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The Queen of the SS & Himmler’s Private Nightmare—His Wife Margarete JJ

1943, German-occupied Europe. Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS   and one of the most feared men in Nazi Germany,  is at the height of his power. He oversees the   concentration camps, controls the police,  and answers only to Adolf Hitler himself.   His name alone spreads terror across  the continent and under his authority,   millions of Jews have already been murdered as  the machinery of genocide runs at full speed. 

But while he directs the Holocaust, he still  writes intimate letters to his wife. She shares   her husband’s hatred of Jews and never  once questions the morality of his work.   Yet behind the scenes, due to her appearance,  she is mocked by the wives of senior SS officers   and tolerates her husband’s affair with a  young secretary who bears him two children. 

She is the bitter, angry, and forgotten  woman at the side of the most powerful   killer in the Third Reich. Her name is Margarete Himmler. Margarete Himmler, one of 5 children of landowner  Hans Boden and his wife Elfriede, was born as   Margarete Boden on 9 September 1893 in the village  of Goncarzewo near the city of Bromberg, today’s   Polish Bydgoszcz, then part of the German Empire.

 Margarete trained and worked as a nurse during   the First World War, which lasted  from July 1914 to November 1918,   followed by a stint at a German Red Cross hospital  after the war ended. Her first marriage was short   and produced no children. With financial support  from her father, Margarete was able to operate   and direct a private nursing clinic in Berlin.

 In 1926, she met Heinrich Himmler, in a hotel   lobby at the Bavarian resort of Bad Reichenhall.  He immediately saw her as his ideal woman and   was particularly attracted to Margarete’s blonde  hair and blue eyes. The two were united not only   by antisemitism, but also by a shared interest  in homeopathy, medicinal herbs, and agriculture. According to some historians, Heinrich Himmler  had great difficulty finding girlfriends as he   lacked confidence. His timidity was likely  based largely on his awareness of his looks. 

Otto Strasser, a former Nazi politician, claimed  that Margarete, aged 34 and therefore almost 7   years older than Himmler, seduced him.  Himmler told Strasser that she was the   first woman with whom he had sexual relations. Margarete and Himmler shared an excessive love   of efficiency and neatness, longed for  strict domesticity, and both preferred   a frugal lifestyle.

 Margarete received from  her husband a steady stream of anti-Semitism   and rants against Communists and Freemasons.  Her hatred of Jews was evident in a letter to   Heinrich Himmler dated 22 June 1928, in which  she made insulting remarks about the co-owner   of the private clinic in Berlin, a gynaecologist  and surgeon named Bernhard Hauschildt. She said:   “That Hauschildt! Those Jews are all the same!” Heinrich and Margarete married in July 1928.  

Initially, Himmler struggled to reveal his  relationship with Margarete to his parents,   partly because she was so much older than  him, also because she was a divorcee and,   above all, because she was a Protestant. None of  Himmler’s family members attended the wedding,   so his groomsmen were the father and brother of  the bride.

 Ultimately, Himmler’s parents accepted   Margarete, but the family kept their distance  from her throughout the rest of the relationship. Just like her husband, Margarete was  captivated by Adolf Hitler and his beliefs,   and in August 1928, she joined the Nazi Party. In August of the following year, the couple had   their only child, a daughter named Gudrun.

 They  were also foster parents to Gerhard von Ahe, the   son of an SS officer who had been shot and killed  in Berlin shortly after the Nazis seized power.   After the marriage, she sold her share in the  private clinic for 12,000 Reichsmarks and moved   from Berlin to Waldtrudering, near Munich, where  the couple bought a house with the proceeds from   the sale.

 To supplement Himmler’s modest income as  a party employee, they unsuccessfully attempted to   sell their own agricultural products and operated  a small chicken farm. In the years that followed,   however, the couple enriched themselves through  property and valuables stolen from murdered Jews. The Himmlers occasionally attended social  functions together and were frequent guests   at the home of Reinhard Heydrich, one of  the principal architects of the Holocaust.  

Margarete saw it as her duty to invite the  wives of senior SS leaders over for coffee   and tea on Wednesday afternoons. Despite her best  efforts, she remained unpopular in SS circles.  Thanks to her husband, Margarete was the  most senior wife, and she was determined   to make sure everyone in the SS clan  respected that.

 Lina Heydrich, however,   resented playing second fiddle to a woman  she considered her inferior. At one point,   Margarete allegedly tried to force her husband  to persuade Heydrich to dump Lina, but Himmler   avoided the issue, unwilling to jeopardize  his working relationship with Lina’s husband.  Some have claimed that Himmler was ashamed  of his own wife, especially compared to   the attractive wives of two men under him,  Reinhard Heydrich and Karl Wolff, who served   as Himmler’s chief of staff. Lina Heydrich  mocked Margarete’s appearance, once sneering:  

“Size 50 underwear, that’s all there was to her.” In July 1937, the German journalist Bella Fromm   saw Himmler with his wife and later commented that  she was “dirty-blonde, dull, and fat” and that the   pleasures of the table were apparently the only  pleasures she got, since Himmler kept her at home.

During the Nuremberg Rally in 1938, Himmler  had conflicts with most of the wives of the   highest-ranking SS leaders, who as a group refused  to take any directions from her. Lina Heydrich,   in particular, harboured a “violent dislike” of  Margarete Himmler, a feeling that was mutual.  After the war, Lina Heydrich made insulting  comments to a reporter from Der Spiegel,   a German news magazine, describing Margarete  as a “narrow-minded, humourless, blonde-haired   woman” who suffered from agoraphobia, a fear  of open spaces that kept her trapped inside  

her home. Lina also said that Margarete Himmler  had “dominated her husband until at least 1936.” Baldur von Schirach, the former Hitler Youth  leader, wrote in his memoirs that Heinrich   Himmler was completely under his wife’s thumb.  He wrote: “The chief of police and the SS was   a nobody at home. He always had to give in.

” These testimonies suggest a striking contrast   between Himmler’s public role as one of the most  feared men in Nazi Germany — together with Hitler   responsible for the deaths of millions during the  Second World War — and his apparently submissive   position within his own marriage, where he seemed  deeply intimidated by his wife in private life. 

Gebhard Himmler, Heinrich Himmler’s older  brother, characterized Margarete as a cool,   hard woman with extremely delicate nerves  who radiated no warmth at all and spent too   much time moaning. Yet he admitted that she had  been an exemplary housewife who devotedly loved   Heinrich and remained true to her husband. Her devotion, however, was not reciprocated. 

In 1936, Heinrich Himmler hired a young  secretary named Hedwig Potthast and   by 1938 she had become his mistress.  Together they had two children, a son   named Helge and a daughter named Nanette Dorothea. Margarete learned of the affair at the latest by   February 1941. She felt humiliated and responded  with bitterness, but the couple did not divorce.  

The marriage was already broken, but they remained  legally bound. Unlike Margarete, Himmler adored   his daughter Gudrun. He nicknamed her Püppi,  which means dolly, and phoned her every few   days while visiting as often as he could. Himmler  continued to visit his wife and daughter at their   home in the Bavarian town of Gmund, mostly to  maintain his close relationship with Gudrun.

During the Second World War, which started  in September 1939, Margarete worked for the   German Red Cross. Beginning in December  1939, she supervised Red Cross hospitals   in the Berlin-Brandenburg military district. In  this role, she travelled to countries occupied   by the German army.

 In March 1940, during  a business trip to German-occupied Poland,   she wrote in a diary entry: “I was in Posen,  Lodsch and Warschau. This Jewish rabble,   the Poles, most of them don’t look like human  beings, and the dirt is indescribable. It is an   incredible job trying to create order there.” Margarete reached the rank of Oberstführerin,   or colonel, in the German Red Cross, but frequent  conflicts with the doctors she supervised   eventually led her to give up the position. She  then returned to live a withdrawn life in Gmund. 

In February 1945, in writing to Gebhard Himmler,  Margarete said of Heinrich: “How wonderful that he   has been called to great tasks and is equal to  them. The whole of Germany is looking to him.”  Margarete last had contact with her husband in  April 1945, shortly before the end of the war.   Assisted by SS personnel, she fled with her  daughter to South Tyrol, a region of northern   Italy then under German control, where they went  into hiding in the provincial capital, Bolzano.

The Second World War in  Europe ended on 8 May 1945.  Five days later, on 13 May 1945, Margarete  Himmler and her daughter were arrested in   Bolzano and held in Italy and France. During  her internment, Margarete was interrogated,   but it became clear that she was not informed  of the official business of her husband and was   described as having a “small-town mentality”  which persisted throughout her questioning.  

When interrogated, Margarete chose to put all  the blame on Hitler’s shoulders. Whatever her   husband may or may not have done, she said,  he was just following the Führer’s orders. After the war, Margarete Himmler said that she  did not have any knowledge of Nazi crimes. Yet   her own visits to the camps suggested she  knew far more than she admitted as she was   the only leading wife to have seen the  inside of the concentration camp system.  

Margarete visited Dachau several times to inspect  its huge herb garden and also toured Ravensbrück,   the women’s camp. Rather than comment on  the experience, she chose to stay silent. Margarete and Gudrun had to also testify at the  Nuremberg Trials and were eventually released   in November 1946.

 Margarete later complained  that she and her daughter had been held in   various camps and treated as though they had  to atone for the alleged sins of her husband.  Margarete Himmler was 73 years old when  she died on 25 August 1967 in Munich,   West Germany. She kept a diary from 1937  to 1945, which today consists of 122 pages.   The original is held in the United States  Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. 

In one of her letters to Heinrich Himmler,  Margarete wrote: “I am so lucky to possess   such a good, evil man, who loves his  evil wife as much as she loves him.”  One can only wonder how someone  could love a person responsible for   the deaths of millions of people  and still call him a good man. Thanks for watching the World History  Channel.

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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.