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Will this be the end of the Adolf Hitler conspiracy theories?

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Adolf Hitler is dead. That’s not really news but in the news this week, a group of French forensic pathologists led by Professor Philippe Charlier examined Hitler’s teeth and a fragment of his skull and confirmed he died in 1945.

The group’s findings were published this week revealing the teeth held no fragments of meat products. Hitler was a vegetarian. Tick. There was a bluish taint in the teeth revealing Hitler had taken cyanide prior to his death and the skull fragment revealed a bullet hole. Tick, tick.

At last now we can set aside the bizarre conspiracy theories that there is a 130-year-old monster shuffling around Paraguay.

As a child I grew up hearing so many of these theories. Hitler was still alive, it was said. He had fled to South America and was living comfortably there. Another crazy theory had Hitler escaping Germany by U-boat after which he set up camp in the North Pole.

That the greatest criminal and mass murderer of the 20th Century (not counting Stalin or Mao), perhaps the greatest bogeyman of all time was alive and kicking somewhere on the planet speaks more of conspiracy theories, how they start and how they gather momentum. It also raises the question of why so many people would prefer to believe bizarre and unlikely tales than examine hard facts and draw logical conclusions.

Charlier’s examinations confirm everything we knew to be true about Hitler’s death. He committed suicide in the bunker of the Reich chancellery and his body and the woman he had married less than 40 hours earlier, Eva Braun, were taken to ground level and incinerated in the early hours of April 30, 1945.

The charred remains of Hitler and Braun and two dogs, almost certainly Hitler’s beloved Alsatian, Blondi and her pup, Wulf, were discovered in a bomb crater outside the Reich Chancellery by the Soviet Third Shock Army under the command of Major General Maksim Purkayev on May 1.

Soviet intelligence, known by the delightful cold war acronym of SMERSH, took charge of the remains, performing autopsies on the two corpses before burying them in Berlin in an undisclosed location. The bodies were exhumed and reburied several times, the last in a location in Magdeburg in Saxony where Hitler’s and Braun’s corpses were joined in interment with those of Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, his wife and their six children. Again the location was kept secret.

A year later, SMERSH agents recovered two skull fragments from the burial site in Magdeburg and these were dispatched to Moscow where they gathered dust in Russian State Archives and sat forgotten until their discovery during the Soviet Perestroika period some two years after Mikhail Gorbachev’s period as General Secretary of the Communist party of the Soviet Union came to an end.

The conspiracy theories that would abound decades later were inspired initially by Stalin. US President Harry S. Truman asked Stalin point blank at the Potsdam conference in July 1945 if Hitler was dead. Stalin said no despite the fact SMERSH had obtained definitive dental evidence to the contrary.

Even at the Nuremberg trials, the US was still uncertain as to Hitler’s fate. Stalin’s game was largely to confuse and confound US authorities but by the end of 1946, the verdict was in and known by all Allied authorities. Hitler was dead and died by his own hand on April 30, 1945.

Less known about Hitler in the decades following his death was the miserable drug addict he had become. His drug regime, prescribed by the unrestrained quack and charlatan, Theodor Morell, had left Hitler perilously close to a premature death. Hitler’s daily intake of methamphetamine, cocaine, and heroin may not have been enough to kill him but would take years off his life, to the point where he was a walking corpse by 1945.

Similarly, the July 20 1944 plot to assassinate him by bomb at the Wolf’s Lair had left him seriously injured and these injuries would necessarily reduce his life expectancy considerably.

Alas, these hard facts were often poorly understood or roughly ignored. It was far more exciting to believe in the fantasy that Hitler had fled Germany and was alive and kicking.

Even as recently as 2009, forensic testing of skull fragments led to further confusion and a brief revisitation of conspiracy theories when an American archaeologist and bone specialist, Nick Bellantoni, found the pieces of skull he was given were that of a woman aged less than 40.

Back then, the Guardian reported breathlessly that the “histories (sic) of Hitler’s death may need to be rewritten — and left open-ended.” What nonsense.

I don’t doubt Bellantoni’s analysis or his qualifications. It seems more likely that he was given pieces of Braun’s skull rather than Hitler’s.

Hitler is dead and he died in 1945. We know this now and really, any sensible person should have accepted the facts as they were known seven decades ago. But will this final piece of the puzzle delivered by one of the world’s leading forensic pathologists kill off the conspiracy theories once and for all? I doubt it.

This column was first published in The Australian on 25 May 2018.

321 Comments

  • Mack the Knife says:

    Bassman, love this from Phil Emmanuel, puts a beautiful interpretation on a great song.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oD6hsNy1DwM

  • Tracy says:

    Rain delay in the cricket.
    Cooks into double figures😳

    • Jack The Insider says:

      England has a substantial lead now. Pakistan doing their usual – one Test outstanding, the next awful.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Now that’s a BIG letter, Mr Insider, the one Kimmie sent POTUS Trump. If that was posted in Australia our Australia Post would have made a motza on Stamps! Strewth
    https://tinyurl.com/ybzcxhnz

    • Milton says:

      Kimmie is obviously not the tweeting type. Still I think it sweet in this day and age that some people are putting pen to paper. This, as they say, could be the start of a beautiful friendship as I here their date is back on. Just imagine the hair of their love child!!

      • Henry Blofeld says:

        Once they meet and greet Milton do think Kimmie will take to the tweet like a duck to water. My guess he may even tweet Donald a goodnight message. White House trip coming up soon for Kimmie and also the Nobel Peace Prize for POTUS Trump, well deserved too. Mr Baptiste must be in a state of shock re developments. Cheers

      • Milton says:

        there hear!

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Mr Insider, we were having a chat at morning tea today discussing amongst other things who was the Aussie Politician we most disliked. Some interesting names were thrown up. My most disliked Pollie was Pauline Hanson for her falseness and a short half-head away that annoying waste of Public Monies, Sarah Hanson- Young.

    • patrick dalton-morgan says:

      No Henry, Peter Dutton by a mile, although Hanson a clear second in company with other climate denying bastards.

    • Bella says:

      Mine’s always been Dutton for his menacing inhumanity & of course Morrison, the deceptive motormouth I just have to put on mute to stay sane, then Pauline H for her general nonsensical contribution & finally, our defeated capitalist sell-out Turncoat, for powerless leadership.

  • Milton says:

    Finally Harvey Weinstein is up before the law. If found guilty Germaine Greer would have him doing community service. Hard to tell if Greer is just loopy or a desperate publicity seeker. Hard to imagine anyone else (especially a male) surviving making the same ludicrous and insensitive comments as Greer. But there will always be a seat waiting for her on Q&A.

    Saw a bit of the afl last night. From when I started viewing the blues needed only to make a gettable goal to get within a point or 2 of the swans. It was missed and I then heard their last 5 shots were behinds. From then the game got away from them, and pretty fast and a bit too easy. I’m not in a position to risk losing points backing them.

  • Tracy says:

    Just reading the comments of a former pupil at Cromer High, as he said there will be a few nervous ex teachers around the place.
    My husband went Forest High, never heard that it was going on there.
    The Lyn Dawson case is an enduring mystery for the Norther Beaches, may be wrong but I think the home was demolished a few years ago and the police took the chance to dig the block up but found nothing.

  • JackSprat says:

    Talking to a guy today who had just been to a reunion at North Sydney High – a selective high school that is very difficult to get into. He is in his 60’s.
    One of the Chinese of his era asked the head – what was the % of Asians when we went through and what is it now?
    The answer was 7% Asian when you went through and 7% Caucasian now.
    What was interesting was his next comment “The Chinese guy was the only person in the room who could get away with that question.”
    Interesting!

    • Trivalve says:

      JS – I went to a high school reunion last year, same vintage. We had four Asian kids in my senior years. One of them had ‘Soo’ as part of his name. It was the year that A Boy Named Sue came out and he was elected as a prefect on the strength of it. The boss got up on assembly and said what a wonderful spirit it showed, apparently not recognising or ignoring the pisstake that it was. Anyhow, one of the four came along to the reunion, which was nice and we talked about the massive change in the place.

      Fast forward to May and the salt mine where I am employed nowadays hosted a class from one of the main feeder schools to our high school (we have them every day, we have a great education centre). I had a look at them saw a ranga and not another ‘white’ face in the group. We have a Facebook page for the reunion so I put up a note about it. Just an observation. the Asian guy from the reunion came on and said that ‘they weren’t all dinky di Aussies like us any more’. Nice irony. Another friend with an Asian wife said he was going to ‘tell her about it’. A few likes came up too. So I did get the impression that one of the four could have stated the obvious but I should not have.

      Ridiculous. Change is change – mentioning it seems to be interpreted as being against it. Which could be the case but if you don’t say so you shouldn’t be criticised for it.

      • JackSprat says:

        TV
        Talking philosophically.
        It is a form of self-censorship.
        In this instance we are talking about a relatively simple question which people are too afraid to ask or see it as inappropriate to ask because of being labelled a racist.
        I have read articles on this tendency previously and it seems that on ethnic affairs, the only people who can ask questions of tender criticism are people from that group.
        I do not know if it is path to somewhere good in the future or it is a method of papering over the problems of “the most successful multi-cultural society in the world” – not that there are many successful ones.

    • Voltaire says:

      JS,

      NSBHS was my school – and we had a bit of everything: of almost 230 in my year, there was about 20 Chinese ( colloquially known as the Chinese mafia at the time), but FWIW more than double that number of Jews … we also had a couple of Indians, couple of Japanese…also a few born overseas fleeing communist Europe Czech, Pole, Hungarian etc

      The school not only dominated in debating (winning State competitions more often than not) but baseball, cricket
      rugby union (although narrowly lost final of Waratah Shield to Matraville High in final year to a bunch of kids by the name of Ella & Walker – and no I was most certainly not a member of the rugby team) tennis etc

      The playground language (handball, soccer or cards on a rainy day) was unequivocally English.

      Word on the street is that that is no longer the case- in fact English is allegedly rarely heard outside the classroom, and sporting feats all but nonexistent… sad as it contributed to a rounded education for survival of the fittest and people did not live in “ghettoes”.

      There was also a culture of intellectual challenge as no idea could not be raised and argued; the only problem was that many of the teachers were not up to it (both teaching and arguing ideas) but of course there were also a few very good ones.

      One who was not so good, was the assistant sportsmaster: Chris Dawson who is now in the news…. but as a single (wrong sex) school HE was not an issue of the sort currently the subject of reports inn the Australian…

      Slowly re-emerging following surgical bout (didn’t want to feel left out amongst the others here)

      cheers

      • Razor says:

        losing to a side carrying those lads is no shame Voltaire. A mate of mine still brings up to this day missing the under 16’s Qld halfback spot to a little blonde bloke from Ipswich. That little bloke was of course Allen Langer!

        Hope the surgery went well.

  • Gryzly says:

    Footy tips please, get em in.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Mr Insider I implore thee, tell us it’s not true, Mark Latham a possible political comeback in the Senate! Well plenty of vacancies with Pauline’s hopeless dysfunctional One Notion, ooops One Nation.
    https://tinyurl.com/ybemu5wh

    • Jack The Insider says:

      He says he’s been approached by four parties to run. He tends to exaggerate so it’s probably just two.

    • Milton says:

      Mad as Latham may be, Henry he’s of a higher calibre than any of the labor mob running around these days.

      • Trivalve says:

        That’s a particularly odd comment Milton.

        • Milton says:

          I didn’t think it was particularly odder than any of my other posts, Trivalve. I’ve just had the impression that Latham is a bit more of an ideas person than, say, Shorten. And he certainly seems to have more spine and conviction than Shorten, Plibersek, Bowen etc. He may have also been the first person I heard mention the term ‘aspirational class’, though I don’t think he coined it. Of course Medicare Gold is not something we need revisit, but that may have been Gillard’s brain fart.

          • Razor says:

            Couldn’t agree more Milt.

          • Trivalve says:

            Fair comment Milton, you do put up some strange posts at times! I guess you could call Latham a conviction politician, even though those convictions have headed from the left to the far right. He’s still a bovver boy too. I think we dodged a bullet in 2004 and we don’t need the ricochet now.

      • BASSMAN says:

        GULP!!

    • BASSMAN says:

      Labor Rat
      Mal Colston reincarnation

  • Wissendorf says:

    Blues got up over the Swans in about the same game last year, and I think they have enough oomph to do it again. Cats have been so ordinary of late I would not be surprised if the Suns got up. Not sure which rein to pull.

    • Wissendorf says:

      Another near miss Jack, but the Blues stayed in the contest. I tore up the ticket but I got an honest deal. Bolton would have to be pleased with that effort. Silvagni mentioned in dispatches during the radio call. The bye next week should freshen them up for the clash with Freo. I’ll be catching that game from some where up Cape York. A close friend of four decades passed away in Townsville last week at the far too young age of 63. Her funeral is this week and as I’ll be halfway there, thought I’d drive on and pitch my skills against the barra. The wild caught industry has gone bust, and hungry barra are leaping out of the water into the boat, I’m reliably informed. Hope your healing is going According to Hoyle.

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