A memorial at the site of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's (forced) suicide outside of the town of Herrlingen, Baden
VERBATIM
For a time, Erwin Rommel was Hitler's
favorite general. Gaining prominence in 1940 as a commander of a panzer
division that smashed the French defenses
(see "Blitzkrieg, 1940"),
Rommel went on to command the Afrika Korps where his tactical genius,
ability to inspire his troops and make the best of limited resources,
prompted Hitler to elevate him to the rank of Field Marshall. In 1943,
Hitler placed Rommel in command of fortifying the
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Rommel in the African desert, 19 |
"Atlantic Wall" along the coast of France
- defenses intended to repel the inevitable invasion of Europe by the
Allies.
By the beginning of 1943, Rommel's faith in Germany's ability to win the
war was crumbling, as was his estimation of Hitler. Touring Germany,
Rommel was appalled at the devastation of the Allied bombing raids and
the erosion of the peoples' morale. He also learned for the first time
of the death camps, slave labor, the extermination of the Jews and the
other atrocities of the Nazi regime. Rommel became convinced that
victory for Germany was a lost cause and that prolonging the war would
lead only to his homeland's devastation. He came in contact with members
of a growing conspiracy dedicated to ousting Hitler and establishing a
separate peace with the western allies.
On July 17, 1944, British aircraft strafed Rommel's staff car, severely wounding
the Field Marshall. He was taken to a hospital and then to his home in Germany
to convalesce. Three days later, an assassin's bomb nearly killed Hitler during
a strategy meeting at his headquarters in East Prussia. In the gory reprisals
that followed, some suspects implicated Rommel in the plot. Although he may
not have been aware of the attempt on Hitler's life, his "defeatist" attitude
was enough to warrant Hitler's wrath. The problem for Hitler was how to eliminate
Germany's most popular general without revealing to the German people that
he had ordered his death. The solution was to force Rommel to commit suicide
and announce that his death was due to his battle wounds.
Rommel's son, Manfred, was 15 years old and
served as part of an antiaircraft crew near his home. On October 14th,
1944 Manfred was given leave to return to his home where his father
continued to convalesce. The family was aware that Rommel was under
suspicion and that his chief of staff and his commanding officer had
both been executed. Manfred's account begins as he enters his home and
finds his father at breakfast:
"...I arrived at
Herrlingen at 7:00 a.m. My father was at breakfast. A cup was quickly
brought for me and we breakfasted together, afterwards taking a stroll
in the garden.
'At twelve o'clock to-day two Generals are coming to discuss my future
employment,' my father started the conversation. 'So today will decide
what is planned for me; whether a People's Court or a new command in the
East.'
'Would you accept such a command,' I asked.
He took me by the arm, and replied: 'My dear boy, our enemy in the East
is so terrible that every other consideration has to give way before it.
If he succeeds in overrunning Europe, even only temporarily, it will be
the end of everything which has made life appear worth living. Of
course I would go.'
Shortly before twelve o'clock, my father went to his room on the first
floor and changed from the brown civilian jacket which he usually wore
over riding-breeches, to his Africa tunic, which was his favorite
uniform on account of its open collar.
At about twelve o'clock a dark-green car with a
Berlin number stopped in front of our garden gate. The only men in the
house apart from my father, were Captain Aldinger (Rommel's aide), a badly wounded war-veteran corporal and myself. Two
generals - Burgdorf, a powerful florid man, and Maisel, small and slender - alighted
from the car and entered the house. They were respectful and courteous and asked
my father's permission to speak to him alone. Aldinger and I left the room. 'So
they are not going to arrest him,' I thought with relief, as I went upstairs
to find myself a book.
"I shall be dead in a quarter of an hour"
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A few minutes later I heard my father come upstairs
and go into my mother's room. Anxious to know what was afoot, I got up
and followed him. He was standing in the middle of the room, his face
pale. 'Come outside with me,' he said in a tight voice. We went into my
room. 'I have just had to tell your mother,' he began slowly, 'that I
shall be dead in a quarter of an hour.' He was calm as he continued: 'To
die by the hand of one's own people is hard. But the house is
surrounded and Hitler is charging me with high treason. ' "In view of my
services in Africa," ' he quoted sarcastically, 'I am to have the
chance of dying by poison. The two generals have brought it with them.
It's fatal in three seconds. If I accept, none of the usual steps will
be taken against my family, that is against you. They will also leave my
staff alone.'
'Do you believe it?' I interrupted. 'Yes,' he replied. 'I believe it. It
is very much in their interest to see that the affair does not come out
into the open. By the way, I have been charged to put you under a
promise of the strictest silence. If a single word of this comes out,
they will no longer feel themselves bound by the agreement.'
I tried again. 'Can't we defend ourselves?' He cut me off short.
'There's no point,' he said. 'It's better for one to die than for all of
us to be killed in a shooting affray. Anyway, we've practically no
ammunition.' We briefly took leave of each other. 'Call Aldinger,
please,' he said.
Aldinger had meanwhile been engaged in conversation by the General's
escort to keep him away from my father. At my call, he came running
upstairs. He, too, was struck cold when he heard what
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German prisoners are marched through the streets of Aachen - the first German city to fall. October 1944 |
was happening. My father now spoke more quickly. He again
said how useless it was to attempt to defend ourselves. 'It's all been
prepared to the last detail. I'm to be given a state funeral. I have
asked that it should take place in Ulm. ( a town near Rommel's home)
In
a quarter of an hour, you, Aldinger, will receive a telephone call from
the Wagnerschule reserve hospital in Ulm to say that I've had a brain
seizure on the way to a conference.' He looked at his watch. 'I must go,
they've only given me ten minutes.' He quickly took leave of us again.
Then we went downstairs together.
We helped my father into his leather coat. Suddenly he pulled out his
wallet. 'There's still 150 marks in there,' he said. 'Shall I take the
money with me?'
'That doesn't matter now, Herr Field Marshal,' said Aldinger.
My father put his wallet carefully back in his pocket. As he went into
the hall, his little dachshund which he had been given as a puppy a few
months before in France, jumped up at him with a whine of joy. 'Shut the
dog in the study, Manfred,' he said, and waited in the hall with
Aldinger while I removed the excited dog and pushed it through the study
door. Then we walked out of the house together. The two generals were
standing at the garden gate. We walked slowly down the path, the crunch
of the gravel sounding unusually loud.
As we approached the generals they raised their right hands in salute.
'Herr Field Marshal,' Burgdorf said shortly and stood aside for my
father to pass through the gate. A knot of villagers stood outside the
drive.
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Hitler's wreath is carried in Rommel's funeral procession Oct. 18, 1944 |
The two generals climbed quickly into their seats and
the doors were slammed. My father did not turn again as the car drove
quickly off up the hill and disappeared round a bend in the road. When
it had gone Aldinger and I turned and walked silently back into the
house.
Twenty minutes later the telephone rang. Aldinger lifted the receiver and my father's death was duly reported.
It was not then entirely clear, what had happened to him after he left
us. Later we learned that the car had halted a few hundred yards up the
hill from our house in an open space at the edge of the wood. Gestapo
men, who had appeared in force from Berlin that morning, were watching
the area with instructions to shoot my father down and storm the house
if he offered resistance. Maisel and the driver got out of the car,
leaving my father and Burgdorf inside. When the driver was permitted to
return ten minutes or so later, he saw my father sunk forward with his
cap off and the marshal's baton fallen from his hand."
References:
Hart, B. H. Liddell, The Rommel Papers (1953); Manvell, Roger, Heinrich Fraenkel, The Men Who Tried to Kill Hitler (1964).