- Hitler Diaries
In April
1983 , the German newsmagazine "Stern" published extracts from what purported to be the diaries ofAdolf Hitler , known as the Hitler Diaries, which were subsequently revealed to be forgeries. The magazine had paid 10 millionGerman mark s for the sixty small books as well as two "special issues" aboutRudolf Hess 's flight to theUnited Kingdom , covering the period from1932 to1945 .Journalist
Gerd Heidemann claimed to have discovered them, and submitted them to be reviewed by a number of experts inWorld War II history, notably the historiansHugh Trevor-Roper ,Eberhard Jäckel andGerhard Weinberg . At a press conference onApril 25 ,1983 , the diaries were declared by these experts to be authentic. Even though they had not yet been properly examined by scientists, Trevor-Roper endorsed the diaries thus::"I am now satisfied that the documents are authentic; that the history of their wanderings since 1945 is true; and that the standard accounts of Hitler's writing habits, of his personality and, even, perhaps, of some public events, may in consequence have to be revised."
Trevor-Roper was at that time a director of Times Newspapers, and although he denied acting dishonestly, there was a clear conflict of interests, because "The Sunday Times" had already paid a substantial sum for the rights to serialise the diaries in the UK.
Heidemann claimed to have received the diaries from
East Germany , smuggled out by a "Dr. Fischer." The diaries were claimed to be part of a consignment of documents recovered from an aircraft crash in Börnersdorf nearDresden in April1945 .However within two weeks the Hitler Diaries were revealed by Dr
Julius Grant as being "grotesquely superficial fakes" made on modern paper using modern ink and full of historical inaccuracies. The autograph expert Kenneth W. Rendell also concluded they were not particularly good fakes. He called them "bad forgeries but a great hoax." Some point out that the most obvious fakery was the monogram on the title page reading 'FH' instead of 'AH' (for Adolf Hitler) - even though in the old German typeface those letters looked strikingly similar. However, 'FH' could conceivably stand for "Führerhauptquartier" ("Führer" Headquarters"). Content had been largely copied from a book of Hitler's speeches with additional 'personal' comments.As a reaction, "Stern" editors Peter Koch and Felix Schmidt resigned from the magazine. The episode was much ridiculed in the UK media (particularly by the "Sunday Times"' rival newspapers), and historian
Hugh Trevor-Roper 's reputation was seriously damaged.The diaries were actually written by
Konrad Kujau , a notoriousStuttgart forger. Both he and Heidemann went to trial in1985 and were each sentenced to 42 months in prison.Reception in popular culture
* In
1991 , "Selling Hitler", a television mini-series based on the book of the same name by Robert Harris, was produced for the British television channelITV . It was directed by Alastair Reid and starredJonathan Pryce as Heidemann,Alexei Sayle as Kujau,Tom Baker as "Stern" editor Manfred Fischer,Alan Bennett as Trevor-Roper,Roger Lloyd Pack asDavid Irving , Richard Wilson asHenri Nannen andBarry Humphries asRupert Murdoch .* A 1992 film by German director
Helmut Dietl featured fictional characterizations which mirrored many of the events.* In "
The Simpsons " episode, "Lisa the Iconoclast ," a museum curator calls the town founder's confessions to be "just as fake as the Howard Hughes will, the Hitler Diaries, or the Emancipation Retraction." (The third hoax being a joke.)*
Berke Breathed 's comic strip "Bloom County " satirized the incident by having Opus create "The Elvis Diaries", the supposed lost diaries of the lateElvis Presley , after being pressured byMilo Bloom in order to gain funds for the Bloom County political party. A panel of fellow comic strip characters (includingDagwood Bumstead ) declared them authentic, shouting in unison: "It's the real McCoy!". The diaries were eventually declared fraudulent after experts discovered they were written on "officialDukes of Hazzard stationery."* In the novel "
Good Omens ",Neil Gaiman andTerry Pratchett describe the fictional prophecy book around which the novel's story revolves, "The Nice and Accurate Prophecies made the Hitler Diaries look, well, like a bunch of forgeries."* In the novel "
The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole ", Adrian becomes ecstatic at the news of the "find" (ironically reported in a newspaper page that was going to be used to clean up his dog's excrement) and ends up betting with Pandora that the diaries are genuine. Naturally he loses, claims he will save the newspaper for the original purpose and is saddened by not getting the chance to find out "what maniacs eat for breakfast and how they behave in private".* In the
video game Castle Wolfenstein the Hitler Diaries are among the objects the player can find hidden in boxes. The player is immediately informed that the diaries are forgeries and they are automatically discarded.ee also
*
Mussolini diaries External links
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,923630,00.html Hitler's Diaries: Real or Fake?] Time Magazine, May 9, 1983.
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,925946,00.html Hitler's Forged Diaries.] Time Magazine, May 16, 1983.
*
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.