injuring more than 4,500. Reinhard feared for the wel being of his wife and
sent her to a smal pension in the Bavarian countryside where she stayed for
several weeks.42
Heydrich’s rapid rise in the SS hierarchy and his scarcely disguised
ambition earned him many enemies. At the beginning of June 1932, the
old rumour of his Jewish ancestry came back to haunt him once again, this
time amplified in its damaging potential by the fact that he was now
working for a political organization in which anti-Semitism was a funda-
mental tenet of faith. It is likely that local members of the Nazi Party in
Halle, jealous of Heydrich’s swift ascent, had alerted the regional party
leadership to the rumours. On 6 June, the Nazi Gauleiter of Halle-
Magdeburg, Rudolf Jordan, wrote to the Nazi Party’s organizational
leader, Gregor Strasser, enquiring about ‘a party member with the name of
Heydrich whose father lives in Halle. There is reason to assume that his
father, Bruno Heydrich, is a Jew.’ As ‘proof ’, Jordan enclosed the extract
from the 1916 edition of Hugo Riemann’s music encyclopaedia in which
Bruno Heydrich was referred to as ‘Heydrich (actually Süss)’. Jordan
insisted that the party’s personnel department investigate the matter.43
Around the same time, Heydrich’s former fellow officer and member of
the court of honour, Hubertus von Wangenheim, told a relative who was
working in the Brown House about the rumours that had accompanied
Heydrich’s time in the navy. He mentioned that Heydrich had been teased
by his fellow officer cadets as a ‘white Jew’ and ‘white Moses’. Such
rumours fuelled suspicions at Nazi Party headquarters.44 Strasser imme-
diately passed the matter on to the party’s chief genealogist, Dr Achim
Gercke, head of the Nazis’
Auskunft
, or Information Office. Scarcely two
weeks later, on 22 June, Gercke responded with a detailed report on
Heydrich’s ancestry and confirmed that he was ‘of German origin and free
from any influence of coloured or Jewish blood’. Gercke insisted that the
‘insulting rumour’ of non-Aryan ancestry was entirely unfounded: ‘I take
full responsibility for the accuracy of this opinion and declare myself
prepared to testify to it before a court should the need arise.’45
Despite this clarification, Heydrich was deeply shaken by the re-
emergence of the damaging rumours only a year after his dismissal from
the navy, rumours that threatened his carefully rebuilt professional exist-
ence. Instead of accepting the findings of Gercke with relief, he privately
engaged a member of his SD service, Ernst Hoffman, to undertake further
62
HITLER’S HANGMAN
genealogical investigations. After the war, Hoffman recalled Heydrich’s
nervousness at each of their meetings, a nervousness which seemed
‘understandable but without foundation’.46 It was not the last time that
Heydrich had to engage with the dreaded rumour: in 1940 a baker from
Halle, Johannes Papst, himself a member of the Nazi Party, was sentenced
to twelve months’ imprisonment for spreading the libellous gossip that
Heydrich was a Jew.47
Partly as a result of this embarrassing and potential y career-terminating
episode, Heydrich devoted great energy to his work in the summer of
1932. His ambitions continued to be vast. In September, during the first
meeting with the recently instal ed branch office directors of the SD, he
declared that he intended to develop the organization into the German
equivalent of the British secret service (as he understood it): ‘Its task would
be to gather, evaluate and verify substantive material on the objectives,
methods and plans of internal enemies; and to report on potential wrongdo-
ings within our own ranks.’48 Compared to the reality of the situation in
mid-1932, these were fantastical goals. The SD was stil a tiny outfit with
no more than thirty-three ful -time employees and a thinly spread network
of largely unpaid agents scarcely able to fulfil the tasks already assigned
to them.49
The autumn of 1932 brought Heydrich further uncertainties. In the
November Reichstag elections Hitler’s party lost more than 2 mil ion
votes, triggering an over-optimistic media campaign by the republican left
predicting the imminent death of Nazism. If only briefly, Heydrich must
have wondered whether he had made the right decision in joining the Nazi
Party. The SD’s finances, always dependent on irregular payments from the
party and the SA, further deteriorated in late 1932 to the extent that for a
few weeks around Christmas even Heydrich’s telephone was cut off due to
unpaid bil s. In January 1933, immediately prior to the seizure of power,
the Nazi Party temporarily stopped paying the SD employees altogether.
The bleak winter of 1932 clearly marked the low point of Heydrich’s SS
career and few people would have predicted at that time that either the SD
or Heydrich had any future role to play in German politics.50
Seizures of Power
The events of January 1933 amounted to an extraordinary political drama,
a drama that unfolded silently behind closed doors and largely out of
Heydrich’s sight. Backed by senior figures in the German business
community and by the powerful Agrarian League of largely East Elbian
estate holders, Germany’s former conservative Chancellor, Franz von
Papen, was looking for ways to replace his increasingly unpopular and
B E C O M I N G H E Y D R I C H
63
isolated successor in office, General Kurt von Schleicher, with a right-
wing coalition government that enjoyed broad popular support. The only
way of establishing a viable government of the national right, as was clear
to everyone involved, was to bring the strongest political party in Germany,
the Nazi Party, into the cabinet. The question was whether the key players
– Hitler, Papen and Reich President von Hindenburg – could agree on the
price for Nazi participation in government. Although Papen initially
wanted the chancellor’s seat for himself, frenetic negotiations between
Hitler, Papen and close associates of Hindenburg finally led to a compro-
mise: Hitler was to lead the government as chancellor, but he was to be
firmly contained by a majority of ‘reliable’ conservative ministers who
enjoyed Hindenburg’s confidence.51
Deprived of Hindenburg’s crucial support, Chancellor von Schleicher
resigned on 27 January 1933. That very same day, Heydrich was ordered
by Himmler to relocate to Berlin, where he moved into a house in the
salubrious Westend that served both as his private residence and as the
SD headquarters in the German capital. Against the backdrop of ongoing
negotiations between Hitler, Papen and Hindenburg regarding a future
Nazi-led coalition government, Heydrich’s task was twofold: to prepare
the relocation of the SD from Munich to Berlin for the increasingly likely
event of a Nazi takeover and to establish closer ties with the powerful and
largely independent SS division in the capital. Just three days after
Heydrich’s arrival in Berlin, on 30 January, Himmler informed him that
Hitler had been appointed German chancellor as head of a coalition
government.52
Heydrich played a passive role in the largely uncoordinated events that
now unfolded throughout Germany. In the lead-up to the general elec-
tions of 5 March which Hitler hoped would strengthen the electoral basis
of his new government, the Nazis gradually increased the pressure on their
opponents on the political left, starting with the Decree for the Protection
of the German People of 4 February, which provided a means of banning
opposition newspapers during the election campaign. A welcome pretext
for the escalation of physical violence against Communists and Social
Democrats occurred on 27 February when a lone Dutchman with a
Communist past, Marinus van der Lubbe, set fire to the Reichstag
building in Berlin. The Nazi leadership immediately seized upon the event
as a long-awaited opportunity to wage open war on the German
Communist Party.53 Five days earlier, to deal with an alleged increase in
left-radical violence, the new Prussian Minister President, Hermann
Göring, had recruited some 50,000 men from the ranks of the SA and the
SS as ‘auxiliary policemen’ with authority to carry out arrests. Now the
often threatened day of reckoning had arrived. The Nazi auxiliary
64
HITLER’S HANGMAN
policemen swiftly used their newly gained powers to incarcerate thou-
sands of real or alleged political enemies and to hold them, without
judicial sanction, in abandoned factories, warehouses and basements
where they were subjected to orgies of cruelty. Communists in particular
were savagely repressed. Individuals were brutally beaten and tortured,
sometimes even murdered, with total impunity. By April, the number of
political prisoners arrested in Prussia alone exceeded 25,000.54
Physical coercion was directed with massive ferocity against leading
Communists, Social Democrats and trade unionists, and with symbolic or
exemplary force against those such as liberals, Catholics and conservatives
who were less diametrically opposed to the politics of the emerging Third
Reich. Jews were often maltreated, but they were not the primary target
of Nazi violence. By the end of the summer of 1933, some 100,000 people,
mainly opponents on the political left, had been arrested throughout
Germany, with some 500–600 killed.55
Although the Nazi ‘revolution’ of 1933 claimed relatively few lives – at
least in comparison with the extreme bloodshed of the following twelve
years – violence and intimidation were a central component. The wave of
arrests, deliberately carried out to create a climate of fear, led the victims
to police prisons or, worse, to one of the many ‘wild’ concentration camps
or informal torture cellars which sprang up across the country to deal with
putative enemies. Physical violence during the first weeks of the Third
Reich served a dual purpose: to eliminate the most outspoken opponents
of Nazism and to intimidate those who might pose a potential threat.
Nazi terror, real and threatened, had a devastating effect, but physical
violence was unevenly applied in different parts of Germany where the
local SA usually acted on its own initiative. In the first two months at least
of the Third Reich, the terror was not co-ordinated from above.56
During the first few weeks of the Third Reich Heydrich remained a
mere observer of political events and the terror that erupted on Germany’s
streets. If he and Himmler had hoped that the Nazi seizure of power
would propel them into positions of influence in Berlin, their ambitions
were quickly disappointed. Both were left empty-handed after the distri-
bution of key offices in the German capital. Heydrich himself remained
in Berlin until March 1933, but continued to operate on the sidelines of
the major political events that took place in Germany’s capital. Frustrated
that the new dawn of the Third Reich had not increased his personal
influence at all, he decided to launch a new initiative.
On 5 March, the day of the general elections which unsurprisingly – given
the pressures on the opposition – gave the Nazis 43.9 per cent of the popular
vote, Heydrich sought to make contact with Kurt Daluege, the powerful
leader of SS Division East and recently appointed commissioner for special
B E C O M I N G H E Y D R I C H
65
assignments in the Prussian Interior Ministry, who would later become
Heydrich’s counterpart as head of the Third Reich’s uniformed Order Police.
Daluege, so much was clear to Heydrich, was an indispensable contact who
could open doors in the capital. Born in 1897 in ethnical y mixed Upper
Silesia, Daluege had a characteristic SS career: he had served both in the
Great War and in various Freikorps formations after 1918 and joined the
Nazi Party in 1922 before transferring from the SA to the SS in 1929,
becoming the leader of that organization for Berlin and northern Germany.
Since then, Daluege had played a key role in restraining the unruly East
German SA, whose members felt that Hitler’s legalistic route to power was
simply too slow. Partly for that reason, Göring had selected him as the future
strong man in the Prussian police apparatus and authorized him to under-
take a political purge of the police force.57
As Heydrich understood, being directly authorized by Göring and now
employed as a senior official in the Prussian Interior Ministry made
Daluege relatively independent of the SS leadership in Munich. Daluege,
who was busy climbing the career ladder, had little time for the unknown