friend Erich Schultze came to a similar conclusion when he met Reinhard
during a brief visit to Halle. ‘We were all certain that he would go far in
the navy because of his ambition and ability. He was never content with
what he had achieved. His impulse was always for more; to do better; to
go higher. As a lieutenant he was already dreaming of becoming an
admiral.’94
While his relationship with the other young officers improved substan-
tially, Heydrich began to display a noticeable arrogance towards his
subordinates – something that would increase even further during the
1930s. He approached the common sailors and non-commissioned officers
on the
Schleswig-Holstein
in an imperious and personally insulting manner,
so much so that on two occasions his behaviour nearly led to a mutiny.95
But, despite these setbacks, Heydrich’s confidence grew and he felt that he
had ‘finally settled into’ his career as a navy officer.96 During and after his
service aboard the
Schleswig-Holstein
he used his more generously allotted
leisure time for sporting activities, mainly for sailing, swimming and
fencing. According to his roommate Beucke, Heydrich exercised every
day, horse-riding and jogging through the woods at weekends:
He wanted to become a pentathlete. He did everything with astounding
energy while vastly overestimating his talents and skills . . . He was
already dreaming of Olympic laurels and was never ashamed to praise
his achievements to the high heavens. When he wasn’t invited to the
Reichswehr Sport Championships, he felt completely misjudged. Based
on the results achieved at the Championships, he ‘proved’ to me that he
would have won the pentathlon . . .97
In Heydrich’s case, sporting prowess and military bearing were propel ed
by a desire to gain acceptance by his peers, but he was not alone in his
enthusiasm for sport as an expression of youthful virility. By 1931 over
6.5 mil ion Germans were members of organized sport associations. The
most popular sports for spectators were martial arts of various kinds, as
wel as sports involving speed, including modern piloting, which with its
daring manoeuvres was associated with adventure, heroic bravery and
technical progress. In the popular imagination the heroic pilot, embodied
YO U N G R E I N H A R D
39
by wartime figures such as the Red Baron, stood for the mastery by man
of the chal enges of modern technology. Heydrich himself began to take
flying lessons in the 1930s before participating as a pilot in various air raids
on the Norwegian and Russian front during the Second World War.98
After undergoing specialist training in radio operation and wireless
telegraphy, Heydrich continued to serve on the
Schleswig-Holstein
as radio
officer until October 1928.99 In 1950, his training officer at the naval
communications school, Gustav Kleikamp, recalled that Heydrich’s
‘talents, knowledge and ability were above average’. Kleikamp also stated
that Heydrich ‘was always convinced of his own abilities, ambitious and
able to present his achievements to his superiors in a favourable light’ – a
‘talent’ that he would use to his best advantage in later years.100 His
ambition grew with every success. According to his roommate at the
time, Heydrich tried ‘to “shine” everywhere: at work, towards his
superiors, towards his comrades, towards the crew, in sport, in society and
at the bar. He collected a repertoire of jokes and anecdotes, and accompa-
nied his songs on a lute. And he frequently impressed people in this
way . . .’101
On 1 July 1928 Heydrich was promoted to first lieutenant and deployed
to the communications division of the Baltic Naval Station in Kiel. He
now had significantly more free time, which he largely devoted to sport,
music and a third area of interest: women. He had already displayed a
strong interest in girls during the
Schleswig-Holstein
’s summer voyage to
Spain and Portugal, and according to some of his former fellow officers he
lived out his sexual fantasies in bars and brothels.102 Back in Kiel, he
repeatedly sought the company of women whom he could impress with
his officer’s uniform, his good manners and his musical talents. His efforts
were not without success, as one of his fellow officers recalled after the
war: ‘He left an impression more than once, particularly on older ladies.’103
In 1930 he made the acquaintance of a schoolgirl from Berlin whom he
visited in the capital over a period of several months. This relationship was
to have immense personal consequences for Heydrich.104
Lina von Osten
Reinhard Heydrich met his future wife, Lina von Osten, at a ball in Kiel
on 6 December 1930. Born on the island of Fehmarn in Eastern Holstein,
Lina had grown up in the coastal village of Lütjenbrode where her father,
Jürgen von Osten, ran the local school. The Osten family was descended
from Danish nobility, but had undergone a steady social decline since the
German–Danish War of 1864, when Fehmarn fell to Prussia. As the
second son in a family with six boys and two girls, Jürgen von Osten had
40
HITLER’S HANGMAN
to give up all claims to the family farm and, in 1896, he moved to
the island of Fehmarn, where he met and married one of his pupils:
Lina’s mother, Mathilde Hiss, whose family had lived and worked as
merchants on the island for generations. Like the Ostens, the Hisses
had seen better times. The war and the subsequent inflation extinguished
whatever was left of the family fortunes and the Ostens were forced to
live in the red-brick school building where Lina’s father taught the local
children.105
After a childhood marked by material deprivation and uncertainty
about the future, Lina received her school-leaving certificate in Oldenburg
in 1927, before spending a year in her parents’ household, during which
time her mother instructed her in cooking and other domestic duties. But
Lina was more ambitious and defied social conventions. On her own
initiative, she applied for a position at the Kiel Vocational School for Girls
with the goal of becoming a teacher – a profession which, at least in
Germany, was still largely dominated by men. In 1928 she moved to Kiel
where she lived in a girls’ dormitory, the Henriettenhaus, frequently
attending social gatherings and balls like the one in December 1930
where she first met Reinhard Heydrich.106
Heydrich took an instant liking to the self-confident and pretty
nineteen-year-old blonde. The attraction was mutual and Heydrich spent
the rest of the evening in Lina’s company before offering to escort her
back to her living quarters when the ball had ended. While they were
walking through the night, he asked for permission to see her again and
she agreed to a stroll in the local park two days later. According to her
memoirs, Lina felt instant ‘sympathy’ for the ‘ambitious yet reserved man’,
who, as she testified many years later, was ‘a comrade, a friend – and really
much more’.107
Three days after their first date, Reinhard invited Lina to the theatre and
afterwards to a nearby wine bar. Although they hardly knew each other,
Heydrich ended the evening with a marriage proposal. Lina voiced a series
of objections – her parents had no idea of his existence and she had not
even finished school yet – but eventually she accepted. On 18 December,
Lina and Heydrich became secretly engaged, with Reinhard assuring his
fiancée that he would seek her family’s approval by Christmas.108
That same day, a seriously love-struck Reinhard Heydrich wrote her a
letter:
My dearest, dearest Lina! In the midst of the hustle and bustle of work
and in a great hurry before my departure, I wanted you to know that . . .
al my thoughts are with you. And I realize now how much I love you.
You! I can no longer remember what it was like before. But I know only
YO U N G R E I N H A R D
41
too wel what I leave behind. That is why I am looking forward al the
more to the life that lies ahead of us. You! With you I could endure every
sorrow! Only a few more days until Christmas Eve. The closer it comes,
the more confidently I look ahead. For being straightforward and upright
is the key demand I have always placed upon myself. It wil thus not be
difficult for me to look your father in the eye. You know, for me there is
nothing worse in people whom I love than beating around the bush and
insincerity. I don’t hesitate to confront mean guys with the same weapons.
– I can hardly wait until Saturday! Until then, much love, Your Reinhard.109
That weekend, Heydrich offically wrote to Lina’s father, Jürgen von
Osten, in order to ask for his daughter’s hand in marriage. Then, over the
Christmas holidays, Heydrich visited his fianceé’s family in Lütjenbrode.
The visit confirmed much of what Lina had already told Reinhard: the
Ostens were part of northern Germany’s impoverished lower aristocracy,
a family that had lost all their savings in the post-war inflation. Since then,
the family had compensated for lost prestige and wealth by moving, like
many other German aristocratic familes that had fallen on hard times, to
the extreme right of the political spectrum. Lina’s brother, Hans, was an
early member of the Nazi Party, having joined in April 1929 after one of
Hitler’s first appearances in northern Germany. At the time of Reinhard’s
first visit to Lütjenbrode, Hans had been a party and SA member for
nearly three years.110
Lina, too, was already a convinced Nazi and a vehement anti-Semite
when she met Reinhard Heydrich in 1930. She first attended a Nazi party
rally in 1929 and was particularly impressed with the handsome young SS
men in their black uniforms who guarded the stage on which Hitler was
speaking that day. Reinhard may have reminded her of those imposing
men on the day of their first encounter, as she described him as ‘tall, manly
and very self-assured in his uniform’.111 According to her own post-war
testimony, however, Heydrich lacked any interest in political parties at the
time of their first encounter. Worse still from her point of view, he had
never heard of Hitler’s
Mein Kampf
and frequently made jokes about the
leader of the Nazi Party as a ‘Bohemian corporal’ and the ‘cripple’
Goebbels.112 Lina, by contrast, found Hitler’s anti-Semitism particularly
appealing. Even in the 1970s, when most people in Germany tried to
disguise their former anti-Semitism, Lina openly confessed that as a teen-
ager she had regarded the Polish Jews who had come into the country
after 1918 as ‘intruders and unwelcome guests’, and had felt so ‘provoked’
by their mere presence that she just ‘had to hate them’: ‘We compared
living with them to a forced marriage, where the partners literally cannot
bear the smell of one another.’113
42
HITLER’S HANGMAN
It was through Lina and her family that Heydrich had his first proper
introduction to Nazism, an ideology born in the immediate post-war
atmosphere of national trauma, defeat, revolution and inflation. Most of
the elements that went into its eclectic ideology – anti-Semitism, Social
Darwinism and a firm belief in a strong authoritarian leadership – had
already existed in Germany and many other European societies before
1914. Germany’s decent into a political and economic abyss between 1914
and 1923 gave such extreme views a new urgency, and increased the will-
ingness to use violence and murder to implement the measures which
pan-Germans, anti-Semites, eugenicists and ultra-nationalists had been
advocating since before the turn of the century.114 The apparent divisive-
ness of Weimar politics, so Hitler’s followers believed, required a firm
leadership to reunite the nation in a new people’s community, the
Volksgemeinschaft
. The institutions of state, society and culture would be
remodelled to create a racially homogeneous nation imbued with one
purpose: to make Germany great again. All those who stood in its way
would be crushed. ‘Community aliens’ and above all Jews would be forced
out of society. Weak, feeble or ‘degenerate’ elements would also be elimi-
nated from the chain of heredity. Thus strengthened, the German nation
would launch a war of conquest in Eastern Europe that would transform
Germany into a superpower and overcome the humiliations of the
previous decades.115
Such ideas remained those of a small number of Germans until 1929,
when the onset of the Great Depression catapulted Hitler’s previously tiny
party of extremists into the centre of German politics, even though it
never won an overall majority in general elections. By the time Reinhard