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Private
struggle against Nazism
Defying Hitler
By Sebastian Haffner. Allen & Unwin. 259pp. $22.95.
Reviewer: CPL Alisha Welch
For people wishing to read a different
and ultimately personal account of the rise of Nazism and
Hitlers Third Reich, this book will not let you down.
Written in 1939 and only recently published after the authors
death in 1999, Defying Hitler is a captivating memoir
refreshing in the fact that the author is aware of his own
insignificance within the bigger picture.
Haffner wrote this book while in exile in England and readers
will appreciate the blunt honesty and disbelief at how his
fellow Germans allowed a madman to rise to absolute power.
It describes his life and the political events in Germany
from 1914 until 1933. After readers get through the first
few chapters where Haffner recalls his childhood infatuation
with the glory of war, the book becomes very difficult
to put down.
One particular paragraph enthralled me: When I compare
the deeper conclusions that Hitler and I drew from the same
painful experience [Germanys loss in World War I]
the one fury, defiance and the resolve to become a politician,
the other doubt as to the validity of the rules of the game,
and a horrified foreboding of the unpredictability of life
then I cannot help thinking that the reaction of the
11-year-old child was more mature than that of the 29-year-old
adult.
Undoubtedly, at that moment it was written in the stars that
I could never be on friendly terms with Hitlers Reich.
This extract is almost empowering and I admire the author
and his strength.
Hitler managed to bury himself deep within the German psyche
to play on the humiliation of losing the Great War.
To be presented with the opportunity to read an account of
one mans struggle with the Nazi ideal written
at the time is an honour and we should consider ourselves
fortunate that we actually can.
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