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OCR Page 1 of 2Carter, John Franklin
PSF: Subject File
Analysis of Personality of
Hitler Pts. 1-3(Pt.1) -
PSF: 9.7. carter folder
ille
Bx 124
JOHN FRANKLIN CARTER
(Jay Franklin)
1210 NATIONAL PRESS BUILDING
WASHINGTON, D. C.
"We. the People"
,
"The Week in Washington"
file Confectual
Metropolitan 4112
Metropolitan 4113
October 28, 1943.
REPORT ON PSYCHIATRIC ANALYSIS OF APCLF HITLER.
The attached manuscript by Dr. Murray of Harvard Medical School was received
by us from Arthur Upham Pope and cost of mimeographing has been paid by 0.S.S. It
is an interesting und important confirmation of the material on Hitler prepared by
Putzi Hanfstaengl and is thus an unexpected vindication of the value of his work.
Putzi is now being put to work on a commentary and analysis of this document for use
in official circles concenred in psychological warfare.
H.C.
J.F.C.
October 29, 1943
MEMORANDUM ON HITLER'S PSYCHOLOGY
This Ms. by Dr. Henry Murray was received from
Mr. Arthur Upham Pope, Chairman of the Committee for
National Morale in New York.
The cost of typing, stencilling and mimeograph-
ing was paid by O.S.S.
HennyHield
PSF: J.F.Carter
Box 124
Copy No. 1 of 30
Analysis of
The Personality of Adolph Hitler
With Predictions of His Future Behavior
)
and
Suggestions for Dealing With Him
Now and After
Germany's Surrender
By HENRY A. MURRAY, M.D.
Harvard Psychological Clinic
OCTOBER, 1943
REGRADED
UNCLASSIFIED
PSF:
J.F.Carter
4.
ANALYSIS OF THE PERSONALITY OF ADOLF HITLER
with predictions of his future behavior
and
suggestions for dealing with him
now and after Germany's surrender
Henry A. Murray, M. D,
Harvard Psychological Clinic
FOREWORD
Aim
The aim of this memorandum is (1) to present an
analysis of Adolf Hitler's personality with an
hypothetical formulation of the manner of its
development; (2) on the basis of this, to make a
few predictions as to his conduct when confronted
by the mounting successes of the Allies; and (3)
to offer some suggestions as to how the U. S.
Government might now influence his mental condition
and behavior (assuming it sees fit to do so), and
might doal with him, if taken into custody, after
Germany's surrender.
The proper interpretation of Hitler's person-
ality is important 63 F. step in understanding the
psychology of the typical Nazi, and - since the
typical Nazi exhibits a strain that has, for a
long time, been prevalont among Germans - as a
step in understanding the psychology of the German
people. Hitler's unprecedented appeal, the eleva-
tion of this man to the status of C. demi-god, can
be explained only on the hypothesis that he and his
ideology have almost exactly mot the neads, longings,
and sentiments of the majority of Germans.
- 2 -
The attainment of a clear impression of the
psychology of the German people is essential if,
after surrender, they are to be converted into a
peace-loving nation that is willing to take its
proper place in a world society.
Sources of Information for this Analysis. -
As is well known, there are no thoroughly re-
liable sources of information about Hitler's early
life and what is known about him since 1918 is in
many respects insufficient or contradictory.
This analysis has been based, for the most
part, on the following material:
1, Data supplied by the Office of
Strategic services
2. Hitler's MEIN KAMPF, New York,
Reynal & Hitchoock, 1939
3. Hitler's MY NEW ORDER, New York,
Reynal & Hitchcock, 1941
4. Heiden, K., HITLER, A BIOGRAPHY,
London, 1936
5. Rauschning, H., VOICE OF DESTRUCTION,
New York
6. Baynes, H. G., GERMANY POSSESSED,
London, 1941
It is generally agreed that MEIN KAMPF is not to be
relied on as a factual document, but as the translators
say in the introduction to the American edition,
this work "1s probably the best written evidence
of the character, the mind, and the spirit of Adolf
Hitler." An analysis of the metaphors used in
- 3 -
MEIN KAMPF has proved rewarding in the attempt to
discover the underlying forces of his personality.
MY NEW ORDER, edited by Roussy de Sales, has also
been utilized extensively.
A paper published by W.H.D. Vernon, HITLER THE
MAN - NOTES FOR A CASE HISTORY (Jour. of Abn. & Soc.
Psychol., 1942, 37, 295-308), was written under my
general supervision and contains most of the ideas
of Professor G, W. Allport and myself on this topic
so far 88 they were crystallized in the fall of 1941.
This article by Vernon is included in toto as an
introduction. thereby relieving me of the necessity
of restating (in the detailed analysis that follows)
all the commonly known facts.
CONTENTS OF THIS MEMORANDUM
Section 1.
Summary of the Entire Memorandum.
Section 2.
HITLER THE MAN - NOTES FOR A CASE HISTORY
by W. H. D. Vernon (the best available
short outline of Hitler's personality).
Section 3.
(Summary, Part A) Detailed Analysis of
Hitler's Personality (written especially
for psychologists, psychiatrists).
Section 4.
(Summary, Part B) Predictions of Hitler's
Behavior in the Coming Future.
Section 5.
(Summary, Part C) Suggestions for the
Treatment of Hitler, Now and After
Germany's Surrender.
Section 6.
(Summery, Part D) Suggestions for the
Treatment of Germany,
SECTION I
Condensed Review of the Entire Memorandum
CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM
containing
A. Brief Analysis of Hitler's Personality.
B. Predictions of Hitler's Behavior.
C. Suggestions for the Treatment of Hitler.
D. Suggestions for the Treatment of the
German People.
Submitted by Henry A. Murray, M.D.
Harvard Psychological Clinic,
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Committee for National Morale,
New York.
A. Brief Analysis of Hitler's Personality
I. Dynamical Pattern, Counteractive Type. -
There is little disagreement among professional, or
even among amateur, psychologists that Hitler's
personality is an example of the counteractive type,
a type that is marked by intense and stubborn efforts
(1) to overcome early disabilities, weaknesses and
humiliations (wounds to self-esteen), and sometimes
also by efforts (11) to revenge injur. 68 and in-
sults to pride. This is achieved by maans of an
- 2 -
Idealego Reaction Formation which involves (1) the
repression and denial of the inferior portions of
the self, and (11) strivings to become (or to imagine
one has become) the exact opposite, represented by
an idealego, or image of a superior self successfully
accomplishing the once-impossible feats and thereby
curing the wounds of pride and winning general
respect, prestige, fame.
This 1s a very common formula, normal (within
limits) and widely admired in Western cultures, but
in Hitler's case all the constituent forces of the
pattern are compulsively extreme, and based on a
weak neurotic structural foundation. The chief
trends are these: (1) Counteractive Need for
Dominance, Superiority; (2) Counteractive Aggres-
sion, Revenge; (5) Repression of Conscience, Com-
pliance, Love; (4) Projection of Criticizable
Elements of the Self.
1. Counteractive Need for Dominance,
Superiority. - The developmental formula for this
1s as follows: (1) intolerable feelings of in-
feriority (partly because of yielding to the will
of a harsh and unjust person), leading to (11)
contempt of own inferior traits (weekmass, timidity,
- 3 -
submissiveness) and the fixed determination to repress
them in oneself and to condemn them in others,
accompanied by (111) admiration and envy of power
in others and a vision of self as ultimately superior
(idealego) leading to (iv) repeated efforts to become
superior (counteraction out of wounded pride), en-
couraged by moments of extreme self-confidence in
which one believes oneself the equal of one's vision.
This, as we have said, is a very common form
of development, but in Hitler the trend is so intense
and the commonly balancing forces (affection,
conscience, self-criticism, humor) are so weak that
we are justified in speaking in speaking of megalo-
mania (delusions of omnipotence), despite the fact
that the man has succeeded in getting a large pro-
portion of the German people to believe that he is
superior: (1) that he has been divinely appointed
to lead them to power and glory, and (11) that he
is never wrong and hence must be followed with blind
obdience, come what may,
Hitler's underlying inferiority feelings, his
basic self-contempt are shown by his choosing as
criteria of superiority (traits of idoolego) attributes
and capacities that are the very opposite of what he
- 4 -
is himself or once was. This may be illustrated
by his fervent eulogy of (a) brute strength; (b)
purity of blood; and (c) fertility.
1. (a) Admiration of Brute Strength,
Contempt of Weakness. - Hitler has always worshipped
physical force, military conquest, and ruthless
domination. He has respected, envied, and emulated
the techniques of power, even when manifested by a
hated enemy. From first to last he has expressed
contempt of weakness, indecision, lack of energy,
fear of conscience;
and yet -
Hitler has many Weaknesses. - There is a
large feminine component in his constitution. As
a child he was frail and sickly, emotionally dependent
on his mother. He never did any manual work, never
engaged in athletics, was turned down as forever
unfit for conscription in the Austrian Army. Afraid
of his father, his behavior was outwardly submissive,
and later he was annoyingly subservient to his superior
officers. Four years in the Army, he never rose above
the rank of corporal. At the end he broke down with
a war neurosis, hysterical blindness. Even lately,
in all his glory, he suffers frequent emotional
- 5 -
collapses in which he yells and weeps. He has night-
mares from a bad conscience; and he has long spells
when energy, confidence and the power of decision
abandon him. Sexually he 1s a full-fledged masochist.
1. (b) Admiration of Pure Noble German
Blood, Contempt of Jewish, Slav and other Blood.-
Hitler has always extolled the superior qualities
of pure, unmixed, and uncorrupted German blood. He
admires the aristocracy. Concurrently he has never
ceased expressing his contempt of the lower classes
and his aversion to admixtures of the blood of other
races, of Jewish blood especially;
and yet -
Hitler's own Origins are Not Noble or
Beyond Reproach.- Hitler comes from illiterate
peasant stock derived from a mixture of races, no
pure Germans among them. His father was illegitimate,
was married three times, and is said to have been
conspicuous for sexual promiscuity. Hitler's mother
was a domestic servant. It is said that Hitler's
father's father was a Jew, and it is certain that
his godfather was a Jew; and that one of his sisters
managed a restaurant for Jewish students in Vienna
and another was, for a time, the mistress of a Jew.
- 5 -
Hitler's appearance, when he wore a long beard during
his outcast Vienna days, was said to be very Jewish.
Of these facts he is evidently ashamed. Unlike
Napoleon, he has rejected all his relations.
As a partial explanation of his complex about
impurity of blood it may be said that as a boy of
twelve, Hitler was caught engaging in some sexual
experiment with a little girl; and later he seems
to have developed a syphilophobia, with a diffuse
fear of contemination of the blood through contact
with a woman. It is almost certain that this irrational
dread was partly due to the association in his mind
of sexuality and excretion. He thought of sexual
relations as something exceedingly filthy.
1. (c) Advocacy of Fertility.- Fertility,
the family as the breeding ground of warriors, multi-
plication of the German race these have been cardinal
points in Hitler's ideology;
and yet -
Hitler himself is Impotent.- He is unmarried
and his old acquaintances say that he is incapable
of consummating the sexual act in a normal fashion.
This infirmity we must recognize as an instigation
to exhorbitant cravings for superiority. Unable to
- 7 -
demonstrate male power before a woman, he is impelled
to compensate by exhibiting unsurpassed power before
mon in the world at large.
1. (d) Achievement of Power through Oratory.-
Hitler could neither change his origins nor decree
his potency, and unlike Mussolini he has never tried
to develop himself physically, but he became for a
while the most powerful individual in the world, pri-
marily by the use of mass-intoxicating words. Aristotle
has said that the metaphor is the most potent force
on earth, and Hitler, master of crude metaphor, has
confirmed the dictum in this generation. By seducing
the masses with his eloquence, and getting them to
accept him as their divinely appointed guide, he com-
pelled the smaller circles of industrialists, politi-
cians and military leaders to fall into line also.
Hitler speaking before a large audience is a
man possessed, comparable to a primitive medicine
man, or shaman. He 1s the incarnation of the crowd's
unspoken needs and cravings; and in this sense he has
been created, and to a large extent invented, by the
people of Gormany.
- 8 -
Hitler has compared the masses to a woman who
must be courted with the arts and skills known to
passion only; and it is not unlikely that the emotional
source of his orgiastic speeches were childhood tantrums
by which he successfully appealed to his ever-indulgent
mother.
1. (e) Significance of the Counteractive
Pattern. - Counteraction is essential to the develop-
ment of strength, but in Hitler's case it has been
extravagent and frantic. He has not ascended step
by step, building the structure of his character
solidly as he went; but instead has rushed forward
with panting haste, pretentiously. As a result,
there is a great distance between Hitler at his best
and Hitler at his worst; which means that when he is
overcome at last by a greater force he will collapse
suddenly and completely - and as an utter wreck.
2. Counteractive Aggression, Revenge. - That
the will to power and the craving for superiority
can not account for the whole of Hitler's psychology
is evidenced by his immeasurable hatred, hatred ex-
pressed in the absence of an adequate stimulus, an
incessant need to find some object on which to vent
his pent-up wrath. This can be traced back with rela-
tive certainty to experiences of insult, humiliation
- 9 -
and wounded pride in childhood. The source of such
insults, we have many reasons to believe, was Hitler's
father, a coarse boastful man who ruled his wife
(twenty-three years younger than himself) and his
children with tyrannical severity and injustice.
2. (a) Explanation. - The hypothesis is
advanced, supported by much evidence, that as a boy
Hitler was severely shocked (as it were, blinded)
by witnessing sexual intercourse between his parents,
and his reaction to this trauma was to swear revenge,
to dream of himself as reestablishing the lost glory
of his mother by overcoming and humiliating his
father. The boy's relative weakness made this action
impossible, and so the drive and passion of revenge
was repressed and locked up within him under tension.
Only much later when a somewhat similar stimulus
occurred - the subjugation and humiliation of his
motherland (Hitler's term for Germany) in 1918 -
was this energy of revenge released, after a short
period of shock and hysterical blindness.
This would explain the fact that Hitler exhibited
no energetic ambitious drive of his own from the age
of 13 years (when his father, the enemy, died) to the
age of 29 years (when 8 new enemy, the conqueror.
- 10 -
of the motherland, appeared). It also helps to account
for Hitler's relentless devotion to the rehabilitation
of Germany, a fact which is hard to explain in a man
who is so extremely egocentric in other relations.
In Mein Kempf Hitler repeatedly speaks of Germany
as a beloved woman.
(Note. In this connection it may be said
that the evidence is in favor of Hitler's having
experienced the common Oedipus Complex (love of mother,
hate of father), but that in his case this pattern
was repressed and submerged by another pattern: pro-
found admiration, envy and emulation of his father's
masculine power and a contempt of his mother's
feminine submissiveness and weakness. Thus both
parents were ambivalent to him: his father was
hated and respected; his mother was loved and de-
preciated. Hitler's conspicuous actions have. all
been in imitation of his father, not his mother.)
Whether this genetical hypothesis is correct
or not, it is certain that there is a vast reservoir
of resentment and revenge in Hitler's make-up which
accounts for his cult of brutality and his many acts
of inexcusable destructivenoss and cruelty. He is
possessed by what amounts to a homicidal compulsion
- 11 -
which has no vent in a "weak piping time of peace"
(unless he became an outright criminal), and there-
fore he has constantly pushed events toward war, or
scapegoating.
2. (b) Significance of Revenge. - As a
result of the fact that resentment is the mainspring
of Hitler's career, it is forever impossible to
hope for any mercy or humane treatment from him.
His revengefulness can be satisfied only by the
extermination of his countless enemies.
3. Repression of Conscience, Compliance, Love. -
Unlike Goering and other associates, Hitler is no
healthy amoral brute, He is a hive of secret neurotic
compunctions and feminine sentimentalities which have
had to be stubbornly repressed ever since he embarked
on his career of ruthless dominance and revenge
(instigated by real or supposed insults). Every
new act of unusual cruelty, such as the purge of
1934, has been followed by a period of anxiety and
depletion, agitated dejection and nightmares, which
can be interpreted only as the unconscious operation
of a bad conscience. Hitler wants nothing so much
as to arrive at the state where he can commit crimes
without guilt feelings; but despite his boasts of
having transcended Good and Evil this had not been
- 12 -
possible. The suicidal trend in his personality
is eloquent testimony of a repressed self-condemning
tendency.
In conjunction with the repression of conscience
and the advance of hate there has been a repression
of affection and sympathy as if "his spirit seemed
to chide such weakness as unworthy of its pride,"
a reaction which sometimes occurs in childhood after
an experience of unbearable disillusionment occasioned
by the felt treachery of a beloved person. One may
find "a vigilance of grief that would compel the
soul to hate for having loved too well." Hitler's
affiliative tendencies have always been very weak;
he has never had any close personal friends; he is
entirely incapable of normal human relationships.
This is due, in part, to the cessation in early life
of sexual development.
3. (a) Self-Vindicating Criminality. -
Paradoxical as it may seem, Hitler's repeated crimes
are partly caused by conscience and the necessity
of appeasing it. For having once set out on a life
of crime, the man can not turn back without reversing
his entire ground for pride and taking the humiliating
path of self-abasement and atonement. The only method
- 13 -
he has of subduing his mounting unconscious guilt
is to commit snother act of aggression, and 30 to
prove, an it were, by the criterion of success, that
his policy is favored by fortune and therefore justi-
fied and right. Failure is the only wrong,
3. (b) Significance of the Repression of
Conscience hy Successful Criminality. - As soon as
the time comes when repeated ffensive actions end
in failure, Mitler will lose faith in bimself and
in his destiny, and become the helpless victim of his
repressed conscience, with suicide or mental breakdown
as the most likely outcome.
4. Projection of Oriticizable Elements of the
Self. - Hitler perceives in other people the traits
or tendencies that are criticizable in himself.
Thus, instead of being devoured by the vulture of
his own condemning conscience or of his own disdain,
he can attack what he apperceives as evil or con-
temptible in the external world, and so remain un-
conscious (most of the time) of his own guilt or
his own inferiority. This mechanism whereby a man
sees his own wicked impulses 02 weaknesses in others,
is called projection. It is one way, the paranoid
way, of maintaining self-esteem. The mechanism
- 14 -
occurs so constantly in Hitler that it is possible
to get a very good idea of the repudiated portions
of his own personality by noticing what he condemns
in others - treachery, lying, corruption, war-monger-
ing, etc, This mechanism would have had more
disastrous consequences for his sanity if he had
not goined somo governance over it by conseiously
adopting (as good political strategy) the practice
of blaming his opponents.
5, Parancid Symptoms. Hiulen's dynamical pattern,
as described, correspends closely to that of parancid
insanity. Indeed he has erhibited, at one time or
another, all of the classical symptoms of carenoid
schizophrenia: hypersensitivity, panice of anxiety,
irrational jeslousy, delusions of persecution. de-
lusions of omnipotence and messiahship.
How is it, then, that Hitler has escaped con-
finement as & dangerous psychopath? This interesting
question will be considered later.
5. Reactions to Opposition and Frustration. -
Opposition is the stimulus which startles Hitler
into life. In the face of it his powers are gathered
and augmented. Whon opposition becomes stronger
resulting in severe frustration, his reaction has
- 15 -
often been as follows: (1) emotional outburst;
tantrum of rage and accusatory indignation ending
in tears and self-pity; succeeded by (11) periods
of inertia, exhaustion, melancholy and indecisive-
ness (accompanied sometimes by hours of acute dejec-
tion and disquieting nightmares) leading to recupera-
tion; and finally (111) confident and resolute de-
cision to counterattack with great force and ruth-
lessness. The entire cycle may run its course in
24 hours, or it may be weeks before the aggressive
decision of the third stage is reached.
For years this pattern of reaction to frustra-
tion has met with success; each counterattack has
brought Hitler nearer to his goal. Since the turn
of fortune on the Russian front, however, the number
of frustrations have increased and Hitler's counter-
attacks have failed, at times disastrously. There
is no structure for defense in Hitler's personality:
he can only strike when inflated with confidence,
or collapse when confidence abandons him.
As time goes on, therefore, we can anticipate
an increase in the intensity, frequency and duration
of Hitler's periods of collapse, and a decrease in
the confidence and power of his retaliations.
- 16 - -
A point to be remembered about Hitler is that
he started his career at scratch, a nonentity with
nothing to lose, and he selected a fanatical path
for himself which requires as an ending - complete
success (omnipotence) or utter failure (death).
No compromise is possible. Since it is not he per-
sonally who has to do the fighting, his collapses can
occur in private at Berchtesgeden. where he can re-
cuperate, and then once again some hach with some
new and always more desperate plan to dectroy the
enemy. There is a powerful compulsion in him to
sacrifice himself and all of Germany to the revenge-
ful annihilation of Western culture, to die, dragging
all of Europe with him into the abyss. This he would
feel was the last resource of an insulted and unendur-
able existence,
7. Need for Creation, Painting, Architecture,
German State, Legerd of Self.- We surmise that
Hitler's early enthusiasm for painting was due to
the fact (1) that this was the one exercise at which
he excelled in school (and thus it offered a compensa-
tory form of achievement); (11) that it provided an
acceptable outlet for a destructive soiling tendency
repressed in infancy; and (111) that painting, and
- 17 -
especially architecture later, also called for much
constructiveness, which served to balance (operate
as a reaction formation to, and atonement for) the
primitive tendency to destroy. Hitler has always
enjoyed the painting of ruined temples (just as he
has liked to contemplate the destruction of cities
inhabited by his enemies); but he has likewise taken
pleasure in painting immonse nastles (just as he has
occupied himself designing buildings for the Third
Reich).
A careful study of Hitler's writings and conduct
has convinced us that he 3.8 not entirely devored to
destruction, as so many claim. In his nature there
is a deep valid strain of creativeness (Jacking,
to be sure, the necessary talent). His creativity
has been engaged in combining elements for an ideology,
in organizing the National Socialist Barty, and in
composing the allegory of his own life. He is the
author and leading actor of a great drame.
Unlike other politicians, Hitler has conducted
his life at certain seasons as a Romantic artist
does, believing that it is the function of a nation's
first statesman to furnish creative ideas, new policies,
and plans.
- 18 -
8. Repressed Need for Passivity and Abasement,
Masochism.- - Hitler's long-concealed secret hetero-
sexual fantasy has been exposed by the systematic
analysis and correlation of the three thousand odd
metaphors he uses in Mein Kampf. The results of this
study were later confirmed by the testimony of one
who "claims to know". It is not necessary to describe
its peculiar features here; suffice it t: say that
the sexual pattern has resulted from the fusion of
(i) a primitive excretory soiling tendency, and (ii)
a passive marochistic tendency (hypartrochy of the
feminine component in his nake-up). The second
element (masochism) derives much of its strength
from an unconscious need for punishment, a tendency
which may be expected in one who has assiduously re-
pressed, out of swollen pride, the submissive reactions
(compliance, cooperation. payment of debts, expression
of gratitude, acknowledgment of errors, apology,
confession, atonement) which are required of every-
body who would adaptively participate in social life.
While Hitler consciously overstrives to assert his
infinite superiority, nature instinctively corrects
the balance by imposing an erotic pattern that calls
for infinite sclf-abasement.
- 19 -
This erotic pattern, however, is not a strong
force in Hitler's personality, nor does it comprise
his entire libidinal investment. It alternates with
other patterns - repressed (or as some claim overt)
homosexuality, for example.
What is important to recognize here is that the
purpose of Hitler's prolonged counteractive efforts
is not solely to rise above his humble origins, to
overcome his weaknesses and ineptitudes, but rather
to check and conquer, by means of a vigorous idealego
reaction formation, an underlying positive craving
for passivity and submission. There is no space
here for the mass cf evidence bearing on this point,
but a few examples can be briefly listed: (i) the
large feminine component in Hitler's physical constitu-
tion, also his feminine tastes and sensibilities;
(ii) his initial identification with his mother;
(111) his exaggerated subservience, in the past, to
masterful superiors (army officers, Ludendorff, stc.);
(iv) attraction to Roehm and other domineering homo-
sexuals; (v) Hitler's nightmares which, as described
by several informants, are very suggestive of homo-
sexual panic; (v1) some of Hitler's interprotations
of human nature, such as when he says that the people
"want someone to frighton thom and make them shudderingly
- 20 -
submissive"; (vii) Hitler's repeated assertions that
he intends, like Sulla, to abdicate power (after an
orgy of conquest with full catharsis of his hate)
and live quietly by himself, painting and designing
buildings; and finally, (viii) recurrent suicidel
threats.
II. E.S. Ideocentricity, Dedication to the Making
of an Ideally Powerful Germany .. No true Garman,
friend or foe, has ever claimed that Habier is not
sincere in his dovotion to the Prussian militarists'
ideal for Germany. Thus wa can say that he has been
ideocentric (dedicated to an idea) for the last twenty
years. Because the idea consists c2 a plan for a
society from which the majority of his fellow country-
men will supposedly benefit, we can speak of him as
sociocentric (S) also. But since this interest in
his countrymen is clearly secondary to his personal
ambition - fame, immortality - wa put egocentricity
(E) first; and so write - E. S. Ideocentricity. It
is rare to find so much ideocentricity in a narcistic
personality; but only those who are incrpable of such
dedication are likely to doubt the reality of it in
Hitler.
1. Insociation in Germany. - Since Hitler and
- 21 -
a large body of the German people are mutually
agreeable, we can speak of him as insociated,
accepting and accepted. It is Hitler's intense affec-
tion for the Reich (perhaps felt to this extent only
by a nationalist born outside its boundaries) that
has acted as a decisive factor in (1) his winning the
support of the people and so satisfying his will to
power; (11) giving him the feeling or vosation, the
sense of mission; (111) providing moral justification
(in his own mind) for many illegal acts; and (iv)
keeping him relatively Hane, by bringing him into
association with a group of like-minded men and so
delivering him from the perils of psychclogical
isolation.
(Note, - The supposition that in Hitler's mind
Germany is identified with his mother helps to explain
the fervor of his dedication.)
III, Sentiments. -
Most of Hitler's sentiments are well known and
have already been listed: his high valuation of
Power, Glory, Dictatorship, Nationalism, Militarism,
and Brutality; and his low valuation of Weakness,
Indecision, Tolerance, Compassion, Peace, Rational
Debate, Democracy, Bolshevism, Materialism, Capitalism,
- 22 -
the Jewish Race, Christianity. A simplification
would be that of regarding him 88 the advocate of
the aggressive instinct (War, Power and Glory) vs.
the acquisitive instinct (Business, Peace and
Prosperity). Two questions deserve special con-
sideration: (1) Why, when he was living as'an outcast
in Vienna, did Hitler not become a Communist? and
(2) What is the explanation of Hitler's extreme
Anti-Semitism?
1. Determinants of Hitler's Anti-Communism,
1. (a) Hitler's father was an upward
mobile individual. Starting as a peasant, he worked
his way into the lower middle class, establishing
a boundary between himself and those below him.
Both parents respected their social superiors. Thus
Hitler instinctively retreated from too close associa-
tion with the workmen of Vienna.
1. (b) Hitler was too frail for construc-
tion work, was unable to hold à job, and therefore
had little opportunity to become associated with a
union.
1. (c) Having been an ardent nationalist
since the age of 12, Hitler's line of cleavage (conflict
between nations) did not conform to the communists'
line of cleavage (conflict between classes).
- 23 -
1. (d) Hitler has always been an advocate
of the hierarchical principle: government by the
fittest, rigorously trained and proved in action.
The ideal of Communism, on the other hand, calls for
a wide distribution of power among those untrained
to rule.
1. (e) Hitler's sentiments have been with
militarism from earliest youth. The materialism of
Communism never appealed to him.
1. (f) Lacking sympathy for the underdog,
the humanitarian aspect of Communism did not attract
him. Hitler has always been a bully.
2. Determinents of Hitler's Anti-Semitism. -
2. (a) The influence of wide-spread Anti-
Semitic sentiments (represented especially by such
men as Lueger and Feder), traditional in Germany.
2. (b) Hitler's personal frustrations
required a scapegoat as focus for his repressed aggres-
sion. The Jew is the classic scapegoat because he
does not fight back with fists and weapons.
2. (c) The Jew was an object upon whom
Hitler could suitably project his own inferior self
(his sensitiveness, weakness, timidity, masochistic
sexuslity).
- 24 -
2. (d) After the Versailles Treaty the
German people also needed a scapegoat. Hitler offered
them the Jewish race as an act of political strategy.
2. (e) Having assembled a veritable army
of gangsters (Nazi troopers) and aroused their fight-
ing spirit, it was necessary for Hitler to find some
object upon whom these men could vent their brutish
passions, to canalize anger away from himself.
2. (f) Jews, being non-militaristic,
could only impede his program on conquest. In
eliminating them he lost no sizeable support.
2. (g) Jews were associated with several
of Hitler's pet antipathies: business, materialism,
democracy, capitalism, communism.
2. (h) Some Jews were very rich and Hitler
needed an excuse for dispossessing them.
IV. Formal Structure, Hysteria, Schizophrenia.-
Hitler has a relatively weak character (ego
structure); his great strength comes from an
emotional complex which drives him periodically.
Usually he can not voluntarily force himself to stick
to a routine of work; he must be compelled from inside,
lifted on a wave of passion. His id (instinctual
forces) and ego (voluntary control) are in league;
his superego (conscience) is repressed.
- 25 -
1. Hysteria. - Hitler has exhibited various forms
of hysterical dissociation, most notably in the two
symptoms which constituted his war neurosis in 1918,
namely blindness and aphonia (mutism). He experiences
periods of marked abstraction, violent emotional
outbursts, visions of hallucinatory clarity. In
speaking before crowds he is virtually possessed.
He clearly belongs to the sensational company of
history-making hysterics, combining, as he does,
some of the attributes of the primitive shaman, the
religious visionary, and the crack-brained demagogue -
consummate actors, one and all.
It is important to note, however, that Hitler
has a large measure of control over his complexes.
He uses an emotional outburst to get his own way,
turning it on or off as the occasion requires. As
Erikson says, he "knows how to exploit his hysteria
On the stage of German history, Hitler senses to what
extent it is safe and expedient to let his own person-
ality represent with hysterical abandon what lives
in every German listener and reader. "
2. Schizophrenia.- Psychiatrists are not un-
familiar with borderline states lying between hystoria
and schizophrenia. In some cases the former develops
- 23 -
into the latter (a serious variety of insenity).
Since Hitlor, as noted above, has exhibited all the
symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia, the possibility
of a complete mental breakdown is not remote.
Here again, however, it should be observed that
paranoid dynamics can be used very effectively in
rousing and focussing the forces of & minority party
or of a defeated nation. The strategy consists chiefly
in (1) painting vivid and exaggerated word-pictures
of the crimes and treacherous evil purposes of your
powerful opponents (delusions of persecution); (11)
persuading your own group of its innate superiority
and glorious dostiny (delusions of grandeur); (iii)
subduing conscience by asserting that your common
end justifies the means, that your opponents have
used the most dastardly means in the past; and (iv)
blaming your enomies for every frustration, every
disaster that occurs. In consciously employing these
tactics Hitler has exploited his own paranoid trends
and retained some governance over them.
Thus the answor to the question, How has Hitler
escaped veritable insanity? might be this: (1) he
has goined a large measure of control over his
hysterical and peranoid trends by using them
- 27 -
consciously and successfully in the achievement
of his aims; (11) he has identified himself with and
dedicated himself to a sociocentric purpose, the
creation of an ideal Germany, which has served to
diminish the pains and perils of an isolated egocen-
trism; and (111) he has been supremely successful
in imposing his visions and delusions (conforming,
as they did, with existent trends) upon the German
people, and so convincing them of his unparalleled
superiority. Thus his irreal world has become real,
insanity is sanity.
V. 1. Abilities and Effective Traits. - Hitler's
success has depended to a large extent upon his own
peculiar abilities and traits:
1. (a) The ability to express with passion
the deepest needs and longings of
the people.
1. (b) The ability to appeal to the most
primitive as well as to the most
ideal tendencies in men.
1. (c) The ability to simplify complex
problems and arrive at the quickest
solution.
1. (d) The ability to use motaphor and draw
on traditional imagery and myth in
speaking and writing.
- 28 -
1. (e) The ability to evoke the sympathy
and protectiveness of his people.
The leader's welfare becomes a matter
of concern to them.
1. (f) Complete dedication to his mission;
abundant self-confidence; and stubborn
adherence to a few principles.
1. (g) Mastery of the art of political
organization.
1. (h) Tactical genius; precise timing.
1. (i) Mastery of the art of propaganda.
2. Principles of Political Action. -
Among the guiding principles of Hitler's
political philosphy the following are worth listing:
2. (a) Success depends on winning the
support of the masses.
2. (b) The leader of a new movement must
appeal to youth.
2. (c) The masses need a sustaining ideology;
it is the function of the leader to
provide one.
2. (d) People do not act if their emotions
are not roused.
2. (e) Artistry and drama are necessary to
the total effect of political rallios
and meetings.
- 29 -
2. (f) The leading statesman must be a
creator of ideas and plans.
2. (g) Success justifies any means.
2. (h) A new movement can not triumph
without the effective use of
terroristic methods
B. Predictions of Hitler's Behavior
Whatever else happens it can be confidently pre-
dicted that Hitler's neurotic spells will increase
in frequency and duration and his effectiveness as a
leader will diminish: responsibility will fall to a
greater or less extent on other shoulders. Indeed
there is some evidence that his mental powers have
been deteriorating since last November, 1942. Only
once or twice has he appeared before his people to
enlighten or encourage them. Aside from the increase
in neurotic symptoms the following things might happen:
1. Hitler may be forcefully seized by the
Military Command or by some revolutionary faction in
Germany and be immured in some prison fortress.
This event is hard to envisage in view of what we
know of the widespread reverence for the man and the
protection that is afforded him. But if this were
to occur the myth of the invincible hero would end
- 30 -
rather ignominiously, and Hitler should eventually
be delivered into our hands. The General Staff
will no doubt become the rulers of Germany if Hitler's
mental condition deteriorates much further (Option #5).
2. Hitler may be shot by some German. - The
man has feared this eventuality for many years and
today he is protected as never before. Germans are
not inclined to shoot their leaders. This is possible
but not very likely.
3. Hitler may arrange to have himself shot by
some German, perhaps by a Jew. - This would complete
the myth of the hero - death at the hand of some
trusted follower: Siegfried stabbed in the back by
Hagen, Caesar by Brutus, Christ betrayed by Judas.
It might increase the fanaticism of the soldiers
for a while and create a legend in conformity with
the ancient pattern. If Hitler could arrange to have
a Jew, some paranoid like himself, kill him, then He
could die in the belief that his fellow countrymen
would rise in their wrath and massacre every remaining
Jew in Germany. Thus he might try to indulge his
insatiable revengefulness for the last time.
4. Hitler may get himself killed leading his
olite troops in battle. - Thus he would live on as a
- 31 -
hero in the hearts of his countrymen. It is not
unlikely that he will choose this course, which would
be very undesirable from our point of view, first
because his death would serve as an example to all
his followers to fight with fanatical death-defying
energy to the bitter end, and second, because it would
insure Hitler's immortality the Siegfried who led
the Aryan hosts against Bolshevism and the Slav.
This is one of Hitler's favorite poses.
5. Hitler may go insane.- The man has been on
the verge of paranoid schizophrenia for years and
with the mounting load of frustration and failure
he may yield his will to the turbulent forces of the
unconscious. This would not be undesirable from our
standpoint, because, even if the fact were hidden
from the people, morale would rapidly deteriorate
as rumors spread, and the legend of the hero would
be severely demaged by the outcome. If Hitler became
insane, he should eventually fall into the hands of
the Allied Nations.
S. Hitler may commit suicide. Hitler has often
vowed that he would commit suicide if his plans
miscarried; but if he chooses this course he will do
it at the last moment and in the most dramatic possible
- 32 -
manner. He will retreat, lot us say, to the impregnable
little refuge that was built for him on the top of
the mountain behind the Berghof (Berchtesgaden).
There alone he will wait until troops come to take him
prisoner. As a grand climax he will either (i) blow
up the mountain and himself with dynamite; or (11)
make a funeral pyre of his dwelling and throw himself
on it (a fitting Götterdämmerung; or (111) kill him-
self with B silver bullet (Emperor Christophe); or
(iv) throw himself off the parapet. This outcome,
undesirable for us, is not at all unlikely.
7. Hitler may die of natural causes.-
8. Hitler may sock rofuge in & neutral country.-
This is not likely, but one of his associates might
drug him and take him to Switzerland in a plane and
then persuade him that he should stay there to write
his long-planned Biblc for the German folk. Since
the Hero's desertion of his people would seriously
damage the logend, this outcome would be more
desirable than some of the other possibilities.
9. Hitler may fall into the hands of the
United Nations.- This is perhaps the loast likely,
but the most desirable, outcome.
- 33 -
In making these predictions we have been swayed
most by the supposition that Hitler's chief concern
is the immortality of his legend and consequently
he will endeavor to plan his own end according to
the most heroic, tragic and dramatic pattorn.
Options #5 (insanity to somo extent) and #5 (dramatic
suicide), or #4 (death at the front), strike us as
most probable today.
Propagande measures should, if possible, be
dovised to prevent #4 and #3.
C. Suggestions for the Treatment of Hitler
1. After the Defort of Germany, if Hitler is'
taken into custody by the United Nations.- Any one
of the conventional punishments - a trial followed
by execution, by life imprisonment or by exile -
will provide a tragic ending for the drams of Hitler's
sensational career; and thus contribute the element
that is necessary to the resurrection and perpotuation
of the Fitlerion legend. "hat can the Allies do that
will spoil the tragody and thus kill the logond?
As on answer to this question, the following plen is
suggested. It should work 1f properly exocuted.
- 34 -
1. (a) Bring the Nazi leaders to trial;
condemn the chief culprits the death, but proclaim
Hitler mentally unbalanced.
1. (b) Commit Hitler to an insane asylum
(such as St. Elizabeth's, Washington, D. C.) and house
him in a comfortable dwelling specially built for his
occupancy. Let the world know that he is being well
treated.
1. (c) Appoint a committee of psychiatrists
and psychologists to examine him and test his faculties
at regular intervals. Unknown to him, have sound-
films taken of his behavior. They will show his fits
and tirades and condemnations of everyone in the world,
including the German people.
1. (d) Exhibit regularly to the public
of the entire world selected segments of these sound-
roels, so that it can be seen how unbalanced he is,
how modiocre his performance on the customary tests.
If taken in a routine, scientific and undramatic manner
tho pictures will become quite tiresome ofter a while
and the people will get bored with Hitlor in a year or
SO. (Trust science to take the drama out of anything.)
1. (e) Hitler's case should be presented
to the world as & lesson: "This 1s what happens to
- 35 -
creck-brained fanatics who try to dominate the world."
As such it could serve as a powerful deterrent to
others with fantasies of world domination.
1. (f) A thorough study of Hitler's personal-
ity would be of considerable importance to psychiatry;
#
and the publication of a carefully documented book
on the subject would not only act as a deterrent
(published in popular form) to future would-be Hitlers,
but would be a significant contribution to science.
2. Between Now and the Cossation of Hostilities. -
The aim should be either (i) to accelerate Hitler's
mental deterioration, to drive him insane; or (ii)
to prevent him from insuring the porpetuation of his
legend by ending his life dramatically and tragically.
There are various psychological techniques avail-
able for accelerating Hitler's nervous breakdown,
but they will not be considered here. None could be
so certainly effective as reposted military setbacks.
We shall limit ourselves to a fow measures which
might serve (2. (a)) to deter Hitler from arranging.
a hero's or a martyr's death for himsolf, and (2. (b))
to make him believe that the immortality of his legend
will not suffer if hc falls into the hands of the
United Nations.
- 35 -
2. (a) Flood Germany with communications
(leaflets, short-wave, long-wave, official speeches,
underground transmission from Sweden, Switzerland,
Turkey) telling the people that Hitler can not be
trusted, that he is planning (quoting Hess, Strasser,
Hanfstaengel, Rauschning and other Nazis in England
and America) to leave them treacherously to their
fate by getting himself killed. This will be a sly
trick of his to insure his own prestige and future
fame. He does not care for the Gorman people; he cares
only for his own glory. He is no better than a sea-
captain who quits his ship, leaving his crew to
drown. Drop vivid cartoons of Hitler rushing
ludicrously forward to his death on the Russian front
(out of a guilty conscience over the noble Germans he
has condomned to die there for his glory); also
cartoons of his arranging to have himself shot, and
others of his committing suicide. Interpret this as
the easy way out, e cowardly betrayal of his people,
the act of a bad conscience, the quintessence of
vanity. Warn the people against him, the falso
prophot, the Judns Iscariot of the Gorman Revolution,
etcetera. If hundreds of these leaflots, pamphlets,
- 37 -
streamers are dropped over Berchtesgeden, the chances
are thet some of them will fall in places where Hitler
himself is likely to come on them. He is very sus-
ceptible to'ridicule, and if the cartoons are clever
enough to make suicide seem cowerdly, grotesque, or
ridiculous, it may be enough to deter him. Prodic-
tion will spoil the startling effect.
2. (b) Flood Germany with another series
of communications in which the people are told that
the Nazi leaders who led them into this disastrous
war are going to be executed - all except Hitler,
who will be exiled to Saint Helena where he can brood
over his sins for the rest of his life. write as
if we thought that this was the most terrible of all
punishments. But actually this idea should appeal
to Hitler, who greatly admires Napoleon and knows
that the Napoleonic legend was fostered by the men's
last years at Saint Helena. This treatment would
be better than any he could now be hoping to receive
from his onemics. It might positively attract him.
He would imagine himself painting landscapes, writing
his new Bible, and mcking plans for an even greater
German:rovolution to be carried out in his name thirty
years honce.
- 38 -
By the repeated and not too obvious use of these
two messages Hitler would be faced by a conflict
between (1) a self-annihilation which might be in-
terpreted as a cowardly betrayal, and (2) a peaceful
old age at Saint Helena. He might choose the latter
and so allow himself to be taken by the Allies.
Only later would he discover that there was to be
no Saint Helena for him. This trick of ours is
justified by the necessity of preventing the resurrec-
tion of the memory of Hitler as a superman to rouse
future generations of criminals and revolutionaries.
D. Suggestions for the Treatment of the
German People
I. Hastening the Breakdown of Germany's Faith in
Hitler. - The German people have put their whole trust
in Hitler. He is their man, as no military commander
representing a special class could be their man.
Having taken the entire responsibility for the conduct
of affairs, he has become their conscience and so
relieved them temporarily of guilt. The pride-
system and security-system of each individual German
is thus based on Hitler's genius and success. The
bulk of the people will not easily be persuaded of
- 39 -
his incompetence and falseness. They will cling as
long as possible to the illusion of his omniscience
because without this they have nothing. When it
comes, the disenchantment will be sudden and catas-
trophic to German morale generally.
The Allies can rely on the march of physical
events to bring about the eventual disenchantment
of the German people; but since events will march
faster and the war will end sooner if this disenchant-
ment can be hastened by other means, the Allies should
not overlook the power of words to change sentiments
and attitudes. The following suggestions may prove
of some value.
1. (a) Technique of communication.- One
effective method would be that of printing leaflets
containing the names, rank and regiments of German
soldiers recently taken prisoner. The Gestapo could
hardly succeed in preventing anxious parents from
picking up these leaflets to obtain the latest news
of their sons at the front. Communications of this
sort might start somewhat as follows: NEWS FROM THE
FRONT. Among the 20,000 German soldiers who surrendered
to the world Army in Sicily the following were happy
at the prospect of going to America, the land of free
-1:40 -
speech and free action: Corp. Hans Schmidt, Capt.
Heinrich Wittels, etc. etc. "why are you leughing?"
they were asked. "Because," they answered, "we are
going to the United States; whereas you are going
to the land of the False Prophet and the Gestapo!"
etc., etc.
We suggest that NEWS FROM THE FRONT be distributed
at regular weekly intervals, like a newspaper; in
order that the Germans will learn to expect it and
look forward to it, since it will contain news that
they can not obtain in any other way.
Mixed in with the lists of German prisoners could
be printed the messages that we wish to impart to the
people.
1. (b) Name for Hitler.- In the minds of
many Germans the word "Hitler" is still surrounded
by a layer of reverential feelings which protect his
image from attack. Therefore it would be better not
to refor to him (except occasionally) by name. Much
more subtly effective would be the use of another
term: False Prophot or Falso Mossiah. Later more
dorogatory terms - the Amateur Strategist, Corporal
Satan, World Criminal No. 1 - might be effectivo.
- 41 -
1. (c) Substitution of a Higher Symbol. -
The German character-structure is morked by E strong
need to worship, obey, and secrifice. When this can
be focussed on some entity - God, the Absolute, the
German State, the Fuehrer - they are happy and healthy.
Consequently, it will be easier to break their present
allegiance to Hitler if a satisfactory substitute is
presented. The Germans will not readily accept a
value that is identified in their minds with the
special preferences of an enemy-nation (Democracy,
etc.); it must be something higher, something supra-
national that will excite the respect of all peoples
alike. There is a great need now, rather than later,
for some form of World Federation. But lacking this,
the Allics in their message to Germany, should use
terms that suggest its spirit. Against Hitler, the
False Prophet, the propagendists should speak of the
World Conscience (the name of God can not be used
without hypocrisy), and should speak of the forces
of Russia, Great Britain, France, and the Americas as
the World Army. (N.B. Suggestion for one leaflet:
Question: who has seduced the German people from
their true path? Who has turned their hearts against
the Conscience of the World? "ho is responsible
this time for Germany's encirclement by the World
Army?). To be offective the terms "World Conscience"
- 42 -
and "World Army" must be reposted frequently. "World
Police Forco" might also be used.
1. (d) A collection should be made of
passages from the first unexpurgated odition of
Moin Kampf demonstrating Hitler's cynical contempt
of the Masses. Each NEWS FROM THE FRONT should end
with one of these quotations.
1. (e) Identification of Hitler with
Mussolini. - Mussolini provided the model for the
development of the Nazi Party and Hitler publicly
expressed his admiration for the Itelien londer.
(His words on this point should be roprinted.)
Mussolini's fall will do much to undermine German
moralo, and no opportunity should be missed to
stress the connection between Hitlor's destiny and
Mussolini's defeat - the Docline and Fall of the
Unholy Allianco.
1. (f) The Conception of Destiny. -
Germans believe in prodostination (tho wave of the
future), and all communications addressed to them should
be writton as if the dofort of the False Prophot
were C. foregone conclusion. Some mossages should
como from the 'Voice of History'.
1. (g) Toking Advantage of Hitler's
- 43 -
Waning Powers. - Hitler's precise status and role in
German politics ct this moment is not definitely known;
but the decreasing frequency of his appearances is
probably due to a growing incepacity to fulfill his
former function. His montal state is ovidontly
dotoriorating. This should be assumed in talking
to the German poople. For example: "Now that
Mussolini has collapsed and Hitler is in the hands
of mental specialists, what has become of the Spirit
of Fascism?" or "Do you still believe that a man
whose senity has been completely undermined by Guilt
can lead the German people to victory age inst the
World?"
1. (h) Germany's One remaining Ally, Japan. -
The Nazi rogimo should be constantly coupled with
Japan in on ironical or satirical manner. For example:
"The Nazis and their blood-brothers, the Japanose,
have both domonstrated their willingness to dio for
Saton - this summer one million of them have thrown
away their lives in a futile attompt to destroy
civilization. "who is responsible for this ignoble
longue of Germany and Japan against the Conscionce
of the World?" "A fact to be explained: Germans
are dying every day fighting with Japanese against
Gorman-Americans. Why is that? Who is responsible."
- 44 -
1. (1) Munich Student Manifesto. - In
planning messages to Germany hints for one line of
propaganda can be obtained from the revolutionary
menifesto distributed last year by students at the
University of Munich.
2. Peace Terms, Trial of War Criminals. -
2. (a) Psychologically it is important
that Hitler, or the leader of the Nazi Perty, be
the one to surrender and sign the peace treaty.
The Allies should insist on this, should drog the
gangsters without coremony from their hiding places
and force them to sign. (A little trickery at this
point would be justified.) The terms should be
severe at first. Later when a more representative
government has been established the terms can be made
more lenient. Thus in the futuro the dictators will
be recalled in connection with the humiliation of
unconditional surrender; whereas the democratic
government will get the credit of securing mildor terms.
2. (b) A World Court, at loast one member
of which is a Swiss and one a Swede, should immodiately
publish a list of war criminals, as complete as possible,
and neutral countries should be officially worned
that no man on this list must be given senctuary.
- 45 -
The Allies should be prepared to invade any country
that harbors a world criminal.
2. (c) The trial of the war criminals
should be carried out with the utmost despatch. It
must not be allowed to drag on for months, as this
would give the Germans a convincing impression of our
moral weakness and incompetence, and postpone their
regeneration. In connection with the trial a short
readable book should be published in German explaining
the nature of international law (the brotherhood
of nations) and exposing the crimes committed by the
Fascists in A.B.C. language.
A pamphlet comparing the terms of the Versailles
Treaty with Germany's method of dealing with conquered
countries should be given wide circulation.
3. Treatment of the German People after the
Cessation of Hostilities. -
It is assumed that Germany will be invaded and
occupied by Allied forces, that simultaneously there
will be uprisings of slave labor and of civilians in
occupied territories; that much German blood will be
spilled. This is as it should be - a fitting Nomosis.
The Allied troops will march in and eventually restore
order. This function of restoring order will mrke
their presence more acceptable to the Germans.
- 46 -
It can be predicted that we will find the Gorman
people profoundly humiliated, resentful, disenchanted,
dejected, morose, despairing of the future. Accustomed
to obeying an arbitrary external authority, thoy will
have no dependable inner guides to control behavior.
There will be a wave of crime and suicide. Apathy
will be wide-spread. Having passed through a period
of intense unanimity and cooperation, Germany as a
social system will fall apart, each man to suffer
pain and mortification in private.
Disorganization and confusion will be general,
creating a breeding ground for cults of extreme
individualism. A considerable part of the population
will be weighed down by a heavy sense of guilt, which
should lead to a revival of religion. The soil will
be laid for a spiritual regenoration; and perhaps
the Germans, not we, will inherit the future.
It is assumed that the Allies will demilitarize
Germany, will insist on efficient guarantees against
futuro conspiracies, will take steps to liquidate
the Junker Class, will prevent rearmament and the
misuse of raw materials. As Dr. Foerster has said:
18 soft peace for Germany will be a very hard peace
for the German people, delivering thom to the Prussian
caste who led them astray.'
- 47 -
Nothing permenent, however, can be achieved by
such measures alone. What is required is a profound
conversion of Germany's attitude: abandonment of the
iden (1) that they are innately superior; (2) that
thoy are destined to govern the earth; (3) that there
is no human law or authority higher than the good
of the German State; (4) that power is to be admired
above everything; and (5) that Might makes Right.
In treating the Gormans psychologically WG must
roalizo that WO are dcaling with a nation suffering
from paranoid tronds: delusions of grandour; dolusions
of persecution; profound hotrod of strong opponents
and contempt of weak opponents; arrogence, suspiciousness
and envy - all of which has been built up as a roaction
to an ago-old inforiority complex and a desire to
be approciated.
Possibly the first four steps in the treatment
of a single paranoid personality can be adapted to the
conversion of Germany. In attompting this we must
not forget that the source of their psychic sickness
is wounded pride.
3. (a) First Step.- The physician must
goin the respect of the patient.
(i) Individual peranoid. - Paranoids
can not bc trented successfully if they are not impressed
- 48 -
(consciously or unconsciously) by the ability, knowledge,
wisdom, or perhaps mere magnetic force, of the physician.
Special efforts must sometimes be made to achieve
this end, since paranoids, being full of scorn, are
not easy to impress.
(11) Germany.- - The regiments that
occupy Germany should be the finest that the United
Nations can assemble - regiments with a history of
victories, composed of tall well-disciplined soldiers
commanded by the best generals. Rowdiness and drunken-
ness should not be permitted. The Germans should be
compolled to admit: "These are splendid men; not the
weak degenerates (democratic soldiers) or barbarians
(Russian soldiers) we were led to expect. ft The Ger-
mans admire orderliness, precision, efficiency.
3. (b) Second Step.- - The potential worth
of the patient should be fully
acknowledged.
(i) Individual parenoid. - The in-
dwelling burning hunger of the paranoid is for recogni-
tion, power and glory - praise from those whom he
respects. This hungor should be appeased as soon
as possible, so that the paranoid thinks to himself:
"The greet man approciates me. Together we can face
the world. " It is as if he thought: "He is God the
Father and I am his chosen son."
- 49 -
(11) Germany.- Germany's country-
side, its music, historic culture and monuments of
beauty should be appreciated and praised. The army
of occupation should manifest intonso interest in the
culture of Old Germany and complete indifference to
all recent developments. The troops should be instructed
and coached by lectures and guide-books covering the
district : thoy will occupy. They should be told that
the war is not won until the heart of the German
people has been won.
Germans of the old school should be hired to
teach the Gorman language, to guido the soldiers
on tours of the country and of musoums, to teach
nativo arts and skills. Concerts should be arranged,
omitting pieces that have been specially favored by
the Nazis. Editions of books burned by the Nazis
should be published and put on salo immediately.
All this will serve a double purpose. It will
provide education for our troops and occupy their
timo; thus helping to maintain moralo. Also the
submerged inforiority feelings and resentments of
the Germans will be alleviated.
- 50 -
3 (c) Third Stop. - Insight should be tactfully
provided, a little at E. timo.
(1) Individual parenoid. - Very
gradually, stop by step, the patient is enlightened
as to his own paranoid mechanisms. Prido in being
uncriticizable and always in the right must be gradu-
ally replaced by pride in being able to riso above
his own mochanisms and criticize himself, pride in
being strong enough to admit some weaknesses and erros.
He should be mode to understand that he has been
victimized by unconscious forces which gained control
over his proper solf. During the course of these
talks the physician should freely confess his own
woaknesses and orrors, the patient being trested
as an equal.
(ii) Gormany. - The last ten years
of Gorman history should be interpreted as a violent
infoctious fever, a possession of the spirit, which
took hold of the people as soon as they gave car to
the false prophets of Fascism.
A series of articles, editorials, essays and short
books should be written now by Germans in this country
(Thomas Mann, Reinhold Nicbuhr, Foorster, and others),
rided possibly by suggestions from psychistrists,
to be published in German newspapers and distributed
- 51 -
soon after the occupation. They should be therapeutic
essays essentially - perhaps signed by a nom de plume
as if writton by a ministor, physician, or writer
in Germany.
Not too much should be said in any ono paper;
but, in time, the lios, delusions, treacherios and
crimos of the Nazis should be reviewed objectively
in historical sequence. The German people should be
made to understand that the world regards them as
unwitting and unhappy victims of instinctual forces.
The Allies should be magnonimous enough to cdmit
their own orrors end misdeods.
3. (d) Fourth Step. - The patient should be
insociated in 8 group.
(1) Individual peranoid. - Having
attained a measure of satisfaction by winning the
respect and friendship of his physician and then having
goined some insight and control, the prtient is roady
for group therapy. Later, ho can be persuaded to
join outside groups. Grodually ho must loarn to take
his place and cooporate on an equal basis with others.
The group he joins should have a goal.
- 52 -
(11) Germany.- - If Germany is to
be converted, it is of the utmost importance that
some strong end efficient super-government be estab-
lished as soon 88 possible, providing a new world
conscience, that her people can respect. As said above,
Germans must have something to look up to - a God,
a Fuehrer, an Absolute, a national ideal. It can
not be a rival nation, or a temporary elliance of
nations. It must be 8. body - a strong body with
a police force - which stands above any single state.
A supranational symbol would eventually attract the
deference that is now focussed upon Hitler. Lacking
such 8 symbol, many Germans will certainly fell into
E. state of profound disillusionment and despair.
At the proper time Germany should be insociated as
an equal in whatever league or federation of nations
has been established.
From here on the therapy of a single peranoid
personality feils as an analogy, principally because
the Gorman people will not be in the position of a
patient who comes willingly to the physician's office.
The Nazis will be in no mood to be educated by their
enomics. Furthormore it would be very prosumptuous
of us to try it. The most that the Allics could do
- 53 -
would be to close all schools and universities until
new onti-fascist teachers and feculties had been
recruited. The greatest problem will be in denling
with a whole generation of brutalized and hardened
young Nazis. (Perhaps exhibition games of soccer,
football, lacrosse and baseball between American
and English regiments would serve to introduce ideas
of fair play and sportsmenship; but much elso must
be done - by German educators.)
For the conversion of Germany the most effective
agency will be some form of world federation. With-
out this the Allied victory will have no permenently
importent consequences.
SECTION II
Hitler the Man -- Notes for a Case History
by
W. H. D. Vernon
- 54 -
HITLER THE MAN -- NOTES FOR A CASE HISTORY
by
W. H. D. Vernon
Harvard University
The purpose of this paper is to bring together
in brief form what is known about Adolf Hitler as
a man. For if allied strategists could peer "inside
Hitler" and adapt their strategy to what they find
there, it is likely that the winning of the war would
be speeded. It must be admitted, to begin with, that
the intricacies of so complex a personality would
be difficult enough to unravel were the subject present
and cooperating in the task. But there are two further
difficulties to be faced. One must attempt both to
select out of the great mass of material which has
been written about Hitler that which appears to be
objective reporting and then further to reconstruct
his personality on the basis of this very inadequate
psychological data. We have, of course, as primary
source material, Hitler's own writings and speeches
and these tell us a good deal. Though we must admit,
therefore, at its beginning that the nature of our
analysis is very tentative and that in many instances
- 55 -
only imperfect proof can be given for the inferences
which are drawn, it is no more tentative than the
psychological pen pictures which the Nazis themselves
have found so useful (3).
HITLER'S ORIGINS AND EARLY LIFE
In any case study one must begin by asking who
the subject is, whence he como, who were his forboars.
Heiden (8) presents the most reliable genealogy avail-
able. Here we note only cortain important points.
Hitler's father, Alois, was born the illegitimate
son of Maria Anna Schicklgruber in 1837 in the village
of Spital. He was supposed to be the son of Johann
Georg Hiedler. However, to his fortieth year,¹ Alois
bore the name of his mother Schicklgruber. Only
then, when Georg Hiedler was (if still alive) 2
cighty-five years of age, and thirty-five years after
the death of his mother, did he take the namo Hitler,
the maidon name of his mother-in-low. As Hoiden says,
"In the life history of Adolf Hitler no mention is
ever made of the grendparents on his father's side.
1 January 5, 1877
2 There seems to be no rocord of his doath.
- 55 -
The details invariably refor only to his mother's
relations. There are many things to suggest that
Adolf Hitler's grandfather was not Johann Georg Hiedlor,
but an unknown man" (8, 8). The encestors on both
sides of the family were peasent people of the district
of Waldviertol, highly illiterato and very inbred
(5; 8).
Alois Hitler, ot first a cobbler, had by the age
of forty achieved the position of an Austrian customs
official. The education for this position was the
contribution of his first wife, Anna Glasl, who, fifteen
years his senior, died in 1883. His second wife,
whom ho married six weeks later, died in a year, and
three months leter, on January 7, 1885 (5), he married
Klara Poolzl, E. distant cousin.
In appearance Heiden has compared Alois to
Hindenburg (8). Gunther (5) describes his picture
as showing a big, round, hoirless skull; small,
sharp, wickod eyes; big bicyclo-hendle moustachios;
and heavy chin. He was D. hersh, stern, embitious,
and punctilious man (5; 8).
Alois' wife, Klara, is described (5) as being
a tall, nervous young woman, not as strong as most
pensent stock, who ran off to Vienna as & girl to
- 57 -
return after ten years (a dering escapade for one
in her social status). Her doctor (1) describes her
in her early forties as tall, with brownish hair
neatly plaited, a long oval face and beautifully
expressive grey blue eyes. A simple, modest, kindly
woman.
Adolf Hitler, born in 1889, as far es can be
ascertained 3 was Alois' fifth child, the third of
his own mother but the first to live more than two
years 4 This it would seem WgS a large factor in
channelling the great affection for Adolf which all
the evidence seems to show she bore him. In return,
Adolf, who feared and opposed his father -- as he
himself admits -- gave all his affection to his
mother, and when she diod of cancer in 1908 he was
prostrated with grief (8; 9; 1).
Adolf as a boy and youth was somewhat tall,
sallow and old for his age, with large melancholy
thoughtful eyes. He was neither robust nor sickly,
and with but the usual infroquent ailments of a
3
Heiden points out that the uncertain details of
Hitler's family have had to be collected from stray
publications, that Hitler is reticent to the point of
arousing suspicion, about his lifo story (8).
4 Alois' children were Alois, 1882 (son by first wife);
Angela, 1883 (daughter by second wife); Gustav, 1885-
1887; a daughter, 1886-1888; Adolf, 1889; Edmund,
1894-1900; Paula, 1895 or 1896 (childron by third wife).
- 58 -
cold or sore throat. That he had lung trouble is a
common and natural belief (9) but his doctor says
"no" (1). His recreations were such '08 were free --
walks in the mountains, swimming in the Denube, and
reading Fenimore Cooper and Karl May. 5 A quiet,
woll-mannered youth who lived with himself. 6
About Adolf's early education we know little
except what he himself tells us -- that he early
wanted to be an artist; that this outraged his father,
who sternly determined to make a good civil servant
of him; that thore was a perpotual strugglo between
the two, with his mother siding with Adolf and finally
sending him off to Vienna to complete his art education
when his father died. Except for history and geography
which caught his imagination he neglected his studies,
to find in Vienna, when he friled his art examination,
that his lack of formal education was a barrier to
entering the erchitoctural school.
At the age of nineteen, when his mother died,
he went to Vienna to spend there three lonely and
miserable years, living in "flop-houses" (7), oking
out a living by begging, shoveling snow, peddling
5
A German author of Indian stories.
S This in contrast to Hitlor's own account of himself
as a bit of a young tough (9).
- 59 -
his own postcards, working as a hod-carrier or casual
laborer of any sort. Here his ideas began to crystal-
lize, his anti-Semitism and enti-Slavism, his anti-
ideas of all sorts. In 1912 he went to Munich and
there as "water-color artist, picture postcard painter,
technical draftsman and occasional house-painter
Hitler managed to earn some sort of a living" (8, 25).
In 1914 he enlisted in the army with great enthusiasm,
performed his duties with distinction and bravery, 7 was
wounded, sent home to recover, and in March, 1917,
was back at the front. H3 was aloof from comrades,
zealous in his duty, and very lonely. Through all
the war he received no letter or parcel (8).
The war over and with no home to go to, Hitler
in 1919 was appointed an espionage agent of the
insurgent Reichswehr which had just put down the
Soviet Republic in Munich. Shortly thereafter he
came in contact with Anton Drexler and what was to
become later the Nazi party had its beginning.
Further than this it is not necessary to follow
Hitler's political history. It is too well known
and the basic structure of his personality was already
7 Militery awards were: Regimental Diplema for
Conspicuous Bravery, Military Cross for Distinguished
Service, Third Class, The Black Wounded Badge, and
The Iron Cross, First Class (8).
- 50 -
formed. Loter years have only brought to fruition
latent tendencies and laid the final product open
for the world to wonder at. We must now turn to a
closer examination of this structure.
HITLER'S PERSONAL APPEARANCE AND MANNER
Portraits or moving pictures of Hitler are common
enough, yet it is well to draw attention to various
aspects of his physique. To most non-Nazis Hitler
has no particular attraction. He resembles a second-
rate waiter. He is a smallish man, slightly under
average height. His forehead is slightly receding
and his nose somewhat incongruous with the rest of
his face. The latter is somewhat soft, his lips
thin, and the whole face expressionless. The eyes
are a neutral grey which tend to take on the color
of their momentary surroundings. 8 The look tends to
be storing or dead and lacking in sparkle. There is
an essentially feminine quality about his person
which is portrayed particularly in his strikingly
well-shaped and expressive hands (2; 8; 13; et al.).
Hitler's manner is essentially awkward and all
his movements jerky except perhaps the gestures of
This fact has caused an amazing number of different
descriptions of his actual eye color.
- 61 -
his hands. He appears shy and 111 at ease in company
and scems seldom capable of carrying on conversation.
Usually ho declaims while his associates listen. He
often scems listless and moody. This is in marked
contrast to the dramatic energy of his specches and
his skillful play upon the emotions of his vast
audiences, every changing mood of which he appears
to perccive and to turn to his own purposes. At
times he is conciliatory, ct other times he may burst
into violent temper tantrums if his whims are checked
in any way (16).
ATTITUDES, TRAITS, AND NEEDS CHARACTERISTIC OF HITLER
Attitudes toward Nature, Fate, Religion. - First
and lest words are often significant. Mein Kampf
begins with 2 sentiment of gratitude to Fato, and
almost its last paragraph appeals for vindication
to the Goddess of History. However, all through
the book there are references to Etornal Nature,
Providence, and Destiny. "Therofore, I believe today
I am noting in the sense of the Almighty creator:
by warding off the Jews I am fighting for the Lord's
work" (9, 84). This fooling of being directed by
great forces outside one, of doing the Lord's work,
is the essence of the feeling of the religious mystic.
- 62 -
No matter how pagan Hitler's othical and social ideas
may be, they have 8 quality comparable to religious
experience. Morcover, all through his acts and words,
both spokon and written, is this extremo exaggeration
of his own self-importance -- he truly feels his
divine mission (16), even to the point of forosecing
a mertyr's death (16).
As far 88 authorized religion is concerned,
Hitler recognized both its strength and weaknesses
(9; 12) and adopted freely whatever be found service-
able for his own ends. That he strikes down Protestant
and Catholic aliko is due merely to the conviction
that these religions are but old husks and must give
way to the new (9).
Toward conscience his attitude is a dual one.
One the one hand he repudiates it PS an othical
guido, heaping contempt on it as a Jowish invention,
a blemish like circumcision (15). He scorns 88
fools those who obey it (16). But in matters of
action he waits upon his innor voice, "Unless I have
the inner incorruptible conviction, this is the solu-
tion, I do nothing .I will not act, I will wait
no motter what happens. But if the voice spenks,
then I know the time has come to not" (15, 181).
Like Socrates he listens to his Daimon.
- 63 -
Hitler's Attitudo toward Power and His Need for
Aggression. - To the German people and the world at
lorge, Hitler appears as a mhn of tremendous strength
of will, dotormination, and power. Yet those who are
or have been close to him (e.g., 16) know that he is
conscious of being powerful and impresses others as
such only at certain times. When ho is declaiming
to a grort throng or when he is on one of his
solitary walks through the mountains, then Hitler is
conscious of his destiny 00 one of the great and power-
ful of the ages. But in between these periods he
feels humiliated and work. At such timos ho is
irritated and unable to do or docide anything. It
is those feelings of his own weakness that no doubt
have determined to 0 great extent his ideas on the
education of youth. All weakness must be knocked
out of the new German youth, they must be indifforent
to pain, have no fear of death, must learn the art of
self-command; for only in this way can they become
creative Godmon (13). Hitler's feolings of workness
and power probably also determine his attitudes towords
pooples and nations. For those who are work, or for
some roason do not display power, he has only contempt. 9
9 "My groat political opportunity lios in my deliberate
use of power ct 0 time when there are still illusions
abroad as to the forces that mould history" (16, 271).
- 64 -
For those who are strong he has feelings of respect,
fear, submissiveness (4; 9; 16). For the Britain of
the great war period he had great respect (9), but
only contempt for the powerless Indian revolutionaries
who tried to oppose British imperial power (9) 10
For the masses over whom he hos sway he feels only
contempt. He compares them to a woman who prefers
to submit to the will of someone stronger (9). He
harangues the crowd at night whon they are tired and
less resistant to the will of another (9). Ho usos
every psychological trick to break the will of an
audience, He mokes uso of all the conditions which
make in the German people for a longing for submission,
their anxieties, their feelings of lonelinoss (9).
He understands his subjects because they are so like
himself (4).
Closely related to his attitude toward power,
and one of the basic clements of Hitler's personality
structure, is a deop-lying need for aggression,
destruction, brutality. It was w1th him in phantasy
at least in childhood (9). And there is evidence
10 It is interesting to note that the war against
Britain apporrs only to have broken our because
Hitler was convinced that she would not and could
not rosist the strength of the German armed forces.
- 65 -
of it from his days in Vienna (7). We know too (9)
that the outbreck of the first great war was 0 tremendous-
ly thrilling experience for him. Since the war we
have seen his adoption of so-called "communist"
mothods of dealing with hocklers (9), the murder of
his close friends, his brutality toward the Jews,
his destruction of one small nation after another,
and his more recent major war against the rest of
the world. But this clement of his personality is
so patent that it hordly needs documenting.
Hitler's attitude toward the Jews and toward
Race.- Anti-Semitism is not on uncommon thing and
Europe has a long history of it but, 08 has been pointed
out, "in the case of Hitler, the Jew has been elevated,
so to speak, to a degree of evilness which he had
never before obtained" (10, 8). That this hotred is
of a more than usual pathological nature is suggested
by the morbid connection which Hitlor makes between
the Jew and discase, blood discrse, syphilis (9),
and filthy excrescences of all sorts. The Jew
in fact 18 not even a benst, he is a creature outsido
nature (16). He is at the root of all things ovil
not only in Germany but clsewhere and only through
his dostruction may the world be saved. It is at
this point, too, that Hitler's foolings about race
- 66 -
find expression. For him there is on inner emotional
connection between sex, syphilis, blood impurity,
Jowishness and the degeneration of pure, healthy,
and virile recial strains. Like the need for
aggression, his fear of the tointing of blood is a
major element in Hitler's personality structure.
Hitler's Attitude toward Sex.- That Hitler's
attitudo toward sex is pathological is already clear
from what has been said above. The best sources
we have do not, however, tell us explicitly what it
is that 1.8 wrong with Hitler's sex life. From the
fect that his close associate, Rbbm, as well as many
of the corly Nazis were homosexuals it has been a
matter of gossip that Hitler too is affected in this
way. All reliable sources, however, deny that there
is any evidence whatever for such an idea (8). In
foot, Hitler appears to have no close men friends,
no intimates nt all. RUhm was the only one whom he
addressed with the intimate "du" (5) and it is
reported that no one has succeeded since the latter's
death to such 0 position of intimacy.
In'regard to women, the reports are conflicting.
Most of the recent books by nowspaper men (e.g., 5)
stress Hitler's ascoticism, his disinterest in women.
- 57 -
However, Hoiden (8) documents his love offairs, and
Hanisch (7), Strasser (18), and Rauschning (13) have
considerable to say about his attitude toward the
opposite sex. As far 08 can be ascertained, it is
completely lacking in respect, even contemptuous (7);
it is opportunistic (18; 16) and in the actual sexual
relationship there is something of a perverso nature
along with a peculiar enslavement to the partner of
his choice (8). It is certain that many women find
Hitler fascinating (16; 7) and that he likes their
company, but it is also true that he hrs never marriod,
and in every love affair the break was made, not by
Hitler, but by the lrdy concerned (8). In one case,
that of his niece, Goli, there was real tragedy in-
volved for either he murderod her in 0 fit of passion,
according to Strasser's evidence (18), or he so abused
and upset her that she committed suicide (8). Finally,
one must mention again his frenzied outburst against
syphilis in Mein Kampf (9) as if the whole Gorman
nation were 0 vast putrifying hotbed of this loath-
some doserse. Hoicon's statement (3) that "there
is something wrong" with Hitler's sex life is surcly
an eloquont understetemont.
- 58 -
Hitler's need to Talk. - This rather obvious
need is worth noting at this point, after what has
just been said above. 11 Ever since Hitler's discovery
of his facility as a speaker, his own people and the
world have been deluged with his words. The number
of speeches is large, varying in length from one and
a half to two hours, though there are several of
three and even four hours' duration. In private,
moreover, Hitler seldom converses, for each individual
whom he addresses is a new audience to be harangued.
In his moments of depression he must talk to prove
to himself his own strength and in moments of
exaltation to dominate others (16).
Hitler's Attitude toward Art.- - Though Hitler's
father intended him to be a civil servant, he himself
craved to be an artist and his failure to be recognized
as such by the Vienna school was one of his most
traumatic experiences (9). As Fuhrer his interest
in art continues and he shows distinctly favorable
attitudes toward music, painting, and architecture.
As is well known, Wagner is Hitler's favorite --
we might almost say only -- composer. At twelve
he was captivated by Lohengrin (9), at nineteen in
Vienna he was championing the merits of Wagner as
- 59 -
against Mozart (7), and as Führer he has seen Die
Meistersinger over a hundred times (19). He knows
all of Wagner's scores (19) and in their rendition
he gets emotional release and inspiration for his
actions. His savior complex, feelings about sex,
race purity, his attitudes toward food and drink,
all find stimulus and reinforcement in the plots,
persons, and themes of his favorite composer. It
is interesting, for example, that Hitler has chosen
Nuremberg, the town which Wagner personified in
Hans Sachs, as the official site of the meeting of
the annual Nazi Party Congress (19).
Wagner's influence over Hitler extends beyond
the realm of music to that of literature. Among
the Fuhrer's favorite readings are Wagner's political
writings, and consciously or unconsciously he has
1
copied Wagner's turgid and bombastic manner with a
resulting style which according to Heiden often
transforms "a living sentence into a confused heap
of bony, indigestible words" (8, 308).
In the field of painting there are two matters
to consider -- Hitler's own work and his attitude
toward the work of others. As regards the former,
we have evidence that during his Vienna days Hitler
showed little ability except for copying the painting
11, From the analytic point of view this may well be
interpreted as a compensation for sexual difficulties.
- 70 -
of others (7). Some of the works that are extant,
however, display some flair for organization and
color, though there is nothing original. Many of
his paintings show a preoccupation with architecture,
old ruins, and with empty desolate places; few of
them contain people. The somewhet hackneyed designs
of the party badge and flag give further evidence
of lack of originality. As regards the painting of
others, Hitler has surrounded himself with military
pictures of all sorts and with portraits of very
literal and explicit nudes (13; 18). At his command
German art has been purged of its modernism, and
classic qualities are stressed instead.
It is in architecture that Hitler's artistic
interest finds its greatest outlet. He spends a
great deal of time over architect's designs and all
important German buildings and monuments must be approved
by him. Massiveness, expensiveness, size, and classic
design are the qualities which Hitler stresses and
approves in the buildings of the new Germany. His
seventy-five-foot-broad motor roads, the conference
grounds at Nuremberg, and his retreat at Ferchtesgaden
are all examples of these emphases.
- 71 -
Hitler's Ascetic Qualities.- Hitler's ascetic
qualities are popularly known and are substantiated
by many writers (5; 13). Hitler himself, according
to Rauschning (16), accredits his vegetarianism and
his abstinence from tobacco and alcohol to Wagner's
influence. He ascribes much of the decay of civiliza-
tion to abdominal poisoning through excesses. This
ascetism of Hitler's is all the more striking among
a people who, on the whole, are heavy eaters and fond
of drinking. It is worthy of note, however, that at
times Hitler is not averse to certain types of over-
indulgence. He is, for example, excessively fond
of sweets, sweetmeats, and pastry (7; 15), and will
consume them in large quantities.
Hitler's Peculiar Abilities.- Hitler, the unedu-
cated, is nevertheless a man of unusual ability,
particularly in certain areas where formal education
is of little value and even in areas where it is
supposed to be important. More than once we find
those who know him (e.g., Rauschning (16) stressing
his extraordinary ability to take a complicated problem
and reduce it to very simple terms. It is hardly
necessary to document Hitler's ability to understand
and make use of the weaknesses of his opponents, his
- 72 -
ability to divide them and strike them one by one,
his sense of timing so as to strike at the most
opportune moment. It is certain, however, that
these abilities of Hitler's have definite limitations.
Hitler has become more and more insolated (16) from
contact with what is actually occurring and thus
has insufficient or incorrect data on which to base
his decisions. Moreover, his own frame of reference
is an unsatisfactory guide to an understanding of
peoples outside the European milieu. He has, con-
sequently, frequently misunderstood both British
and American points of view with unhappy results to
his own program of expansion.
Overt Evidence of Maladjustment. - Certain facts
symptomatic of maladjustment have already been men-
tioned, such as his peculiar relationship to women.
Here there have to be added others of a less specific
nature. Hitler suffers from severe incomnia and when
he does sleep has violent nightmares (16). At times
he suffers from hallucinations, often hearing voices
on his long solitary walks (16). He has an excessive
fear of poisoning and takes extreme precautions to
guard against it both in his food and in his bedroom
(16). Here the bed must be made only in one specific
- 73 -
way (15). He cannot work steadily, but with explosive
outbursts of activity or not at all (15; 8). Even
the smallest decision demands great effort and he
has to work himself up to it. When thwarted, he will
break out into an hysterical tentrum, scolding in
high-pitched tones, foaming at the mouth, and stamping
with uncontrolled fury (15). On several occasions,
when an important speech was due, he has stood silent
before his audience and then walked out on them (15).
In the case of at least one international broadcast
he was suddenly and inexplicably cut off the sir.
Finally, there is Hitler's threat to commit suicide
if the Nazi party is destroyed or the plans of the
German Reich fail (5).
THE SOURCES OF HITLER'S MALADJUSTMENTS
The Sources of Hitler's Aggressive and Submissive
Traits. - The schizoid temperament, one such as Hitler's,
which combines both a sensitive, shy, and indrawn nature
with inhibitions of feeling toward others, and at the
same time, in way of compensation, violent aggressive-
ness, callousness, and brutality, from one point of
view of constitutional psychology is usually associated
with a particular type of physique. It is difficult
from the sort of photograph available to classify
- 74 -
Hitler's physique accurately. He probably falls in
Kretschmer's athletic group though verging on the
pyknic (11). This would place him in the schizophrenic
group of temperaments. In terms of Sheldon's system,
he is probably classifiable as a 443 with a considerable
degree of gynandromorphy, that is, an essentially
masculine body but one showing feminine characteristics
also (17).
Probably more important, however, is the social
milieu and the family situation in which Hitler grew up.
In a strongly patriarchal society, his father was
particularly aggressive and probably brutal toward
his son, Adolf. This would produce an individual
both very submissive to authority and at the same time
boiling over with rebelliousness to it. Further, we
know of the extreme attachment which Hitler had for
his mother. If, as seems most likely, he has never
outgrown this, 12 there might be a protest in his
nature against this enslavement, which in turn might
give rise to a deep unconscious hatred, a possible
source of frightful unconscious rage. 13 Finally,
12 Note Hitler's frequent and unusual use of the word
Motherland for Germany (9).
13 Hitler's hatred of meat and love of sweets is
said to be often found in cases harboring an unconscious
hate of the mother (15).
- 75 -
the consistent failure to achieve his artistic
ambitions, his loneliness and poverty in Vienna, his
failure to arrive at any higher status than that of
corporal in his beloved army (8), all must have
stimulated in highest degree whatever original tendency
there was toward brutality and destructiveness.
The sources of Hitler's Anti-Semitism.- - Anti-
Senitism was part of the social milieu in which Hitler
grew up. He admits himself (9) that he avoided the
only Jewish boy at school and it is known that anti-
Semitism and asceticism were strong in Catholic
rural communities in Europe. In Vienna, of course,
Hitler came in contact with violent anti-Semitic
literature and it is at this period that he claims
his deep-rooted hatred for the Jews was born (9).
The pathological strength of this hatred suggests
that there were certain psychological as well as
cultural reasons for it. What they were we can only
surmise but we can list certain possibilities. We
know that the name Hitler is a common Jewish one
(8), that Adolf was teased about his Jewish appear-
ance in Vienna. 14 There is, too, the mystery of
14 It is interesting that Hitler's description of the
first Jew to arouse his hatred is almost word for
word the same as Hanisch's description of Hitler in
Vienna (7).
- 75 -
Alois Hitler's true parentage which his son may have
known. We also know that many of the people who helped
him, gave him food, and bought his paintings were
Jews 15 To have to accept kindnesses from people he
disliked would not add to his love of them. But
there must be more to it than this for Hitler's anti-
Semitism is bound up with his morbid concern with
syphilis and phobia over contamination of the blood
of the German race. This, therefore, leads to a
discussion of Hitler's theories.
Sources of Hitler's Theories of Race and Blood.-
The concept of the superiority of the Aryan race is,
of course, not new with Hitler. Its great exponent
was Houston Stewart Chamberlain. In the writings
of Wagner also the same conception is exalted. But
the constant repetition of the idea of blood, pure
blood, and untainted blood which occurs in Mein Kampf
calls for a more than purely cultural explanation.
This is suggested all the more forcefully because
of the association which Hitler makes between im-
purities of blood which are due to disease (syphilis)
and impurities in the blood of 8 superior race due
to mixture with a racially inferior stock; further
15 His rejection of the Jew may also stom from the
rejection within himself of the passive gentle elements
which are prominent in Hebrew- Christian thought.
- 77 -
to the fact that he points to the Jews as the source
of both.
Now it is known that syphilophobia often has
its roots in the childhood discovery of the nature of
sexual congress between the parents. with a father
who was an illegitimate and possibly of Jewish origin, 16
and a strong mother fixation, such a discovery by the
child Adolf may well have laid the basis of a syphilo-
phobia which some adventure with a Jewish prostitute
in Vienna fanned to 8 full flame 17 Terrified by
the fear of his own infection, all the hatred in his
being is then directed toward the Jews.
ONE POSSIBLE PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION
Hitler's personality structure, though falling
within the normal range, may now be described as of
the paranoid type with delusions of persecution and
of grandeur. This stems from a sado-masochistic
split in his personality (4). Integral with these
alternating and opposed elements in his personality
are his fear of infection, the identification of the
16 The name Hitler is Jewish as was pointed out.
17 This is mere conjecture and must be treated as
such. But it 1s the sort of explanation which fits
known psychological facts.
- 78 -
Jews as the source of that infection, and some de-
rangement of the sexual function which makes his
,relations to the opposite sex abnormal in nature.
The drama and tragedy of Hitler's life are the
projection onto the world of his own inner conflicts
and his attempts to solve them. The split in Hitler's
personality seems clearly to be due to his identifica-
tion both with his mother, whom he passionately loved,
and with his father, whom he hated and feared. This
dual and contradictory identification (the one is
gentle, passive, feminine; the other brutal, aggressive,
masculine) results -- whenever Hitler is playing the
aggressive role -- also in a deep hatred and contempt
for his mother and love and admiration for his
father. This inner conflict is projected into the
world where Germany comes to represent the mother,
and the Jew and -- for a time -- the Austrian State,
the father. Just as the father is the cause of his
mixed blood, the source of his domination and punish-
ment, and of the restrictions of his own artistic
development; just as in the childish interpretation
of sexual congress the father attacks, strangles,
and infects the mother, so the Jew, international
Jewish capital, etc., encircle and restrict Germany,
- 79 -
threaten and attack her and infect her with impurities
of blood. Out of the hetred of the father and love
of the mother came the desire to save her. So Hitler
becomes the savior of Germany, who cleanses her of
infection, destroys her enemies, breaks their encircle-
ment, removes every restriction upon her so that she
may expand into new living space, uncramped and un-
throttles. At the same time, Hitler is cleansing
himself, defending himself, casting off paternal domina-
tion and restriction.
Not only is the Father feared but he is a source
of jealousy for he possesses, at least in part, the
beloved mother. So he must be destroyed to permit
complete possession. The destruction of the father
is achieved symbolically by the destruction of the
Austrian State and complete domination and possession
of the mother through gathering all Germans in a
common Reich.
But the mother is not only loved but hated. For
she is weak, besides he is enslaved to her affections
and she reminds him all too much, in his rôle as
dominant father, of his own gentle sensitivo nature.
So, though he depends on the German people for his
position of dominance, he despises and hates them,
- 80 -
he dominates them and, because he fears his very
love of them, he leads them into the destructive-
ness of war where multitudes of them are destroyed.
Besides, the Jewish element in his father identifica-
tion permits him to use all the so-called "Jewish"
tricks of deceit, lying, violence, and sudden attack
both to subject the German people as well as their
foes.
To be dominant, aggressive, brutal is to arouse
the violent protest of the other side of his nature.
Only severe anxiety can come from this; nightmeres
and sleepless nights result. But fear is assuaged
by the fiction of the demands of Fate, of Destiny,
of the Folk-Soul of the German people.
The denouement of the drama approaches at every
aggressive step. The fiction of the command of Fate
only holds as long as there is success -- greater and
groater success to assuage the mounting feelings
of anxioty and guilt. Aggression, therefore, has a
limit; it cannot go beyond the highest point of
success When that is reached, the personality
may collapse under the flood of its own guilt
feelings.
18 It is, therefore, quito possible that
18 That Hitler is partly conscious of this we know
from his own threats of suicide and references to
dying for the German poople (9).
- 81 -
Hitler will do away with himself at whatever moment
German defeat becomes sufficient enough to destroy
the fiction of Fate which has shielded him from the
violence of his own guilt. He may then turn upon
himself the destructiveness which so long has been
channelled toward his people and their neighbors.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Bloch, E.
MY PATIENT HITLER.
Collier's, March 15, 1941.
2. Dodd, M.
THROUGH EMBASSY EYES.
New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1939.
3. Farago, L.
GERMAN PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE.
New York: Committee on National
Morale, 1941.
4. Frome, E.
ESCAPE FROM FREEDOM.
New York: Farrar & Rinchart, 1941.
5. Gunther, J.
INSIDE EUROPE.
New York and London: Harper, 1935.
6. Haffner, S. GERMANY: JEKYLL AND HYDE.
London: Secker & Warburn, 1940.
7. Hanisch, R. I WAS HITLER'S BUDDY.
New Republic, April 5, 1939.
8. Heiden, K.
HITLER, A BIOGRAPHY.
London: Constable, 1936.
9. Hitler, A.
MEIN KAMPF.
New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1939.
10. Hitler, A.
MY NEW ORDER.
New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1941.
11. Kretschmer, E. PHYSIQUE AND CHARACTER.
New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1925.
12. Krueger, K. INSIDE HITLER.
New York: Avalon Press, 1941.
13. Lewis, W.
HITLER CULT.
London: Dent, 1939.
14. Life,
June 23, 1941.
15. Medicus.
A PSYCHIATRIST LOOKS AT HITLER.
New Republic, April 26, 1939.
16. Rauschning, H. HITLER SPEAKS.
London: Butterworth, 1939.
17. Sheldon, W.H. THE VARIETIES OF HUMAN PHYSIQUE.
New York: Harper, 1940.
18. Strasser, O. HITLER AND I.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1940.
19. Viereck, P. METAPOLITICS.
New York: Knopf, 1941.
SECTION III
Detailed Analysis of Hitler's Personality
(Written especially
for psychologists
and psychiatrists)
- 82 -
FOREWORD TO THE DETAILED ANALYSIS
In writing this analysis of Hitler's personality,
the use of certain technical words was unavoidable.
Although I have attempted to follow as simple and
intelligible a form as possible, I could not, without
much circumlocution and vagueness, get along without
three terms:
Need (roughly synonymous with Drive, impulse,
tendency, purpose, instinct). This is a force within
the subject (i.e., the individual whose behavior
is being studied) which inclines him to strive toward
a certain goal, the attainment of which reduces momen-
tarily the tension of the need. Needs vary in kind
and in strength.
Press (plural: press). This is a force, emanating
from an object (usually a person) in the environment,
which is directed toward the subject. A press (for
the subject) is the need or drive in the object, which,
if successful, would harm or benefit him. Press
vary in kind and in strength.
Cathexis. This is the power of an object
to arouse feelings of liking (positive cathexis)
or of disliking (negative cathexis) in the subject.
It is also permissible to say that the subject
- 83 -
"positively cathects" or simply "cathects" (velues,
admires, loves) one object; or that he "negatively
cathects" (depreciates, scorns, fears, hates) another.
The cathexis (potency) of objects -- their ability
to evoke behavior in the subject -- cen vary in kind
(positive or negative) or in strength.
1. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Thirty years ago Hitler was a common bum, an
unemployed nonentity, a derelict of the polyglot
society that was Vienna. "It was a miserable life,"
his pal, Hanisch, has written, "and I once asked him
what he was really weiting for. He answered: 'I
don't know myself. I I have never seen such helpless
letting-down in distress."
Twenty years later Hitler was dictator of all
Germany. He was not weiting for anything; but demending
and getting all that a boundlessly ambitious man could
want. Many people thought that they had never seen
such resolute confidence in victory.
Three years ago, at the age of fifty-one, Hitler
was the most powerful and successful individual on
earth, on the one hand, the most worshipped, on the
other, the most despised. In Germany he was virtually
- 84 -
a demigod: he had unlimited power; he was always
right; he could do no wrong; he was the savior of the
Vaterland, the conqueror of Europe, the divinely
appointed prophet of a new era. There was a Hitler
Strasse or Hitler Platz in every town. "Heil Hitler"
was the convential greeting for acquaintances. The
man's picture was prominently displayed in every
public building, in every railroad station, in millions
of homes. His autobiography was accepted as the Biblo
of a revolutionary folk religion. Hitler was compared
to Christ.
The man is chiefly interesting as a force that
has affected the lives of more people on this globe
than any man in history, aided, to be surc, by new
end miraculous instruments. of communication. How was
it possible for a man so insignificant in stature and
appearance, so deficient in bodily strength and omotional
control, so lecking in intellectual attainments --
how was it possible for such a man to succeed where
the mightiest Germans of the past had failed? What
kind of a man is this Hitler? What are his chief
abilities and disabilitios? "hat conditions in
Germany wore conducive to his meteoric rise to power?
What is he likely to do next? And, if the Allies
- 85 -
get their hands on him, how can he be treated 30 that
he will never rise again as a legendary figure to
instigate another Satanic revolution against culture?
These are among the questions that have been faced
in this paper.
The aspects of Hitler's personality that especially
require explanation are these: the intensity of the
men's dedication to the creation of an ideal; the
nature of his life-drama, or Mission, as he conceives
it; the fanaticism of his sentiments pro Power,
Glory, Dictetorship, Militarism, Brutelity, the
Aggressive Instinct, Nationalism, Purity of Blood;
and the fanaticism of his sentiments con Weakness,
Indecision, Tolerance, Compassion, Peace, Retional
Debate, Democracy, Bolshevism, the Acquisitive Instinct,
Materialism, Capitalism, the Jewish Rece, Christienity.
Also of interest are: the nature of his oratorical
power over the emotions of the masses; his painting
and architechtural interests; the vagaries of his
sex instinct; end the significance of his neurotic
and psychotic symptoms.
- 86 -
II. PHYSICAL CONSTITUTION
1. Physique
A point of fundamontal importence is the large
gynic (fominine) component in Hitlor's constitution.
His hips are wide and his shoulders relatively
narrow. His muscles are flabby; his legs thin and
spindly, the latter being hidden in the pest by
heavy boots and more recontly by long trousers. He
is hollow chosted, and in the throos of passionate
speech his voice sometimes breeks into shrill felsetto.
In contrast to his masculine ideal for German youth,
Hitler's physical strength and agility are definitely
below the average. He was froil 28 a child, never
labored in the fields, never played rough games.
He has long tapering sensitive fingers. In Vienna,
he was too week to be employed on construction jobs
and before the outbroak of "orld Wer I was rejected
by the Austrian Army as permanently disquelified
for service. Ho was discouraged after one attempt
to ride a horse, and in the last twenty years his
exercise has been limited to short walks. Some
informants say that he is physically incapable of
normal sexual relations. His movements have been
- 87 -
described as womanish - a dainty Indylike way of
walking (when not assuming a military carriage in
public), effeminate gestures of his arms -- a
peculier graceless ineptitude reminiscent of a girl
throwing & baseball.
2. Medical and Psychiatric History
Hitler has suffered from nervous gastritis, or
indigestion, for many years. This is probably a
psychosomatic syndrome, part and parcel of his general
neuroticism.
A German psychiatrist who examined Hitler's modical
record in World War I has reported that the diagnosis
of his condition was hysterical blindness. In other
words, he did not suffer from mustard gas poisoning,
as publicly stated, but from a war neurosis. It has
also been said that he was not only blind but dumb,
and (according to one informant) doof.
Some years ago E benign polyp was removed from
8 vocal chord.
Hitler is a victim of tomper tantrums which have
increased in intensity and frequency during the last
ten years. A typical scizure consists of (1) pacing,
shouting, cursing, blaming, accusations of treachery
- 88 -
and betrayal; (2) weeping and exhibitions of self-
pity; and (3) folling on the floor, foaming at the
mouth, biting the carpet. The man has some control
over these epileptiform attacks, using them to get
his own way with his close associates.
Hitler also suffers from agitated depressions,
affrighting nightmeres, hypochondriscal states in which
he fears that he will be poisoned or die from cancer
of the stomach.
III. APPEARANCE AND EXPRESSIVE ATTITUDES
The most significant fact about Hitlor's appear-
ance is its utter insignificance. He is the proto-
type of the little men, an unnecessary duplicate,
apparently, that one would never turn to look at
twice. For ten years, notwithstending, Germans have
been gazing at him and, spollbound, scen the magnetic
figure of one who could have said and done what Hitler
has said and done.
Comments have chiefly contored on Hitler's eyes
and his hands. Although his greyish-blue eyes are
usually stary and dead, imporsonal and unseeing, at
times he looks a man or woman straight in the face
with a fixed, unwavering gazo that has been described
- 89 -
08 positivoly hypnotic. Behind the hebitual vacancy
of expression some discorn an intonso flome of
passionate dedication. His hands are strikingly
well-shaped and expressive, and in haranguing an
audience they are used to good effect.
In all other respects, Hitler's appearance is
totally lacking in distinction. His features are soft,
his cheeks sallow and puffy, his handshake loose, his
palms moist and clammy. Such features can hardly
be appreciated by the average visitor as evidences
of an Iron Man.
In his reactions to the world, Hitler plays
many ports. There is the expressionless Hitler,
like a dummy standing with upraised hand in the front
of a six-wheeled motorcar that moves at a slow pace
down the great avenue between serried ranks of shouting
worshipful adherents. There is the embarrassed Hitler,
111 at case, even subservient, in the presence of a
stranger, an aristocrat, a great general, or a king
(as on his visit to Italy). There is the gracious
Hitler, the soft, good-natured Austrian, gontle,
informal, and oven modest, welcoming friendly admirers
at his villa; as well as tho sentimental Hitler,
weeping over E deed cenary. Then there is the tactical
- 90 -
Hitler, who comes in at the critical moment with the
daringly right decision; and the mystical Hitler;
hinting of a thousand years of superiority for the
German folk; the possessed Hitler, shricking with,
fenatical fury as he exhorts the masses; the
hysterical Hitler, rolling on the carpet or shaking
with terror as he wakes from a nightmare; the
apathetic Hitler, limp, indolent, and indecisive;
and at all times, the soapbox Hitler, ready to go
off half-cocked on a long tirade even though he is
addressing a single individual. Of all those, it is
the tactical Hitler, the mystical Hitler, and the
possessed Hitler which have been chiefly instrumental
in winning the position he now holds. It is because
of these powerful inhabitants of his being that people
have accepted and tolerated the less appealing or less
bearable inhabitants.
- 91 -
IV. PAST HISTORY
Chronology
1837
Maria Anna Schicklgruber has an illegitimate
son, Alois, born in Strones, near Spital
Johann Georg Hiedler (Hitler) m. Morie Anne
Schicklgruber
1850
Birth of Klara Poelzl in Spital
1877, Jan. 6
Alois Schicklgruber legitimized as Alois Hitler
Alois Hitler m. Anna Glasl-Horer (14 years
older)
1883
Death of Anna Glasl-Horer in Braunau
1883
Alois Hitler m. Franziska Matzelberger
cal883
Birth of Alois Hitler Jr., 2 months after
marriage
1884
Birth of Angela Hitler
1884
Death of Franziska Matzelbergor
1885, Jan. 7
Alois Hitler (47 years) m. Klara Poolzl
Birth of two children who die in infancy
1889, Apr. 20
Birth of Adolf Hitler in Braunau
Family move to Passau (Bavaria) on Austrian
border.
cal893
Alois Hitler retires on a pension
Family move to Lambach (24 miles from Linz);
Catholic convent
ca1896
Birth of Paula Hitler
ca1900
Family move to Leonding (suburb of Linz);
Technical School
1903, Jan. 3
Death of Alois Hitler
Family move to Linz
1904-5
Adolf Hitler attends school in Steyr
1907, Oct.Hitler fails to pass examination of Academy
of Arts, Vienna
1907, Dec. 21
Klara Hitler dies (A. H. is 18 years old)
1908, Jan. A. H. moves to Vienna
1908, Oct. A. H. fails a second time to pass examination
of Academy of Arts
1913
A. H. moves to Munich.
* Not all these dates are reliable; most of the
early ones are from Gunther's INSIDE EUROPE.
- 93 -
A. CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE
1889 - 1907
I. Family Relations
1. Father
Some of the confusion that has arison in regard
to Hitler's forobears disappoars 88 soon C8 we realizo
the name Hitlor has been variously spelled - Hidler,
Hiedler, Huettler - by different members of the same
illiterate peasant family. Adolf Hitlor's parents
were both desconded from one Hitler (father's grand-
father and mother's groat-grandfather), an inhabitant
of the culturally backward Weldviertel district,
Upper Austria.
Marshal Hindonburg
Alois Hitler --
Hitler's fether.
Note resemblance
to Hindenburg.
- 94 -
Family History and Personality of Father
The chief facts about Alois Hitler which have
bearing on our analysis are these:
(a) According to an inquiry ordered by the
Austrian Chancellor, Dollfuss, Maria Anne Schickl-
gruber became pregnant during her employment as a
servant in a Jewish Viennese family. For this
reason she was sent back to her home in the country.
If this is true, Alois Hitler may have been half-
Jewish. The fact that he selected a Jew, Herr Prinz
of Vienna, to be the godfather of his son Adolf, is
in line with this hypothesis.
(b) In any event, Alois Hitler was illegitimate
and as such was no doubt made to suffer the contempt
of the little community, Spital, in which he was reared.
Perhaps it was for this reason that he left his home
at an early age to seek his fortune in Vienna.
(c) Alois Hitler started life as 8 simple
cobbler but finelly improved his status by becoming
a customs official. For a time he patrolled the
German-Austrian border, was known as a 'man-hunter'.
He was very proud of this position, believing that
it entitled him to lord it over those of the class
that had once scorned him.
- 95 -
(d) In appearence Alois Hitler resembled Marshal
Hindenburg. He had a walrus moustache, under which
protruded sullen and arrogant a lower lip. He wore
an uniform, his badge of status; and as a border
patrolman carried a revolver on his person. He smoked
and ron after women. It is said that he frequented
the village pub and enjoyed nothing so much as recount-
ing his accomplishments to a receptive auditory. He
was a coarse man, with boasts and curses forever on
his tongue. He died of apoplexy.
(e) He was twenty-three years older than his
wife, a peasant girl who had once served as a maid
in the house of his first wife. Thus, the father's
greater age, his higher social status, the traditional
prerogatives of the husband in the Germen family, the
man's over-weening pride -- all supported him in
maintaining a master-servant relationship with his
wife. Frau Hitler was nervous, mild, devoted, and
submissive. In his own home, Alois Hitler Was a
tyrant.
(f) In his treatment of his son Adolf, it is
said that the father was stern and harsh. Physical
punishments were frequent. He seems to have looked on
his son as a weakling, a good-for-nothing, moonstruck
- 96 -
dreamer; et times perhaps his venity imagined a
successful career for the boy, which would still further
lift the family status, and so when young Adolf announced
his intention to be an crtist the father, perceiving
the frustration of his dream, put his foot down --
"An artist, no, never as long as I live. (M.K. 14).
(g) There is some doubt about the complexion of
Alois Hitler's political sentiments. Hanisch reports
that "Hitler heard from his father only praise of
Germany and all the faults of Austria;" but, accord-
ing to Heiden, more reliable informants claim that
the father, though full of complaints and criticisms
of the government he served, was by no means a German
nationalist. They say he favored Austria against
Germany.
(h) It is not unlikely that Hitler in writing
his sketch of the typical lower class home drew upon
his personal experiences, and if this is true, the
following passages give us an interesting side-light
on the character of the father:
(1) But things end badly indeed when
the men from the very start goes his own way
(Alois Hitler 'ran after other women') and
the wife, for the sake of her children,
stands up against him. Quarreling and
nagging set in, and in the same measure in
which the husband becomes ostranged from
his wife, ho becomes familiar with
- 97 -
alcohol "hen he finally comes home on
Sunday or Monday night, drunk and brutel,
but always without a last cent and penny,
then God have mercy on the scenes which
follow. I witnessed all of this personally
in hundreds of scenes and st the beginning
with both disgust and indignation
(M.K. 38-38).
The other things the little fellow
hears at home do not tend to further his
respect for his surroundings. Not a
single shred is left for humanity, not
a single institution is left unattacked;
starting with the teacher, up to the
head of the State, be it religion, or
morality as such, be it the State or
Society, no matter which, everything
is abused, everything 1s pulled down
in the nastiest mannor into the filth
of a depraved montality. (M.K. 43).
(i) Relations to Father
There are reasons to believe that the boy Adobf
was very much afraid of his father in his early years;
that he was timid and submissivo in his presence;
but when he was out of reach of his father's immense
authority (when his father was out of the house or
when the boy was at school under less severe dis-
ciplinarians) he was often unruly and defiant. He
had no respect for C leniont system of government.
Not until he was cloven did Adolf daro to oppose
his father. Here the issue was the seloction of his
vocation: Herr Hitler wanted his son to follow in
his footsteps and become a State official; but the
- 98 -
boy docided ho wanted to be an artist. Of this
conflict between father and son, Hitler writes:
(1) His domineering nature, the
result of D life-long struggle for existence,
would have thought it unbearable to
leave the ultimate decision to a boy
who, in his opinion, was inexperienced
and irresponsible. (M.K. 11).
(11) No matter how firm and de-
termined my father might be in cerrying
out his plans and intentions once made,
his son was just as stubborn and
obstinate (M.K. 12).
(iii)
...he opposed me with the
resoluteness of his entire nature The
old man became embittered, and, much as
I loved him, the same was true of myself
...and now the old man relentlessly began
to enforce his authority. (M.K. 13-14).
It is obvious from these and other passages,
as well as from local hearsay, that the rolations of
Adolf and his parent from 1900-1903 (when the father
died) were exceedingly stormy. It was a classical
father-son conflict.
(j) Noto: Hitler's attitude to old men. In
many places, in NEIN KAMPF and in some of his recorded
conversations, Hitler speaks of old men in a derogatory and
contemptuous manner. It is often very suggestive of what
might have been his sentiments towards his sixty-
year-old father (twenty-three years older than his
mother). The following quotetions might be cited
in illustration:
- 99 -
(1) Rauschning: Everywhere, Hitler
complained, there were nothing but sterilo
old men in their second childhood, who
bragged of their technical knowledge and
had lost their sound common sense.
(11) Hitler, quoted by Heiden:
My great adversary, Reichspräsident von
Hindenburg, is today eighty-five years
of age. I am forty-three and I feel in
perfect health. And nothing will happen
to me, for I am clearly conscious of the
great task which Providence has assigned
to me.
2. Mother
(a) Personality of Mother
The pertinent facts are these:
Klara Poelzl was an exemplary housokeeper. Her
home was always spotlessly clean, everything had
its place, not a speck of dust on the furniture.
She had a gentle nature. Her relatively young
age, her docile character, her years of domestic
service - all inclined hor to compliance and
Christien resignation. The trials and tribulations
of life with an irascible husband resulted in a
permanent attitude of abnegation. Toward hor son
Adolf she was ever devoted, catering to his whims
to the point of spoiling him. She it was who
encouraged his ertistic ambitions.
- 100 -
The mother was operated on for concer of the
bronst in the summer of 1907 and died within six months.
It is very likely that the disease virs marked by
ulcerations of the chest wall and metestrses in the
lungs.
International Via Photos
HITLER'S MOTHER
(b) Relations to Mother.
Hitler has written very little and said nothing
publicly about his mother, but the few scraps obtained
suggest meny youthful years of loving dependence
upon her. Hitler spenks of:
(1)
the mother devoting herself to
the cares of the household looking after her
children with eternally the same loving
kindness. (N.K. 5).
- 101 -
(ii) For three or four of the 5 years
between his father's and his mother's death,
Adolf Hitler idled away a good deal of his
time as the indulged apple of his mother's
eye. She allowed him to drop his studies
at the Realschule; she encouraged him in his
ambitions to be a painter; she yielded to
his every wish. During these years, it is
reported, the relationship between mother
and son was marked by reciprocal adoration.
Hitler's amazing self-assurance (at most
times) can be attributed in part to the
impression of these years when at the age
of thirteen his father died and he succeeded
to the power and became the little dictator
of the family. His older brother, Alois,
had left by this time, and he was the only
male in a household of four. "These were my
happiest days; they seemed like a dream to me,
and so they were. " (N.K. 25).
(111) Hitler writes: "My mother's
death
was a terrible shock to me
I loved
my mother. If
(iv) Dr. Bloch reports that Adolf
cried when he heard of his mother's suffer-
ings at operation and later at her death
exhibited greet grief. The doctor has never
seen anyone so prostrate with sorrow. After
the burial in the Catholic cemetery, Adolf
stayed by her grave long after the others
had deperted.
(v) Hitler wore the picture of his
mother over his breast in the field during
World War I.
(vi) That the mother-child relation-
ship was a compelling, though rejected, pattern
for Hitler may be surmised from (1) his
attachment to 'substitute mothers' during
his post-war years, (2) his frequent use of
'mother imagery' in speaking and writing,
and (3) his selection of pictures of Madonna
and child to decorate his rooms.
- 102 -
Corner of Big Room at Berchtesgaden.
Painting of Madonna & Child over mantel.
From these and other bits of evidence we can
conclude that Hitler loved his mother and hated his
father, that he had an Oedipus Complex, in other words.
But, as we shall soon see, this can explain only one
phase of his relationship to his parents.
- 103 -
(c) Siblings
It is certain that there were two older children
in the household during Adolf's early years. The
father had been married twice before; thore was a
half-brother, Alois Hitler, Jr., and a helf-sister,
Angela Hitler. We know nothing of Hitler's relation-
ship to the former (who much later turned up in Berlin
as proprietor of a restaurent). The half-sister,
Angela, married Herr Raubal, an official in the tax
bureau in Linz. Later she managed a restaurant for
Jewish students at the University of Vienna. For
some years she was Hitler's housekeeper at Berchtes-
gaden, until she married Professor Martin Hammizsch
of Dresden, where she now lives.
(i) Several informants have stated that
there is a younger sister, Paula, born when Adolf
was about seven years old. Consequently, he must
have experienced the press Birth of Sibling during
his childhood. This younger sister, it seems, is a
very peculiar, seclusive person who now lives in
Vienna. It has been said that she had affairs with
several men in turn, one of whom was a Jew. It is
believed that she is mentally reterded.
- 104 -
(11) There are reports of two children
who died in infancy before Adolf was born. One of
these may have been Edmund, or Gustaf, mentioned by
some informants.
3. Boyhood Reactions, Activities, and Interests
Very little reliable information exists as to
Hitler's childhood. Most informants, however, agree
on the following points:
(a) Physical Weakness.- Adolf was a frail lad,
thin and pale. He did not participate in any athletics
or enjoy hard physical exercise. He was sensitive
and liked to be with his mother, look at books, sketch
landscapes; or take walks by himself. He liked to
daydream about Germany's wars, but he did nothing to
fit himself to be a soldier. When he tired of school
(ashamed of his inferiority in scholarship), he became
nervously sick (feigned lung trouble), and his mother
permitted him to drop out and stay at home.
(b) Low Tolerance of Frustration.- One can be
certain that, 88 a child, Adolf reacted violently to
frustration. He undoubtedly had temper tantrums
which were rewarded by his mother's ready compliance
to his wishes. (This was his way of "courting the
soul of the common people".) He was also finnicky
about food, we can be sure.
- 105 -
(c) Rebelliousness and Reported Aggression.-
At home discipline was capricious: His father was
often unusually severe, his mother inordinately
lonient. As a result, he developed no stendy and
consistent character; he alternated between subservience
(to placate his father) and unruliness.
(1) Lansing: His first teacher
recalled
that he was a quarrelsome,
stubborn lad who smoked cigarets and cigar
stubs collected from the gutter or begged
from roisterers in the public houses.
(11) Hanish reports that Hitler
told him that the people of the Innviertel
were great brawlers and that, as a boy,
he used to love to watch their fights.
Also, that he used to enjoy visiting a
fine exhibition in Linz of deadly weapons.
What others abhorred appealed to him.
(N.B., Here is fair evidence of repressed
aggression (sadism) during boyhood.)
(111) Hitler, as a mere boy of ten,
became passionately interosted in reading
about the "amazingly victorious campaign
of the heroic German armies during the
Franco-Prussian War". Soon this had be-
come "my greatest spiritual experience".
(N.K. 8).
(1v) I raved more and more about
everything connected with war or militarism.
(M.K. 8).
(v) A careful examination of the
first chapter of MEIN KAMPF will convince
any psychologically trained reader that
Adolf's vigorous advocacy of the cause of
Germany as opposed to that of Austria from
the age of eleven onward ropresented a
legitimate substitute for his repressed
- 106 -
robellion against his father. Inspired by his
history teacher, Professor Poetsch (father-
surrogate), and a long line of German military
heroes, the boy could give vent to his pent-up
resentment by publicly proclaiming his devotion
to the German Reich of Bismark and vehemently
denouncing the authority of Austria (symbol of
his father). In MEIN KAMPF Hitler writes at
length of his possession of :
(vi)
an intense love for my native
German-Austrian country and a bitter hatred
against the 'Austrian' State. (M.K. 22-23).
Speaking of the youthful Nationalist movement
that he joined, he writes:
(vii) ...it is rebellious; it wears the
forbidden emblem of its own nationality and
rejoices in being punished or even in being
beaten for wearing that emblem
the greeting
was 'Heil'; and 'Doutschland über alles' was
preferred to the imporial anthem, despite
warnings and punishments. (M.K. 16).
It was during these days that he first began
to play the role of a young agitator.
(viii) I believe that oven then my
ability for making speeches was trained by
the more or less stirring discussions with
my comrades
For obvious reasons my father
could not appreciate the talent for oratory
of his quarrelsome son. (M.K. 7).
The boy's ideas of greatest glory revolved round
the victories of the Franco-Prussian War.
(1x) Why was it that Austria had not
taken part also in this war, why not my father
? (M.K. 9). I had decidedly no sympathy
for the course my father's life had taken.
(M.K. 7). During the years of my unruly youth
nothing had grieved me more than having been born
-107 -
at a time when temples of glory were only
erected to merchants or State officials
(his father's profession). (M.K. 204).
I, too, wanted to become 'something' --
but in no event an official. (M.K. 25).
These quotations supply further evidence
of Adolf's repressed hatred of his father and of the
fact that negativism and wilfulness had become es-
tablished patterns before puberty.
(d) Passivity, or Illness, as Means of
Resistance.- Hitler menifested a significant aspect
of his nature when he determined to frustrate his
father's intention to make a civil servant out of
him. The policy he adopted was that of resistance
through indolence and passivity.
(1) I was certain that as soon as
my father saw my lack of progross in school
he would lot me seek the happiness
of which I was dreaming. (M.K. 14).
Later, after his father's death, when he wanted
to leave school, he won his mother's consent by making
himself sick.
(i) Impressed by my illness my mother
agreed at long last to take me out of school
(M.K. 24).
After this he spent two years of shiftless
activity around the house, which set the pattern
for his passive drifting and droaming days in Vienna.
- 108 -
(c) Lack of Friends.- No friendships dating
from boyhood have ever been mentioned and it is not
likely that the boy was at all popular with his class-
mates. During adolescence he was said to be quiet,
serious, dreamy and taciturn.
(f) Sexual Misbehavior. A Nazi who visited
Leonding much later and looked up the school records
thore found evidence that at the age of cleven or
twelve Adolf had committed a serious sexual indiscre-
tion with a little girl. For this he was punished
but not expelled from school.
4. Conclusions
(a) Hate for Father, Love for Mother, (Oodipus
Complex). This has been noted and stressed by numerous
psychologists; and some evidence for it has been listed
hore. Rarely mentioned but equally important is:
(b) Respect for Power of Father, Contempt for
Weakness of Mother. Hitler is certainly not a typical
product of the Ocdipus complex, and more can be learned
about the underlying forces of his character by
observing which parent he has emulated, rather than
which parent he has loved. In MEIN KAMPF, he writes,
"I had respected my father, but I loved my mother."
- 109 -
He might better have said, "I loved my mother, but
I respected my father", because respect has always
meant more to him than love.
(c) Idontification with Father. Although Hitler
has not the physique or temperament of his old man,
being constitutionally of another type, it is evident
that he has imitated, consciously or unconsciously,
many of his father's traits and none of his mother's.
(d) Adolf Hitler's will to power, his pride,
aggressiveness and cult of brutality are all in
keeping with what we know of the personslity and
conduct of Alois Hitler. The son's declaration that
he has demanded nothing but sacrifices from his ad-
herents is certainly reminiscent of the father's
attitude toward wife and children.
(i)
...his son has undoubtedly in-
herited, amongst other qualities, a stubborn-
ness similar to his own...
(M.K. 14).
(e) The father's loud, boastful, and perhaps
drunken, talk, at home and at the pub (described by
some informants), may well have provided his young
son with an impressive model for emulation. The
notion of being a village pastor had appealed to
Alois Hitler and that of being an abbot appealed
to his boy, no doubt for the same reason -- the
opportunity it afforded for oratory.
- 110 -
(f) Father and son each left home to seek his
fortune in Vienna. In MEIN KAMPF there are several
indications that the image of his father's success
in Vienna acted as a spur.
(i) I, too, hoped to wrest from Fate
the success my father had met fifty years
earlier.. (M.K. 25).
(11) And I would overcome these
obstacles, always bearing in mind my father's
example, who, from being a poor village boy
and a cobbler's apprentice, had made his way
up to the position of civil servant. (M.K. 28).
(g) Adolf Hitler sported a walrus moustache
like his father's for a number of years. He finally
trimmed it in imitation of a new exemplar, Feder.
(h) Adolf Hitler's invariable uniform and
pistol may well have been suggested by Alois Hitler's
uniform and pistol (1 (d)).
(i) It is said that Alois Hitler had a great
respect for the class system; was proud of his rise
in status; envied those above him and looked down
upon those below him. If this is true, the father
was instrumental in establishing a pattern of senti-
ments which was of determining importance in his son's
career. Adolf Hitler has always been envious of his
superiors and deferential; he has never showed any
affinity for the proletariat.
- 111 -
(1) Adolf Hitler has hung a portrait of his
father over the desk in his study at Berchtesgaden.
This is & signal honor, since the likoness of only
three other men -- Frederick the Great, Karl von
Moltke, and Mussolini -- have been selected for
inclusion in any of Hitler's rooms. There is no-
where any picture of his mother.
/
Hitler's Study at Berghof.
Desk faces portrait of Alois Hitler.
- 112 -
Alois, it is said, was a smoker, a drinker and
a lecher; and today his son is remarkable for his
abstemiousness. Thus, in these respects the two
are different. But we should not forget that Adolf
used to pick up cigar butts and smoke them as a boy;
he drank beer and wine in his early Munich days; and
in the last fifteen years has shown a good deal of
interest in women.
There can be no doubt then that Hitler greatly
envied and admired the power and authority of his
father; and although he hated him as the tyrant who
opposed and frustrated him personally, he looked on
him with awe, and admiration, desiring to be as he
was. Speaking of his old man, the son confessed in
his autobiography that "unconsciously he had sown
the seeds for a future which neither he nor I would
have grasped at that time." (M.K. 24). Henceforth
Adolf Hitler's attention and emulation was only to
be evoked by a dominating ruthless man, and if this
man happened to be in opposition to him, then he
would hate and respect him simultaneously. Hitler's
admiration for strongly enduring institutions was
very similar, it seems, to his admiration for his
sixty-year-old parent. He writes:.
- 113 -
(1) incredibly vigorous power that
inhabits this age-old institution (Catholic
Church).
(11) ...he (Lueger) was disposed to
secure the favor of any existing powerful
institutions, in order that he might derive
from these old sources of strength the
greatest possible advantage
(k) Identification with Mother.- In Hitler's
constitution there is a large gynic (feminine)
component and he has many feminine traits, some
hidden. Consequently, in view of his avowed love
for his mother, we must suppose that there was a
dispositional kinship or biological identification,
between the two during the boy's earliest years.
Adolf naturally and spontaneously felt the way
his mother felt. This, however, was not of his
own making. There 1s some evidence that in Hitler's
mind "Germany" is a mystical conception which stands
for the ideal mother--a substitute for his own im-
perfect mother. But there are no indications, in
any event, that Hitler admired his mother or any
woman who resembled her, or that he adopted any
of her sentiments, or that he was even influenced
by her in any important way. Hence, the conclusion
is that Hitler had many traits in common with his
mother; but that he repudiated these traits as
evidences of weakness and femininity, and in so
doing repudiated her.
- 114 -
(k) Rejection of Mother.- To the extent that
Hitler respected and emulated his father, he dis-
respected and denied. his mother. Some evidence to
demonstráte this point will be brought forward in a
later section. Hitler probably loved his mother very
much as a person; but his strong dependent attachment
to her was a humiliating sign of his incapacity to
take care of himself, and hence he was forced to be-
little the relationship. At eighteen years he was too
near to her weakness, not feminine enough and yet not
male enough, to respect her. He writes:
(1) I owe much to the time in which
I had learned to become hard (in Vienna)
I praise it even more for having rescued
me from the emptiness of an easy life (in
Linz with his mother), that it took the
milksop out of his downy nest and gave
him Dame Sorrow for a foster mother
(M.K. 29).
Hanisch reports that in Vienna Hitler mani-
fested a "queer idealism about love"; but had very
little respect for the female sex. Every woman he
believed could be had. This remark falls in with
the evidence to be presented later which suggests that
for a time Adolf was indignant with his mother for
submitting to his father, and in the end scorned her
for so doing. Since he has always been
- 115 -
contemptuous of physical weakness, one might expect
him to be contemptuous of women; and there are some
facts to show that this is true. It is even possible
that after Herr Hitler's death the adolescent Adolf,
adopting his father's role to some extent, sometimes
lashed his mother with insolent words and maybe struck
her. If this were true, it would help explain his
exceeding grief on the occasion of her death, guilt
contributing to his dejection, and it might explain a
striking passage in MEIN KAMPF in which Hitler des-
cribes the typical lower class family.
(i) When, at the age of fourteen, the
young lad is dismissed from school (Adolf
dropped school when he was about sixteen
years), it is difficult to say which is
worse: his unbelievable ignorance as far
as knowledge and ability are concerned, or
the biting impudence of his behavior, com-
bined with an immorality which makes one's
hair stand on end, considering his age
(Adolf's immorality came to the notice of
his teachers at the age of twelve years)
The three-year-old child has now become a
youth of fifteen who despises all authority
(Recall Adolf's conflict with his father)
Now he loiters about, and God' only knows when
he comes home (See p.
7
"caused my mother
much grief, made me anything but a stay-at-
home ; for a change he may even beat the
poor creature who was once his mother, curses
God and the world
(M.K. 43-44).
(1) Evidence will be advanced later to show
that one of the most potent impressions of Hitler's
early life was that of a relationship in which a
- 115 -
a domineering and severe old man (his father) bullied
and scornfully maltreated a gentle and compliant woman
(his mother). The effects of being reared under these
conditions were lasting: the experience made it 1m-
possible for him to believe in, hope for, or enjoy a
relationship marked by peace, love, and tenderness.
(m) The outstanding press of the boy's early
life were those of p - Aggression and p - Rejection.
The former came mostly from his father; the latter from
many people. Among the specific causes of this idea
of having been rejected we would list (1) the birth
of a younger sister, Paula, in 1895 or 1896; (2) the
opposition of his father; (3) his repeated failures
at school; (4) his lack of friends; (5) the death
of both parents, making it necessary for him, a
penniless uneducated and unemployed orphan, to face
the world alone. The sense of being rejected by his
family is in many passages expressed in connection
with his feeling of being excluded from membership
in the German nation. This point will be taken up
later.
(i) Are we not the same as all the
other Germans? Do we not all belong to-
gether? This problem now began to whirl
through my little head for the first time.
After cautious questioning, I heard with
envy the reply that not every German was
fortunate enough to belong to Bismarck's
Reich. This I could not understand. (M.K. 9).
- 115 -
(11) An unnatural separation from the
great common Motherland. (M.N.O. 459).
(n) Repudiation of Past Self and Family Connections.
Knowing Hitler's fanatical sentiments against mixed
marriages, impure blood, the lower classes, and the
Jewish race, it is important to note the following
facts:
(i) His forebears come from a region in
which the blood of Bavarians, Bohemians, Moravians,
Czechs, and Slovakians have mixed for generations.
Without doubt all of these strains are represented
in him.
(ii) His father was illegitimate; his grand-
father may have been a Viennese Jew.
(111) His godfather, Herr Prinz, was a
Viennese Jew.
(iv) His father had three wives, one a
waitress, one a domestic servant, and a number of
women on the side (hearsay).
(v) His father begot at least one child
out of marriage.
(vi) Klara Poelzl, his mother, was Alois
Hitler's second cousin once removed and also his ward
(twenty-three years younger). Special permission from
the Church had to be obtained before he could marry her.
- 117 -
(vii) Angela Hitler, Adolf's older half-
sister, ran a restaurant for Jewish students in Vionna.
(viii) Paula Hitler, Adolf's younger sister,
was the mistress of a Viennese Jew for a while.
(ix) A cousin of Hitler's is feeble-minded,
most of the other members of his clan are ignorant,
illiterate, or mentally retarded. He himself had to
repeat the first year of Realschule (Technical High
School) and failed to graduate.
Thus, Hitler has spent a good part of his life
cursing and condemning people who belong to his layer
of society, who resemble members of his own clan, who
have characteristics sinilar to his own. On the other
hand, the ideal he has set up, the person he pretends
to be, is the exact opposite of all this. We have a
fairly clear case, then, of Counteraction against
inferiority feelings and self-contempt. Between
1908, when he left, and 1938, after the Anschluss,
Hitler never visited his home, and never communicated
with his relatives (except in the case of his half-
sister Angela). Unlike Napoleon, he did not carry his
family along with him as he ascended to the heights
of power. In this we see a Rejection of his past self
and family connections.
- 118 -
(o) Identification with Germany.- Hitler's
egocentrism has always been so marked; he has been
such a Bohemian, if not a lone wolf, in many phases of
,
his career that his undoubted devotion to Germany strikes
one as most unusual. Since this devotion began at an
early age and was the factor, more than any other, which
decided that he would become a supreme success rather
than an utter failure, it is worth while noting here
the forces so far mentioned which brought about this
intense insociation:
(i) Influence of Ludwig Poetsch, his
teacher, who, serving as a substitute father,
glorified the history of Germany and presented
Bismark's Reich as an ideal.
(11) Influence of a strong nationalist
association among Hitler's classmates.
(iii) Cathexis of power. The figures of
Frederick the Great, Bismarck and others offered better
foci of admiration than did Austrian heroes.
(iv) Insociation with a more powerful nation
satisfied his youthful pride, raised his status in his
own eyes, and allowed him to reject his inferior
Austrian self.
- 119 -
(v) Heightened cathexis of an object behind
a barrier. This is a general principle: that an
individual will idealize an object that he can not
quite attain -- so near but yet so far. In this
connection it is interesting to note that the great
majority of dictators have not been natives of the
country that they came to dominate. Hitler's con-
tinued sympathy for Germans outside the Reich is evi-
dently a projection of his own self-pity as an Ost-
markian.
(v-1) (Memel returns to the
Reich) I thereby lead you back into that
home which you have not forgotten and which
has never forgotten you. (M.N.O. 614).
(vi) Displacement of defiance against
the father. By identifying himself with Germany, the
boy Adolf found an object even greater than his stern
father, which permitted him to give vent to his frus-
trated rebelliousness against his Austrian parent.
(vii) Germany as a substitute mother.
In view of the press rejection suffered in childhood,
it is likely -- and much evidence for this hypothesis
will be presented later -- that Germany represented
a kind of foster perent. It is even possible that
Hitler as a child entertained a foster parent fantasy.
- 120 -
He speaks of being Bavarian by blood, a statement for
which there is no known justification. This point will
be fully discussed later in describing his devotions
to Germany's cause in 1918, the hour of her deepest
humiliation. In many places Hitler sponks of Germany
in words that one might use in speaking of a beloved
woman:
(vii - 1) the longing grew
stronger to go there (Germany) where
since my early youth I had been drawn
by secret wishes and secret love.
(M.K. 161).
(vii - 2) What I first had
looked upon as an impassable chasm
now spurred me on to a greater love
for my country than ever before.
(M.K. 55).
(vii - 3) Heiden, quoting
from Hitler: The hundreds of thou-
sands who love their country more
than anything else must also be
loved by their country more than
anything else.
(vii - 4) I appeal to those
who, severed from the motherland,
have to fight for the holy treasure
of their language and who now in
painful emotion long for the hour
that will allow them to return to
the arms of the beloved mother
(M.K. 161).
The common expression for Germans is Fatherland,
but Hitler very often substitutes Motherland, He
speaks of "the common motherland, "the great German
- 121 -
motherlend," "the German mother of all life".
This is not unnatural, since he, once a very de-
pondent adolescent, was left penniless and unbe-
friended after the death of his mother. We' are
not surprised, therefore, to find him speaking of
being removed "from the emptiness of an easy life,
that it took the milksop out of his downy nest and
gave him Dame Sorrow for a foster mother" and
speaking also of the time "when the Goddess of
Misery took me into her arms". It is reported
that he was mothered by several older lodies in
his early Munich days and seemed to find comfort
in such relationships. In 1920, for example, he
found a sort of home with Frau Hoffman. He always
had to send her, according to Heiden, his latest
portrait, on which he would write, for example:
"To my dear, faithful little Mother, Christmas,
1925, from her respectful Adolf Hitler."
Relations
belongs_to