Secret Germany: Claus von
Stauffenberg and the Mystical Crusade Against Hitler by Michael Baigent and
Richard Leigh. Published by Jonathan Cape in 1994.
Colonel Count Claus Graf von Stauffenberg is widely known as the man
who planted a bomb in a briefcase which almost succeeded in killing Adolf
Hitler. Secret Germany: Claus von Stauffenberg and the Mystical Crusade Against
Hitler, a book which I purchased back in August 1994, sought to explore
Stauffenberg not in the linear narrative format or by focusing on the Bomb Plot
against Hitler, and instead investigated the influence on him by the German
symbolist poet Stefan George, one of whose works was entitled “Secret Germany”.
Stauffenberg allegedly shouted “Long live Secret Germany” (some claim that it
was “Long live Holy Germany) just before a firing squad opened fire. The book
makes references to figures such as Heine, Goethe, Thomas Mann, Wagner and others
who examined what may be termed “The German Soul”. It examines German history,
as well as the philosophical and spiritual content of the ideas which shaped
German nationhood up to the Third Reich.
The best book
that I have read about a military figure is Secret
Germany: Claus von Stauffenberg and the Mystical Crusade Against Hitler.
Why do I rate
it highly?
Because of
what it is not.
The book is
not a conventional biography. While it does cover biographical details, as well
as Colonel Stauffenberg’s pivotal role in the July 20 plot to assassinate Adolf
Hitler, it delves into the ideas and the belief system which shaped the man, as
well as the epochs in German history which shaped the German people.
Stauffenberg
reportedly shouted the words “Long live Secret Germany” prior to being shot
dead by a firing squad after the failure of the anti-Hitler coup that he led.
Those words were pregnant with meaning and open the window through which
Baigent and Leigh assessed his belief system. There are thought-provoking
reference points to esotericism, mysticism, religion, poetry, and the shaping
not only of the subject, who was an aristocrat by birth, but also of the German
people and the powers that unleashed their domination of culture through music,
philosophy and economics. It also explores the factors influencing the German
tendency towards martial belligerence and hyper-nationalist sentiment during
the rise of Prussia, the era of the Kaiser and the Third Reich.
The reader is
reminded that Heine, the German poet and thinker, felt that Christianity served
as a bulwark of sorts to control the “battle lust” of the German people. Even
after centuries of official Christianisation, he believed that this religion kept
a tenuous lid on the warrior tendencies of the German race, among who could
arise a demagogue-thinker who would be able to use his primitive powers to
summon up the demonic forces of German pantheism.
The “battle
lust” that led to German defeat and near annihilation in two World Wars was
something predicted by Goethe, who during the Napoleonic age cautioned his
people about their embrace of nationalism and militarism. As the authors point
out in the chapter entitled “Culture and the Spirit”, Goethe predicted that
Germany would come to disaster if its people pursued the path of militarism,
and so called on the German people to invest in culture and the spirit, that
is, conquer the world with their talents in music, philosophy, trade and the
sciences.
By initially
supporting the policies of Adolf Hitler, this is something which Stauffenberg
did not adhere to. But his action in seeking to end Hitler’s life in an
operation which was not likely to succeed, was designed from his perspective to
serve as an atonement for the sins of his nation.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2020)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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