and after voluntarily
taking the first step, he is driven on to the next and the next at a
furiously accelerating rate. Everywhere and at all times of greatest
trial men have appeared, prophets and saints who cherished their
freedom, who preached the One God and who His help brought the people
to a reversal of their downward course. Man is free, to be sure, but
without the true God he is defenseless against the principle of evil.
He is a like rudderless ship, at the mercy of the storm, an infant
without his mother, a cloud dissolving into thin air.
*
I ask you, you as a Christian
wrestling for the preservation of your greatest treasure, whether you
hesitate, whether you incline toward intrigue, calculation, or
procrastination in the hope that someone else will raise his arm in
your defense? Has God not given you the strength, the will to fight?
We must attack evil where it is strongest, and it is strongest
in the power of Hitler.
*
So I returned, and
considered all the oppressions that are done under the sun: and behold
the tears of such as were oppressed, and they had no comforter; and on
the side of their oppressors there was power; but they had no
comforter. Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead than
the living which are yet alive. Ecclesiastes 4
*
True anarchy is the
generative element of religion. Out of the annihilation of every
positive element she lifts her gloriously radiant countenance as the
founder of a new world... If Europe were about to awaken again,
if a state of states, a teaching of political science were at hand!
Should hierarchy then... be the principle of the union of
states? Blood will stream over Europe until the nations become aware
of the frightful madness which drives them in circles. And then,
struck by celestial music and made gentle, the approach their former
altars all together, hear about the works of peace, and hold a great
celebration of peace with fervent tears before the smoking altars.
Only religion can reawaken Europe, establish the rights of the
peoples, and install Christianity in new splendor visibly on earth in
its office as guarantor of peace.
Novalis
*
We wish expressly to point out
that the White Rose is not in the pay of any foreign power.
Though we know that National Socialist power must be broken by
military means, we are trying to achieve a renewal from within of the
severely wounded German spirit. This rebirth must be preceded,
however, by the clear recognition of all the guilt with which the
German people have burdened themselves, and by an uncompromising
battle against Hitler and his all too many minions, party members,
Quislings, and the like. With total brutality the chasm that separates
the better portion of the nation from everything that is opened wide.
For Hitler and his followers there is no punishment on this Earth
commensurate with their crimes. But out of love for coming generations
we must make an example after the conclusion of the war, so that no
one will ever again have the slightest urge to try a similar action.
And do not forget the petty scoundrels in this regime; note their
names, so that none will go free! They should not find it possible,
having had their part in these abominable crimes, at the last minute
to rally to another flag and then act as if nothing had happened!
To set you at rest, we add that
the addresses of the readers of the White Rose are not recorded in
writing. They were picked at random from directories.
*
We will not be silent. We are
your bad conscience. The White Rose will not leave you in peace! |
The fifth
leaflet
A
Call to All Germans!
*
The war is approaching its
destined end. As in the year 1918, the German government is trying to
focus attention exclusively on the growing threat of submarine
warfare, while in the East the armies are constantly in retreat and
invasion in imminent in the West. Mobiliation in the United States has
not yet reached its climax, but already it exceeds anything that the
world has ever seen. It has become a mathematical certainty that
Hitler is leading the German people into the abyss. Hitler cannot
win the war; he can only prolong it. The guilt of Hitler and his
minions goes beyond all measure. Retribution comes closer and closer.
*
But what are the German people
doing? They will not see and will not listen. Blindly they follow
their seducers into ruin. Victory at any price! is inscribed on
their banner. "I will fight to the last man," says
Hitler-but in the meantime the war has already been lost.
*
Germans! Do you and your
children want to suffer the same fate that befell the Jews? Do you
want to be judged by the same standards are your traducers? Are we to
be forever a nation which is hated and rejected by all mankind? No.
Dissociate yourselves from National Socialist gangsterism. Prove by
your deeds that you think otherwise. A new war of liberation is about
to begin. The better part of the nation will fight on our side. Cast
off the cloak of indifference you have wrapped around you. Make the
decision before it is too late. Do not believe the National
Socialist propoganda which has driven the fear of Bolshevism into your
bones. Do not believe that Germany's welfare is linked to the victory
of national Socialism for good or ill. A criminal regime cannot
achieve a German victory. Separate yourselves in time from
everything connected with National Socialism. In the aftermath a
terrible but just judgment will be meted out to those who stayed in
hiding, who were cowardly and hesitant.
*
What can we learn from the
outcome of this war-this war that never was a national war?
*
The imperialist ideology of
force, from whatever side it comes, must be shattered for all time. A
one sided Prussian militarism must never again be allowed to assume
power. Only in large-scale cooperation among the nations of Europe can
the ground be prepared for reconstruction. Centralized hegemony, such
as the Prussian state has tried to excercise in Germany and in Europe,
must be cut down at its inception. The Germany of the future must be a
federal state. At this juncture only a sound federal system can inbue
a weakened Europe with a new life. The workers must be liberated from
their condition of down trodden slavery under National Socialism. The
illusory structure of autonomous national industry must disappear.
Every nation and each man have a right to the goods of the whole
world!
*
Freedom of speech, freedom of
religion, the protection of individual citizens from the abritrary
will of criminal regimes of violence-these will be the bases of the
New Europe.
*
Support the resistance.
Distribute the leaflets! |
The sixth leaflet
Fellow
Fighters in the Resistance!
*
Shaken and broken, our people
behold the loss of the men of Stalingrad. Three hundred and thirty
thousand German men have been senselessly and irresponsibly driven to
death and destruction by the inspired strategy of our World War I
Private First Class. Fuhrer, we thank you!
*
The German people are in
ferment. Will we continue to entrust the fate of our armies to a
dilettante? Do we want to sacrifice the rest of German youth to the
base ambitions of a Party clique? No, never! The day of reckoning has
come - the reckoning of German youth with the most abominable tyrant
our people have ever been forced to endure. In the name of German
youth we demand restitution by Adolf Hitler's state of our personal
freedom, the most precious treasure we have, out of which he has
swindled us in the most miserable way.
*
We grew up in a state in which
all free expression of opinion is unscrupulously suppressed. The
Hitler Youth, the SA, the SS have tried to drug us, to revolutionize
us, to regiment us in the most promising young years of our lives.
"Philosophical training" is the name given to the despicable
method by which our budding intellectual development is muffled in a
fog of empty phrases. A system of selection of leaders at once
unimaginably devilish and narrow-minded trains up its future party
bigwigs in the "Castles of the Knightly Order" to become
Godless, impudent, and conscienceless exploiters and executioners -
blind, stupid hangers-on of the Fuhrer. We "Intellectual
Workers" are the ones who should put obstacles in the path of
this caste of overlords. Soldiers at the front are regimented like
schoolboys by student leaders and trainees for the post of Gauleiter,
and the lewd jokes of the Gauleiters insult the honor of the women
students. German women students at the university in Munich have given
a dignified reply to the besmirching of their honor, and German
students have defended the women in the universities and have stood
firm.... That is a beginning of the struggle for our free
self-determination - without which intellectual and spiritual values
cannot be created. We thank the brave comrades, both men and women,
who have set us brilliant examples.
*
For us there is but one slogan:
fight against the party! Get out of the party organization, which are
used to keep our mouths sealed and hold us in political bondage! Get
out of the lecture rooms of the SS corporals and sergeants and the
party bootlickers! We want genuine learning and real freedom of
opinion. No threat can terrorize us, not even the shutting down of the
institutions of higher learning. This is the struggle of each and
every one of us for our future, our freedom, and our honor under a
regime conscious of its moral responsibility.
*
Freedom and honor! For ten long
years Hitler and his coadjutor have manhandled, squeezed, twisted, and
debased these two splendid German words to the point of nausea, as
only dilettantes can, casting the highest values of a nation before
swine. They have sufficiently demonstrated in the ten years of
destruction of all material and intellectual freedom, of all moral
substance among the German people, what they understand by freedom and
honor. The frightful bloodbath has opened the eyes of even the
stupidest German - it is a slaughter which they arranged in the name
of "freedom and honor of the German nation" throughout
Europe, and which they daily start anew. The name of Germany is
dishonored for all time if German youth does not finally rise, take
revenge, and atone, smash its tormentors, and set up a new Europe of
the spirit. Students! The German people look to us. As in 1813 the
people expected us to shake off the Napoleonic yoke, so in 1943 they
look to us to break the National Socialist terror through the power of
the spirit. Beresina and Stalingrad are burning in the East. The dead
of Stalingrad implore us to take action. "Up, up, my people, let smoke and flame be
our sign!"
*
Our people stand ready to rebel
against the Nationals Socialist enslavement of Europe in a fervent new
breakthrough of freedom and honor. |
A seventh leaflet ?
| When Hans
and Sophie Scholl were taken into Gestapo custody on that fateful
February morning, Hans carried in his pocket the draft of the next
leaflet - handwritten by Christoph Probst. When discovered, Hans
insisted it was thrust upon him in a crowd by an unknown student and
then Hans shred the document into innumerable pieces. It was carefully
taped together by the Gestapo and matched to a sample of Christl's
handwriting found in Hans' apartment. The Gestapo also forced him to
"reconstruct" the draft during his interogation. So what did
Christl have to say?
The
following is quoted from an article entitled "The White Rose
in the Light of New Archival Evidence" by Christiane Moll
[Resistance Against the Third Reich 1933-1990; ed. by Michael Geyer
and John W. Boyer]:
After
listening to BBC broadcasts, Probst quoted in his draft Roosevelt's
demand for unconditional surrender on January 24, 1943, emphasizing
that this demand was not directed against the people but against the
political systems of the Axis powers. The positive example he
referred to was the clearance of the German-Italian troops on
January 23, 1943, in Tripoli by the British, which was carried out
without senseless sacrifices [of human life]. Probst wrote,
"What did the English do? They let the lives of the citizens
continue in their usual tracks. They even keep the police and the
civil servants." The other extreme, Probst wrote, was the
senseless sacrifice of two hundred thousand German soldiers in
Stalingrad "for the prestige of a military con-man."
National Socialist propaganda had concealed the humane nature of the
Russian demands of surrender. Probst then appealed to the Germans:
"Today Germany is as encircled as Stalingrad was. Will all
Germans be sacrificed to the harbinger of hate and destruction? To
him, who tortured the Jews, who eradicated half of the Poles, who
desired the annihilation of Russia - to him who took away liberty,
peace, happiness, hope and joy, and gave us inflationary money
instead? This ought not, this must not be. Hitler and his regime
must fall so that Germany can live. Make your decision, Stalingrad
and downfall, or Tripoli and a hopeful future. And once you have
decided, act." A desire for a "hopeful future" must
have been especially strong for Probst, who had a family and whose
third child had just been born.
|
The Generation of the German Conservative
Revolution
|