Hans Frank

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Hans Frank
Hans Frank

In office
October 26, 1939 – January 1945
Preceded by Ignacy Mościcki (President of Poland)
Succeeded by Provisional government

Born May 23, 1900(1900-05-23)
Karlsruhe, Germany
Died October 16, 1946 (aged 46)
Nuremberg, Germany
Nationality German
Political party National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP)
Spouse Brigitte Herbst (married 1925)

Hans Michael Frank (May 23, 1900October 16, 1946) was a German lawyer who worked for the Nazi party during the 1920s and 1930s and later became a high ranking official in Nazi Germany. He was prosecuted during the Nuremberg trials for his role in perpetrating the Holocaust during his tenure as Governor-General of occupied Poland. He was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and executed on October 16, 1946.

Contents

[edit] Pre-war career

Frank was born in Karlsruhe, and his parents were Karl Frank, a lawyer, and his wife Magdalena (nee Buchmaier). He had an elder brother, Karl Jr., and a younger sister, Elisabeth. He joined the German army in 1917, during World War I. After the war he served in the Freikorps and then joined the German Worker's Party (which soon evolved into NSDAP), in 1919, and was one of the party's earliest members.

He studied law, passing the final state examination in 1926, and rose to become the personal legal advisor to Adolf Hitler. In this capacity he was privy to personal details of Hitler's life. In his memoirs, written shortly before his execution, Frank made the sensational claim that he had investigated Hitler's family in 1930 after a "blackmail letter" had been received from Hitler's nephew William Patrick Hitler. William Patrick Hitler allegedly threatened to reveal embarrassing facts about Hitler's ancestry. Frank claimed to have uncovered evidence that Hitler's father was the illegitimate son of a Jew named Leopold Frankenberger. According to Frank, Hitler told him that his grandmother had merely extorted money from Frankenburger by threatening to claim his paternity of her illegitimate child. No evidence has ever emerged to support Frank's claims.[1]

As the Nazis rose to power, Frank served as the party's lawyer, representing it in over 2,400 cases, over $10,000 dollars where spent. This sometimes brought him into conflict with other lawyers, and one, a former teacher of Frank's appealed to him: "I beg you to leave these people alone! No good will come of it!" adding ominously, "Political movements that begin in the criminal courts will end in the criminal courts!"[2]

He was elected to the Reichstag in 1930, and in 1933 he was made Minister of Justice for Bavaria. He was also the head of the National Socialist Jurists Association and President of the Academy of German Law from 1933. Frank objected to extrajudicial killings,[3] both at the Dachau concentration camp and during the Night of the Long Knives.

However, Frank's view of what the judicial process required should not be exaggerated:

[The judge's] role is to safeguard the concrete order of the racial community, to eliminate dangerous elements, to prosecute all acts harmful to the community, and to arbitrate in disagreements between members of the community. The National Socialist ideology, especially as expressed in the Party programme and in the speeches of our Leader, is the basis for interpreting legal sources.[4]

From 1934, Frank was Reich Minister Without Portfolio.

[edit] Wartime career

In September 1939 Frank was assigned as Chief of Administration to Gerd von Rundstedt in the General Government (GG). From October 26, 1939, following the invasion of Poland, Frank was the Governor-General of the General Government for the occupied Polish territories (Generalgouverneur für die besetzten polnischen Gebiete), that is head of the General Government controlling those areas of Poland that had not been directly incorporated into Germany (roughly 90,000 km² out of the 170,000 km² Germany had gained). He was granted the SS rank of Obergruppenführer.

One of his first operations was the AB Action, aimed at destroying Polish intellectual life. Frank oversaw the segregation of the Jews into ghettos (Jewish quarters) and the use of Polish civilians as "forced and compulsory" labour. In 1942 he lost his positions of authority outside the GG after annoying Hitler with a series of speeches in Berlin, Vienna, Heidelberg, and Munich and also as part of a power struggle with Friedrich Wilhelm Krüger, the State Secretary for Security—head of the SS and the police in the GG. But it was Krüger who was ultimately replaced, with Wilhelm Koppe.

Frank later claimed that the extermination of Jews was entirely controlled by Heinrich Himmler and the SS and that he, Frank, was unaware of the extermination camps in the General Government until early in 1944. During his testimony at Nuremberg, Frank claimed he submitted resignation requests to Hitler on fourteen occasions but Hitler would not allow him to resign. Frank fled the General Government in January 1945, in advance of the Soviet Army.

[edit] Capture and trial

Frank (center, wearing a glove after an unsuccessful suicide attempt shortly after his arrest) at the Nuremberg trial, with Alfred Jodl and Alfred Rosenberg
Frank (center, wearing a glove after an unsuccessful suicide attempt shortly after his arrest) at the Nuremberg trial, with Alfred Jodl and Alfred Rosenberg

Frank was captured by American troops on May 3, 1945, at Tegernsee in southern Bavaria. Upon his capture, he tried to cut his own throat. Two days later, he lacerated his left arm in a second unsuccessful suicide attempt. He was indicted for war crimes and tried before the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg from November 20, 1945 to October 1, 1946. During the trial he renewed his childhood practice of Catholicism and, under the pressure of being on trial for his life, claimed to have a series of religious experiences.

Frank voluntarily surrendered forty-three volumes of his personal diaries to the Allies, which were then used against him as evidence of his guilt. Frank confessed to some of the charges put against him and viewed his own execution as a form of atonement for his sins. On the witness stand he uttered: "A thousand years will pass and the guilt of Germany will still not have been erased." However, during the trial, he vacillated wildly between penitence for his crimes and blaming the Allies, especially the Soviets, for an equal share of wartime atrocities.

The former Governor-General of Poland was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity on October 1, 1946, and was sentenced to death by hanging. While awaiting execution, he wrote his memoirs. The sentence was carried out on October 16. Journalist Howard K. Smith wrote of the execution:

Hans Frank was next in the parade of death. He was the only one of the condemned to enter the chamber with a smile on his countenance. Although nervous and swallowing frequently, this man, who claimed to have returned to his childhood Catholic faith after his arrest, gave the appearance of being relieved at the prospect of atoning for his evil deeds.[5]
The corpse of Hans Frank after he was hanged
The corpse of Hans Frank after he was hanged

He and Albert Speer were the only defendants to apparently show any true remorse for their war crimes during World War Two.[6]"My conscience does not allow me simply to throw the responsibility simply on minor people...A thousand years will pass and still Germany's guilt will not have been erased." [7]

He answered to his name quietly and when asked for any last statement, he replied "I am thankful for the kind treatment during my captivity and I ask God to accept me with mercy."[8]

[edit] Family

On April 2, 1925 Frank married 29-year-old secretary Brigitte Herbst (1895 - 1959) from Forst (Lausitz). The wedding took place in Munich. The couple honeymooned in Venetia. Hans and Brigitte Frank had five children:

Brigitte Frank had a reputation for having a more dominant personality than her husband, and from 1939 she called herself "Königin von Polen" ("Queen of Poland"). The marriage was unhappy and became colder from year to year. When Frank sought a divorce in 1942, Brigitte gave everything to save their marriage in order to remain the "First Lady in the General Government". One of her most famous comments was "I'd rather be widowed than divorced from a Reichsminister!" Frank answered: "So you are my deadly enemy!"[9]

In 1987, Niklas Frank wrote a book about his father, Der Vater: Eine Abrechnung ("The Father: A Settling of Accounts"), which was published in English in 1991 as In the Shadow of the Reich. The book, which was serialized in the magazine Stern, resulted in controversy in Germany because of the scathing way in which the younger Frank attacked his father, referring to him as "a slime-hole of a Hitler fanatic" and questioning his remorse before his execution.[10]

[edit] Quotations

In a 1940 interview in the Völkischer Beobachter:

In Prague, big red posters were put up on which one could read that seven Czechs had been shot today. I said to myself, 'If I had to put up a poster for every seven Poles shot, the forests of Poland would not be sufficient to manufacture the paper. [11]

About Polish partisans in Warsaw in 1943, he spoke from Kraków, stating:

If not for Warsaw in the General Government, we wouldn't have 4/5 of our current problems on that territory. Warsaw was and will be the center of chaos and a place from which opposition spreads throughout the rest of the country.

[edit] Portrayal in the media

Hans Frank has been portrayed by the following actors in film, television and theater productions.[12]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rosenbaum, R, Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of his Evil, Macmillan, 1998, pp.16-36
  2. ^ Richard J. Evans, The Coming of the Third Reich, Penguin Press, 2004, p. 179. ISBN 0143034693.
  3. ^ See Martyn Housden, Hans Frank's Opposition to the SS: Social Behavior, Consistency and the Power of the Situation, University of Bradford.
  4. ^ Quoted in Richard J. Evans, The Third Reich in Power, Penguin 2005, p. 73.
  5. ^ See Smith, "The Execution of Nazi War Criminals"
  6. ^ GM Gilbert. Nuremberg Diary, 19. ISBN 0306806614. 
  7. ^ From the transcript of his cross-examination during his trial. See Testimony of Frank at Nuremberg
  8. ^ See Smith, "The Execution of Nazi War Criminals"
  9. ^ "Hans Frank - Pre-war career, Wartime career, Quotation, Fiction and film," in Cambridge Encyclopedia, Vol. 32. Retrieved 20 January 2008.
  10. ^ See Niklas Frank, In the Shadow of the Reich, Knopf, 1991. ISBN 0394583450. See also Susan Benesch's Review] in Washington Monthly, Nov. 1991.
  11. ^ Date of publication was June 6, 1940. Cited in Davies, N. (2003) Rising '44. Macmillan, London. p.84 ISBN 978-0333905685. A slightly different translation is given by Czapski, J. (1987) The Inhuman Land. Polish Cultural Foundation, London. p.306 ISBN 0 85065 164 6: The occasion was a widely distributed proclamation in Czechoslovakia announcing the execution of seven Czech students. This is what he said: 'If I had to order a distribution of posters announcing such an event every time I order a shooting of seven Poles, there would not be enough trees in the Polish forests to supply the necessary paper.'
  12. ^ Hans Frank (Character) (English). IMDb.com. Retrieved on June 1, 2008.
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