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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,340 --> 00:00:10,180 This programme contains some scenes which some viewers may find upsetting. 2 00:00:42,100 --> 00:00:45,180 Italy was the birthplace of Fascism, 3 00:00:46,460 --> 00:00:54,780 So an alliance between the Fascist government in Rome and the Nazi government in Berlin seemed natural. 4 00:00:55,820 --> 00:00:58,740 But on the 19th of July, 1943, 5 00:00:58,740 --> 00:01:02,620 the unthinkable happened - Rome was bombed. 6 00:01:04,980 --> 00:01:10,620 By 1943, nearly 200,000 Italian soldiers were dead or missing. 7 00:01:13,340 --> 00:01:20,620 The Italian alliance with Nazi Germany had resulted in nothing but disaster. 8 00:01:20,620 --> 00:01:25,660 During the four years of war, more or less, you know, 9 00:01:25,660 --> 00:01:29,780 Italy was practically half destroyed. 10 00:01:29,780 --> 00:01:34,340 Everybody understood that the war was lost. 11 00:01:34,340 --> 00:01:42,020 And, of course, everybody was thinking that Italy had to get out and not stay with Mussolini. 12 00:01:44,100 --> 00:01:47,340 On the night of the 24th of July, 1943, 13 00:01:47,340 --> 00:01:53,340 the Fascist Grand Council met and expressed its lack of confidence in Mussolini. 14 00:01:53,340 --> 00:01:59,420 They voted that the king should gain control of the armed forces. 15 00:01:59,420 --> 00:02:03,540 Benito Mussolini had been the first Fascist dictator, 16 00:02:03,540 --> 00:02:10,260 his success an inspiration to the Nazis. But now the Italians had had enough. 17 00:02:10,260 --> 00:02:15,740 The king summoned Mussolini to a meeting at the Villa Savoia 18 00:02:15,740 --> 00:02:18,420 on the 25th of July, 1943. 19 00:02:19,980 --> 00:02:24,300 Mussolini was told he was dismissed as Prime Minister. 20 00:02:24,300 --> 00:02:29,420 He walked down the hall out of the king's villa at 5.20pm. 21 00:02:29,420 --> 00:02:34,500 As soon as he set foot outside the front door, 22 00:02:34,500 --> 00:02:40,460 Mussolini was arrested by the Italian police and taken to prison. 23 00:02:44,300 --> 00:02:50,060 The Italians were jubilant. Now they were free of Mussolini 24 00:02:50,060 --> 00:02:54,340 and soon changed sides to be with the winners. 25 00:02:54,340 --> 00:02:58,980 The new Italian government first surrendered, 26 00:02:58,980 --> 00:03:05,500 and then, in October, 1943, declared war on its former ally, Nazi Germany. 27 00:03:05,500 --> 00:03:08,300 Not very honourable, certainly, 28 00:03:08,300 --> 00:03:10,860 whenever you...you... 29 00:03:12,260 --> 00:03:15,660 ..betray a friend, an ally. 30 00:03:15,660 --> 00:03:19,740 It's not very noble, But it happens. It happens. 31 00:03:19,740 --> 00:03:25,380 We are more realistic sometimes than the Germans are, no? 32 00:03:25,380 --> 00:03:32,100 Being more realistic, we are not faithful to the present chief and so on. 33 00:03:32,100 --> 00:03:34,740 I don't say it's a noble thing, 34 00:03:34,740 --> 00:03:38,220 but it is...it is our character. 35 00:03:39,300 --> 00:03:44,420 If the Italians were capable of removing Mussolini in 1943, 36 00:03:44,420 --> 00:03:48,460 why couldn't the Germans remove Hitler? 37 00:03:48,460 --> 00:03:52,420 Why were the Germans fighting to the end? 38 00:04:01,340 --> 00:04:08,100 The first task facing anyone who sought to remove Hitler was gaining access to him - 39 00:04:08,100 --> 00:04:10,700 and that was not easy. 40 00:04:10,700 --> 00:04:15,780 For most of the war, Hitler hid himself here at the Wolf's Lair, 41 00:04:15,780 --> 00:04:21,460 in what was then German East Prussia, protected by minefields, 42 00:04:21,460 --> 00:04:24,580 barbed wire and his loyal SS bodyguard. 43 00:04:24,580 --> 00:04:29,820 Discussions with his generals dominated his time here. 44 00:04:29,820 --> 00:04:37,300 Deep into the war, the Fuhrer had still not lost his ability to dominate those around him. 45 00:04:38,540 --> 00:04:41,300 At that time, 46 00:04:41,300 --> 00:04:43,900 I respected him. 47 00:04:43,900 --> 00:04:46,260 I mean... 48 00:04:46,260 --> 00:04:49,060 He impressed me. 49 00:04:49,060 --> 00:04:56,540 He made me tense. Whenever I was near him, I was prepared in every respect to watch out. 50 00:04:57,660 --> 00:05:02,340 But the flair Hitler had was unusual. 51 00:05:05,020 --> 00:05:10,060 He could... Somebody who was almost ready for suicide, 52 00:05:10,060 --> 00:05:15,860 he could revive him and make him feel that he should carry the flag 53 00:05:15,860 --> 00:05:19,580 and die in battle. Very strange. 54 00:05:37,340 --> 00:05:43,140 But by the end of 1943, it was clear that Germany was losing the war. 55 00:05:59,500 --> 00:06:06,460 In November, 1942, the area of territory controlled by the Nazis and their European allies 56 00:06:06,460 --> 00:06:09,180 had reached its peak. 57 00:06:09,180 --> 00:06:15,860 Now, just over a year later, Soviet forces were making huge advances in the East. 58 00:06:15,860 --> 00:06:21,020 The British and Americans were fighting their way up through Italy 59 00:06:21,020 --> 00:06:27,100 and Allied forces were gathering in Britain for D-day - the invasion of France. 60 00:06:27,100 --> 00:06:33,100 But it was in the war in the East that the Germans were suffering their greatest losses. 61 00:06:33,100 --> 00:06:37,260 Four million German troops faced over six million Soviets. 62 00:06:37,260 --> 00:06:44,660 Hitler had said this would be a different war, a war of annihilation. 63 00:06:44,660 --> 00:06:50,980 The nature of this war was to be a crucial reason why the Germans fought to the end, 64 00:06:50,980 --> 00:06:56,500 for, in the East, the Nazis thought they were fighting sub-humans. 65 00:07:33,620 --> 00:07:38,700 Behind German lines, partisans resisted the Nazi occupation 66 00:07:38,700 --> 00:07:43,500 and were summarily executed wherever they were found. 67 00:07:43,500 --> 00:07:46,220 This partisan war 68 00:07:46,220 --> 00:07:53,220 gave the Nazis an easy excuse simply to hang and shoot anyone they didn't like the look of. 69 00:08:38,940 --> 00:08:43,140 German forces, unlike their Italian allies, 70 00:08:43,140 --> 00:08:47,180 committed countless atrocities in the East. 71 00:08:47,180 --> 00:08:53,900 This massacre of Polish prisoners in Lublin was carried out by the SS in July 1944. 72 00:08:53,900 --> 00:09:01,420 But not only the SS and the security police killing squads committed atrocities. 73 00:09:01,420 --> 00:09:07,540 Many Wehrmacht units, too, were deeply implicated in the barbarism. 74 00:09:07,540 --> 00:09:12,540 This war of annihilation made it harder for some to remove Hitler, 75 00:09:12,540 --> 00:09:17,580 the man ultimately responsible for all the killings. 76 00:09:17,580 --> 00:09:20,540 Almost all the Nazi Party hierarchy 77 00:09:20,540 --> 00:09:24,700 knew and approved of the criminal killings. 78 00:09:24,700 --> 00:09:31,300 There was another reason why the Nazi leadership found it hard to conspire against Hitler. 79 00:09:31,300 --> 00:09:38,340 From the beginning, Hitler had encouraged personal emnity to grow among his favourites, 80 00:09:38,340 --> 00:09:45,940 often by appointing two people to more or less the same job and then watching as they fought. 81 00:09:45,940 --> 00:09:53,020 The result was a leadership in which almost everybody hated and distrusted everyone else. 82 00:09:53,020 --> 00:09:57,860 Goering disliked Speer, Ribbentrop, Goebbels and Bormann. 83 00:09:57,860 --> 00:10:03,940 Goebbels had little time for either Goering, Ribbentrop or Bormann. 84 00:10:03,940 --> 00:10:09,940 Ribbentrop couldn't stand any of these leading Nazis and vice versa. 85 00:10:09,940 --> 00:10:17,140 The Nazi leadership was riven by dislike as they fought each other for Hitler's praise and favour. 86 00:10:17,140 --> 00:10:23,020 That left the military leadership. But they, too, had agreed 87 00:10:23,020 --> 00:10:30,340 to the killing of the Communist commissars in the East and felt bound by their oath to the Fuhrer. 88 00:10:30,340 --> 00:10:35,420 A conspiracy was only possible under conditions of great secrecy. 89 00:10:35,420 --> 00:10:42,620 Finally, almost a year after Mussolini's overthrow, one senior officer DID come forward. 90 00:10:42,620 --> 00:10:45,620 On the 20th of July, 1944, 91 00:10:45,620 --> 00:10:50,500 in the most famous attempt on the Fuhrer's life, 92 00:10:50,500 --> 00:10:54,420 Claus von Stauffenberg tried to kill Hitler. 93 00:10:55,580 --> 00:11:00,620 Stauffenberg was the only one who said, "I am prepared to do it." 94 00:11:00,620 --> 00:11:03,300 But my opinion was 95 00:11:03,300 --> 00:11:06,820 that it could only succeed 96 00:11:06,820 --> 00:11:12,300 if the man who tried to kill him killed himself at the same moment. 97 00:11:12,300 --> 00:11:18,780 The way the Palestinians do it now in Israel, you see? 98 00:11:18,780 --> 00:11:21,660 Self-sacrifice or kamikaze. 99 00:11:21,660 --> 00:11:26,340 Stauffenberg left a bomb in his briefcase 100 00:11:26,340 --> 00:11:30,700 in the conference room on this spot at the Wolf's Lair 101 00:11:30,700 --> 00:11:35,460 then hurried away to Berlin. At 12.42pm... 102 00:11:35,460 --> 00:11:40,740 on the 20th of July, 1944, the bomb exploded during a briefing. 103 00:11:40,740 --> 00:11:45,260 Karl Boehm-Tettelbach was in his office nearby. 104 00:11:45,260 --> 00:11:52,260 Suddenly my colleague came and said, "Did you hear that?" Suddenly there was a big bomb. 105 00:11:52,260 --> 00:12:00,300 He said, "Did you hear that?" Four or five minutes later, we saw the SS in battle uniform 106 00:12:00,300 --> 00:12:04,780 surrounding our barracks. 107 00:12:04,780 --> 00:12:07,740 I said, "Isn't that funny?" 108 00:12:07,740 --> 00:12:15,380 The bomb destroyed the conference room. But the force of the blast was dispersed by the wooden walls, 109 00:12:15,380 --> 00:12:19,420 and Hitler escaped with only minor injuries. 110 00:12:19,420 --> 00:12:23,780 Now the search was on for those responsible. 111 00:12:23,780 --> 00:12:29,380 But by no means every German officer had supported the plot. 112 00:12:29,380 --> 00:12:35,460 Nobody approached me because they knew that I wouldn't break my oath. 113 00:12:35,460 --> 00:12:41,980 They knew from the beginning that I would stick. Luckily nobody would approach me 114 00:12:41,980 --> 00:12:47,020 because I was air force and the air force was not involved. 115 00:12:47,020 --> 00:12:50,340 If you had been approached, 116 00:12:50,340 --> 00:12:53,100 what would you have said? 117 00:12:53,100 --> 00:13:00,500 To Stauffenberg? I would have said, "I am going to report to Hitler that you want to kill him." 118 00:13:02,300 --> 00:13:03,940 Ja. 119 00:13:03,940 --> 00:13:06,860 I had no other choice. 120 00:13:06,860 --> 00:13:14,460 If I had stayed quiet, they would put me down in a little notebook and I would be shot. 121 00:13:16,940 --> 00:13:21,020 All my comrades who were all shot, they didn't speak. 122 00:13:21,020 --> 00:13:28,340 Stauffenberg couldn't speak, Mertz couldn't speak, and Haeften. They were shot immediately. 123 00:13:28,340 --> 00:13:34,380 The other ones whom I worked with, they were later on condemned to death, 124 00:13:34,380 --> 00:13:37,100 but they didn't give away my name. 125 00:13:37,100 --> 00:13:39,780 I owe my life to them. 126 00:13:39,780 --> 00:13:44,020 Even under torture, they didn't give away the names. 127 00:13:45,260 --> 00:13:52,500 In the early hours of the 21st of July, Hitler spoke on the radio to the German people. 128 00:14:37,460 --> 00:14:43,340 Hitler visited the officers who had been injured in the blast. 129 00:14:43,340 --> 00:14:46,420 The propaganda newsreel 130 00:14:46,420 --> 00:14:50,580 expressed joy at the Fuhrer's survival 131 00:14:50,580 --> 00:14:57,380 and hatred for those who had tried to kill him, feelings that were shared by many. 132 00:15:40,500 --> 00:15:43,340 The roots of Hitler's popularity, 133 00:15:43,340 --> 00:15:49,900 carefully nurtured by Goebbels over the previous 11 years, went deep. 134 00:15:51,300 --> 00:15:58,300 Letters home from the frontline reveal what many soldiers felt about the assassination attempt. 135 00:15:58,300 --> 00:16:01,060 Though these letters were censored, 136 00:16:01,060 --> 00:16:08,180 there was no need for the soldiers to refer to Stauffenberg and the plot unless they wanted to. 137 00:16:08,180 --> 00:16:12,340 "..There's a deep disgust about this crime..." 138 00:16:12,340 --> 00:16:17,380 "..The honour of the officers corps has come under attack..." 139 00:16:17,380 --> 00:16:20,780 "..a sad chapter in German history..." 140 00:16:20,780 --> 00:16:26,380 Hitler ordered the armed forces be drawn deeper into the Nazi fold. 141 00:18:05,380 --> 00:18:10,380 Propaganda images of this perfect Nazi world 142 00:18:10,380 --> 00:18:14,700 showing the young members of the master race 143 00:18:14,700 --> 00:18:19,820 helping out around the farm, hid another truth. 144 00:18:19,820 --> 00:18:25,500 Unlike Italy, Germany had become a racist state. 145 00:18:25,500 --> 00:18:32,660 The German economy relied, not so much on the work of these young boys of the Hitler Youth, 146 00:18:32,660 --> 00:18:39,820 as on the sweat and toil of forced labour from the "inferior races" of the conquered territories. 147 00:18:39,820 --> 00:18:46,580 It was horrible...to take a young boy, a child, from the family, 148 00:18:46,580 --> 00:18:52,700 put him into forced labours and being beaten... 149 00:18:54,340 --> 00:18:56,940 He awoke me at 5am. 150 00:18:56,940 --> 00:19:01,940 I had to go to the work in the barn and the stable. 151 00:19:03,340 --> 00:19:09,700 Polish the horses, he had two horses and, I believe, six cows, pigs... 152 00:19:09,700 --> 00:19:12,780 And then after I had done all this, 153 00:19:12,780 --> 00:19:17,340 to go to the fields to work in the fields - 154 00:19:17,340 --> 00:19:21,340 it was spring - to prepare everything. 155 00:19:21,340 --> 00:19:26,060 Well, I never cried as much as at that time. 156 00:19:26,060 --> 00:19:31,660 Last...I would say last months of my childhood passed this way. 157 00:19:32,860 --> 00:19:39,420 By August, 1944, there were more than 7½ million forced labourers in the New Germany. 158 00:19:39,420 --> 00:19:42,660 1,700,000 of them were Poles. 159 00:20:48,020 --> 00:20:54,020 The half million slave workers from the concentration camps, mostly Jews, 160 00:20:54,020 --> 00:20:58,420 suffered even more than the Polish forced labourers. 161 00:20:58,420 --> 00:21:05,260 At least 35,000 of them worked here at the chemical plant of IG Farben in Silesia. 162 00:21:05,260 --> 00:21:10,300 The name of the camp these workers lived in has become infamous. 163 00:21:10,300 --> 00:21:12,420 Auschwitz. 164 00:21:12,420 --> 00:21:19,540 But there were two types of camp at Auschwitz. The concentration camps for the slave workers... 165 00:21:19,540 --> 00:21:26,860 and the extermination camp with its gas chambers. New arrivals were selected to go to one or the other. 166 00:21:28,220 --> 00:21:32,740 Arriving at Auschwitz, we were separated. 167 00:21:32,740 --> 00:21:35,580 I remember the selection. 168 00:21:35,580 --> 00:21:40,300 "What are you? What's your profession?" 169 00:21:40,300 --> 00:21:42,980 "I am mechanic." 170 00:21:42,980 --> 00:21:45,620 To the right. 171 00:21:45,620 --> 00:21:48,180 "What are you?" "I am a doctor." 172 00:21:49,300 --> 00:21:52,780 "You must learn to work." 173 00:21:52,780 --> 00:21:55,220 He hit him. 174 00:21:56,220 --> 00:21:58,500 And so on. 175 00:21:58,500 --> 00:22:05,300 Women with children and men with chidren, to the left, and the others to the right. 176 00:22:05,300 --> 00:22:08,020 And I was thinking, 177 00:22:08,020 --> 00:22:10,700 the fool that I was, 178 00:22:10,700 --> 00:22:13,820 they were going into a family camp. 179 00:22:16,220 --> 00:22:18,860 In the gas chambers. 180 00:22:22,260 --> 00:22:27,780 And...we were taken by a truck... it was two o'clock in the morning, 181 00:22:27,780 --> 00:22:29,620 and... 182 00:22:29,620 --> 00:22:33,980 we came into the camp. 183 00:22:35,300 --> 00:22:40,540 This was the camp of the IG Farben. 184 00:22:42,260 --> 00:22:48,300 And the people there said, "You are now in a concentration camp. 185 00:22:48,300 --> 00:22:51,380 "To go out from here... 186 00:22:51,380 --> 00:22:54,700 "through the chimney." 187 00:22:56,260 --> 00:23:03,340 Selection for the work camp normally meant only a temporary postponement of death. 188 00:23:03,340 --> 00:23:09,700 One Nazi doctor estimated that life expectancy for the labourers was three months. 189 00:23:11,180 --> 00:23:14,860 We went to work... 190 00:23:14,860 --> 00:23:17,940 in lines of five men in groups. 191 00:23:19,620 --> 00:23:25,140 I always tried to be in the middle. 192 00:23:25,140 --> 00:23:29,740 Not to be hit from the SS. And it helped. 193 00:23:32,220 --> 00:23:35,900 I am not a man who says, 194 00:23:35,900 --> 00:23:41,220 "I must do something. Some sabotage or something." No. 195 00:23:43,980 --> 00:23:46,780 I wanted to stay alive. 196 00:23:46,780 --> 00:23:49,860 I wanted to live... 197 00:23:49,860 --> 00:23:53,580 and to see Germany destroyed. 198 00:23:53,580 --> 00:23:57,340 The Nazi system destroyed. 199 00:23:57,340 --> 00:24:02,820 The majority may not have known of the realities of Auschwitz. 200 00:24:02,820 --> 00:24:07,940 But EVERY German knew that their country had become a racist state. 201 00:24:09,180 --> 00:24:17,260 The Nazis said that every true German was a superior being, something this propaganda film, 202 00:24:17,260 --> 00:24:20,860 made in 1944, was designed to illustrate. 203 00:24:22,100 --> 00:24:25,820 But this belief that they were superior 204 00:24:25,820 --> 00:24:32,340 made it harder for Germans to accept that they were losing the war. 205 00:24:32,340 --> 00:24:38,260 Perhaps, the Nazis thought, they were having trouble winning 206 00:24:38,260 --> 00:24:44,540 because there weren't enough superior beings in their army. 207 00:24:44,540 --> 00:24:51,420 So they tried to recruite racially acceptable foreigners into the Waffen SS. 208 00:25:06,620 --> 00:25:10,500 400,000 foreigners joined the Waffen SS 209 00:25:10,500 --> 00:25:15,460 and fought alongside the Germans, many motivated by one reason. 210 00:26:14,900 --> 00:26:21,340 Jacques Leroy was badly injured in battle and lost an eye and an arm. 211 00:26:21,340 --> 00:26:26,380 A few weeks later, he begged to be allowed to rejoin his regiment. 212 00:26:26,380 --> 00:26:30,340 The SS agreed and he carried on fighting. 213 00:27:41,220 --> 00:27:47,140 It wasn't just on the front line the Germans were losing the war. 214 00:27:47,140 --> 00:27:52,860 In the last phase of the war, Allied bombing of Germany increased. 215 00:27:52,860 --> 00:28:00,900 In the last 15 months of the war, 350,000 Germans died as a result of the bombing raids - 216 00:28:00,900 --> 00:28:06,900 three times more than in the previous three years of the war put together. 217 00:28:06,900 --> 00:28:12,660 The British bomber were called by the Germans at that time, 218 00:28:12,660 --> 00:28:15,740 under the influence of Goebbels, 219 00:28:15,740 --> 00:28:18,820 "Churchill's Mordbuben." 220 00:28:18,820 --> 00:28:21,660 And they hated them. 221 00:28:21,660 --> 00:28:23,780 And... 222 00:28:23,780 --> 00:28:26,580 it was no fun to become... 223 00:28:26,580 --> 00:28:31,620 if you made out of the bomber and came down on the ground, 224 00:28:31,620 --> 00:28:35,460 never you know what will happen. 225 00:28:35,460 --> 00:28:41,260 Germans may have hated the bombing, but it did not break their will. 226 00:28:41,260 --> 00:28:47,220 Men like Wolf Falck believed the Allies would not stop the bombing 227 00:28:47,220 --> 00:28:52,580 until Germany was destroyed as an industrial power. 228 00:28:54,380 --> 00:29:00,180 When it was decided to destroy Germany, we have nothing to lose. 229 00:29:00,180 --> 00:29:08,140 We have nothing to lose, and so we fought for our people, for our country, to protect them. 230 00:29:08,140 --> 00:29:15,980 There was another, more powerful reason, to keep fighting - a dread of the advancing Soviet forces. 231 00:29:15,980 --> 00:29:22,380 Both sides had committed atrocities against each other in this war of annihilation. 232 00:29:22,380 --> 00:29:28,700 But now the supposed sub-humans were forcing the Germany army to retreat. 233 00:29:58,940 --> 00:30:02,740 NEWSREEL: 234 00:30:21,300 --> 00:30:27,500 Not only the propaganda newsreels tried to put the retreat in the best light, 235 00:30:27,500 --> 00:30:34,140 so did the Nazi guidance officers attached to each unit. Men like Walter Fernau. 236 00:33:02,740 --> 00:33:07,300 Also exhorting the Germans to continue fighting 237 00:33:07,300 --> 00:33:11,900 was the Nazi Propaganda Minister, Joseph Goebbels. 238 00:33:11,900 --> 00:33:16,780 In November, 1944, he addressed the Volkssturm, 239 00:33:16,780 --> 00:33:20,220 the German equivalent of the Home Guard. 240 00:34:16,620 --> 00:34:20,620 About six million men were in the Volkssturm, 241 00:34:20,620 --> 00:34:27,020 mostly those who had been thought too old or too young for military service. 242 00:34:27,020 --> 00:34:33,300 They were told they were the last bastion against the approaching Bolsheviks. 243 00:34:33,300 --> 00:34:40,460 The majority of the Italians had only been fighting against the British and the Americans. 244 00:34:40,460 --> 00:34:45,980 Nazi propaganda said the Russians were an entirely different enemy, 245 00:34:45,980 --> 00:34:53,420 sentiments echoed by Hitler the last time he ever broadcast to the German people on 30th January, 1945. 246 00:35:27,260 --> 00:35:32,940 It wasn't just fear of the Russians that kept the Germans fighting. 247 00:35:32,940 --> 00:35:37,620 It was fear of other Germans. In the last months of the war, 248 00:35:37,620 --> 00:35:43,220 Nazi oppression against German civilians increased dramatically. 249 00:35:43,220 --> 00:35:49,660 In the town of Zellingen by the river Main, a local farmer discovered what happened 250 00:35:49,660 --> 00:35:53,460 if you dared to criticise the local Nazis. 251 00:35:53,460 --> 00:36:01,020 On March the 25th, 1945, the local Volkssturm paraded in front of the parish church. 252 00:36:01,020 --> 00:36:06,020 They were exhorted to continue the struggle to fight to the end. 253 00:36:41,500 --> 00:36:44,100 One of the men who had sniggered 254 00:36:44,100 --> 00:36:48,020 lived on the edge of the parade ground. 255 00:36:48,020 --> 00:36:50,620 His name was Karl Weiglein, 256 00:36:50,620 --> 00:36:55,580 a local farmer with a reputation as something of a hothead. 257 00:36:55,580 --> 00:36:58,180 He was less than pleased 258 00:36:58,180 --> 00:37:04,060 when, two days later, local Nazis blew up the bridge over the Main, 259 00:37:04,060 --> 00:37:08,580 to prevent it being used by the approaching Allies. 260 00:37:08,580 --> 00:37:14,620 Weiglein remarked that the men who blew up the bridge should be hanged. 261 00:37:14,620 --> 00:37:20,980 The remark was overheard and Weiglein was arrested. A court martial was called, 262 00:37:20,980 --> 00:37:27,140 and Walter Fernau was told by his commanding officer to act as prosecutor. 263 00:37:38,420 --> 00:37:43,500 The court martial was held in a house near the parade ground. 264 00:37:43,500 --> 00:37:51,700 A trumped-up charge of sabotage was added to the case against Weiglein, and, after a brief hearing, 265 00:37:51,700 --> 00:37:54,300 as the hangman's noose was prepared, 266 00:37:54,300 --> 00:37:57,700 Walter Fernau made a final submission. 267 00:38:52,220 --> 00:38:56,820 Karl Weiglein was taken round the corner to a nearby tree. 268 00:38:56,820 --> 00:38:59,380 There, his head was put in a noose 269 00:38:59,380 --> 00:39:03,940 as his wife watched from their house a few feet away. 270 00:39:03,940 --> 00:39:07,100 A neighbour heard what happened next. 271 00:39:23,700 --> 00:39:30,140 Karl Weiglein was just one of thousands of victims of these flying court martials. 272 00:39:30,140 --> 00:39:32,820 For his part in Weiglein's death, 273 00:39:32,820 --> 00:39:37,140 Walter Fernau later served six years in prison. 274 00:40:02,940 --> 00:40:07,380 The ruins of Berlin now became Hitler's final bolt hole 275 00:40:07,380 --> 00:40:09,900 as the Soviet army advanced west. 276 00:40:19,900 --> 00:40:25,380 Even Goebbels' propaganda could not now conceal the reality - 277 00:40:25,380 --> 00:40:27,980 Hitler had become a physical wreck. 278 00:41:44,580 --> 00:41:50,140 Yet, even then, Hitler remained the undisputed leader of Germany. 279 00:41:50,140 --> 00:41:56,700 The Italians had turned to their king when they'd grown sick of Mussolini, 280 00:41:56,700 --> 00:42:01,220 but in Germany, Hitler held all the levers of power 281 00:42:01,220 --> 00:42:03,620 as head of state and chancellor. 282 00:42:05,460 --> 00:42:10,380 The price the Germans paid because Hitler remained their leader 283 00:42:10,380 --> 00:42:14,820 became heavier each day the war continued. 284 00:42:21,180 --> 00:42:25,580 Hitler had told his generals to act brutally. 285 00:42:25,580 --> 00:42:31,540 The advancing Soviet troops showed they too had learnt this Nazi lesson. 286 00:42:32,660 --> 00:42:36,220 On the very last day of Hitler's life, 287 00:42:36,220 --> 00:42:38,820 April the 30th, 1945, 288 00:42:38,820 --> 00:42:43,340 Soviet troops moved into the East German town of Demmin 289 00:42:43,340 --> 00:42:45,860 and destroyed it. 290 00:42:45,860 --> 00:42:52,900 The Germans were reaping the consequences of the suffering their army had sown in the East. 291 00:42:52,900 --> 00:42:57,540 Waltraud Reski was eleven when the Soviet soldiers came. 292 00:42:57,540 --> 00:43:03,900 She saw what the Russians did to the women of the town, including her own mother. 293 00:43:43,420 --> 00:43:47,500 Sooner than endure the Soviet occupation, 294 00:43:47,500 --> 00:43:51,980 more than 900 people in Demmin commited suicide. 295 00:43:51,980 --> 00:43:54,860 Hundreds drowned themselves here 296 00:43:54,860 --> 00:43:58,340 in the rivers which surround the town. 297 00:45:09,780 --> 00:45:15,300 It was Hitler and the Nazis who had brought this suffering on Germany. 298 00:45:19,420 --> 00:45:23,460 Now the Fuhrer too was to take his own life, 299 00:45:23,460 --> 00:45:28,660 but only when Soviet troops were yards away from him. 300 00:45:39,020 --> 00:45:41,540 He shot himself 301 00:45:41,540 --> 00:45:44,140 shortly before half past three 302 00:45:44,140 --> 00:45:47,060 on the afternoon of 30th April, 1945. 303 00:45:58,300 --> 00:46:01,340 Nazism had been destroyed 304 00:46:01,340 --> 00:46:04,500 but at a terrible cost. 305 00:46:04,500 --> 00:46:11,260 There were many reasons the Germans, unlike the Italians, had fought to the end, 306 00:46:11,260 --> 00:46:16,580 crucially, an inability to rid themselves of Hitler 307 00:46:16,580 --> 00:46:21,060 and a fear of the approaching Soviet forces, 308 00:46:21,060 --> 00:46:26,140 people they had been taught to believe were scarcely human. 309 00:46:26,140 --> 00:46:28,620 Hitler had said that when he died, 310 00:46:28,620 --> 00:46:33,060 he would leave a great and strong Germany behind him. 311 00:46:33,060 --> 00:46:35,700 He left a very different legacy - 312 00:46:35,700 --> 00:46:40,020 new knowledge of what human beings are capable of. 313 00:46:55,740 --> 00:47:03,340 The German-born philospher, Karl Jaspers, himself persecuted by the Nazis, wrote after the war, 314 00:47:03,340 --> 00:47:06,820 "That which has happened is a warning. 315 00:47:06,820 --> 00:47:09,340 "To forget it, is guilt. 316 00:47:09,340 --> 00:47:11,940 "It was possible for this to happen, 317 00:47:11,940 --> 00:47:16,940 "and it remains possible for it to happen again at any minute." 318 00:48:13,180 --> 00:48:19,660 Subtitles on 888 by Janice Hamilton and Judith Simpson BBC Scotland 1997 29888

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