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The Girl Who Traded Her Soul for a Nazi Villa and Champagne JJ

3 June 1944, Salzburg, Austria. The Second World War is in its fifth   year and across Europe, millions have already  perished. The Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied   Europe is just days away and yet Adolf Hitler  presides over a lavish wedding ceremony at   Mirabell Palace in Salzburg, before moving to the  Eagle’s Nest high in the Bavarian Alps, where the   celebration will continue for the next three days.

Despite the increasingly common food shortages and   bombings of major cities, the newlyweds enjoy  live music, dancing and champagne. The groom   is Hermann Fegelein, a high-ranking SS officer,  an opportunistic social climber and someone whom   Albert Speer, Hitler’s architect, described as  “one of the most disgusting people in Hitler’s   circle.

” The bride is the younger sister of Eva  Braun, Hitler’s long-time mistress and companion,   who for years lived in her older sister’s  shadow. She has spent the war years at the   Berghof, flirting with SS officers and  enjoying the luxuries of the Nazi elite,   seemingly oblivious to the genocide unfolding  across Europe. Her name is Gretl Braun. Margarete Berta “Gretl” Braun was born on 31  August 1915 in Munich, then part of the German   Empire.

She was the youngest of three daughters,  and along with her sisters Eva and Ilse,   she was raised in a middle-class family.  Gretl’s father Friedrich was a schoolteacher   and her mother Franziska worked as a seamstress. Gretl dropped out of secondary school at the age   of 16 and afterwards found work as a clerk for the  photography company of Heinrich Hoffmann, Hitler’s   official photographer. Hoffmann also employed her  older sister Eva.

It was through Hoffmann that Eva   had first met Adolf Hitler, and Gretl soon found  herself introduced to the same inner circle.   That job became Gretl’s ticket into Hitler’s  world and gave her the chance to develop a   shared passion for photography with her sister. Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party came into power   in January 1933.

2 years later in August 1935,  Hitler provided the sisters with a three-bedroom   apartment in Munich, near the city centre, where  they entertained senior Nazis in between trips   to the Berghof, Hitler’s private retreat in the  Bavarian Alps. In March 1936, Gretl and Eva moved   into a small villa at 12 Wasserburgerstrasse in  one of Munich’s most prestigious neighbourhoods.   Their father was not pleased with this  arrangement and wrote to Hitler to protest.

Gretl spent much of her time with Eva  at the Berghof, where she brightened the   formal atmosphere by having fun, smoking, and  flirting with SS orderlies. Hitler detested   smoking and frequently lectured those around  him about its dangers. He once promised a   Swiss gold watch and jewellery to any woman  who could go a month without cigarettes.

Eva   earned her reward, but Gretl did not. Hitler personally tried to persuade   Gretl to quit. He told her: “Give up  cigarettes, and I will offer you a villa.”   Gretl replied: “My Führer, a villa would be a  great joy to me, but only one, whereas smoking   gives me twenty little satisfactions every  day, satisfactions that last and multiply.

” Like many of the young women who surrounded  the Nazi leader, Gretl Braun was always on the   lookout for a suitable and influential husband.  Hitler himself encouraged young party officials,   military officers, and SS members to court her. His first choice was Heinrich, the son of   his official photographer Heinrich Hoffmann.

Gretl did not find him attractive and instead   began a relationship with an American  diplomat. When that relationship ended,   she turned her attention to Hitler’s adjutant,  Fritz Darges. But that relationship also came to   an end when Darges was reassigned to the Eastern  Front in 1944, following a sarcastic comment made   in front of Hitler, which the Führer did not find  amusing.

Moreover, rumours circulated that Gretl   was pregnant with Darges’ child, and that his  refusal to marry her had angered the Führer.  Hitler also tried to persuade Walter Hewel,  a member of his inner circle, to marry Gretl.   Hewel served as the liaison between Nazi  Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and   Hitler himself.

The Führer once described Hewel  as an “excellent diplomat” — a necessary quality,   he added, for anyone serving as an intermediary  between himself and Ribbentrop. Hitler promised   Hewel that after marrying Gretl, he would appoint  him ambassador to Rome. But Hewel did not fancy   the idea. He married someone else instead, and  Hitler was so furious that he refused to see   him for some time. Eventually, however, he forgave  him, and Hewel returned to Hitler’s inner circle.

Gretl then became involved with Hermann  Fegelein, the SS liaison officer to Hitler.   Between September 1939 and the autumn of  1943, Fegelein and the cavalry units under   his command participated in the so-called  anti-partisan operations in Poland and the   Soviet Union — operations that in practice often  meant the systematic murder of Jews and civilians.

Tens of thousands of men, women, and children  were killed in areas where his units operated.  Despite this violent record, Fegelein cultivated  the image of a charming and ambitious officer   within Hitler’s inner circle and was accustomed  to attracting attention wherever he went. He   had a refreshing, sometimes very dry wit, and he  never minced his words.

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He would go to the nightly   parties hosted by Martin Bormann, Hitler’s private  secretary, where he drank with all the important   men and had all the women at his feet. On one  occasion he frankly admitted that nothing was   as important to him as his career and a good life. Many in Hitler’s inner circle, however, despised   him.

Albert Speer, Hitler’s chief architect  and later Minister of Armaments, called him   one of the “most disgusting people in Hitler’s  circle.” Fegelein had worked his way into Heinrich   Himmler’s favour through a combination of flattery  and manipulation, gaining choice assignments,   promotions, and decorations despite horrific  casualty rates among the units he commanded. For Gretl, marrying Fegelein meant escaping her   sister’s shadow and securing her  place in Hitler’s inner circle.

On 3 June 1944, just days before  the Allied invasion of Normandy,   Gretl Braun married Hermann Fegelein. Eva had arranged the wedding, held at Mirabell   Palace in Salzburg, with Hitler in attendance and  witnessed by Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS,   and Martin Bormann.

Eva insisted that the wedding  be perfect, as beautiful as if it were her own,   supervising every aspect of the planning. Fegelein  was only too happy to marry Gretl, as it cemented   his position within the Nazi hierarchy. The  marriage also transformed Gretl’s standing,   finally bringing her out of her sister’s shadow  and greatly increasing her social prestige.  Despite the increasingly common food  shortages and bombings of major cities,   the newlyweds partied for three days — while  the Nazi leadership turned its attention   to the deteriorating situation in France and  Italy, where the Allies had just captured Rome.

Gretl Braun and Hermann Fegelein had  little time together before the war   entered its final catastrophic stage. Just  a week after the wedding, on 10 June 1944,   Fegelein was promoted to SS-Gruppenführer and  Generalleutnant of the Waffen-SS, which was the   military branch of the SS.

On 20 July 1944,  he was at the Wolf’s Lair in East Prussia,   when Oberstleutnant Claus von Stauffenberg  set off a bomb in a failed bid to kill Hitler.   Fegelein survived the blast, and his decision to  marry Hitler’s de facto sister-in-law had worked   in his favour. His career was advancing fast. Soon, Gretl became pregnant and was staying   at the Berghof, far from the bombing and  combat.

During the last months of 1944,   Fegelein headed the investigation into the 20 July  Plot, while Eva travelled back and forth between   Berlin and the Berghof to keep her sister company. In January 1945, Hitler and Eva, along with most   of the government and their followers, moved into  the fortified Führerbunker complex in central   Berlin, while Gretl remained at the Berghof.

In April 1945, the Red Army had broken through   the German military and was close  to capturing the German capital. On 23 April, Eva Braun wrote her  final letter to her younger sister,   Gretl, asking her to destroy most of her  correspondence while preserving and burying   a small portion of her personal papers. None  of these documents were found after the war.

With defeat closing in, Fegelein tried  to escape Berlin and flee to Sweden or   Switzerland. When Himmler attempted to negotiate  a separate peace with the Western Allies, Hitler   flew into a rage and ordered Fegelein’s arrest.  The Führer believed that Fegelein had betrayed   him. A commando squad found Fegelein at home,  reportedly drunk and dressed in civilian clothes.

On the night of 28 April 1945, as Fegelein was  court-martialled and executed for desertion,   Hitler finally married Eva Braun. Two days  later, on 30 April 1945, Hitler and Eva Braun   took their own lives in the bunker. Less than  a week afterward, on 5 May 1945, Gretl Braun   gave birth to a daughter, whom she named Eva  Barbara Fegelein in memory of her dead sister.

The Second World War in  Europe ended on 8 May 1945. After the war, Gretl cut ties with her  family. She hid Eva Braun’s photograph albums,   private films, and personal letters in  the grounds of her late husband’s mansion.  At some point, she met a German refugee whom  she came to trust.

Out of love or financial   desperation, she confided in him about the  hidden archive. But the man was not who he   seemed. He turned out to be an agent of  the American Counterintelligence Corps.   He persuaded her to reveal the hiding place,  and the entire archive was sent to Washington,   where the photographs were distributed to  intelligence services around the world.

In February 1954 Gretl married Kurt Berlinghoff  in Munich but the marriage produced no children.  Tragically, her only child, Eva Barbara Fegelein,   committed suicide in April 1971 at the age of 25  after her boyfriend was killed in a car accident. In the late 1970s, one of Gretl’s cousins found   her in Bavaria but by then,  she had Alzheimer’s disease.

Gretl Braun was 72 years old when she died on  10 October 1987 in the small town of Steingaden,   West Germany. The secrets of her correspondence  with her sister were buried with her. Thanks for watching the World History  Channel. Be sure to like and subscribe   and click the bell notification icon  so you don’t miss our next episodes.

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Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.