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The
White Rose: A Lesson in Dissent
by Jacob G. Hornberger
The date was February 22, 1943. Hans Scholl and his sister
Sophie, along with their best friend, Christoph Probst, were scheduled
to be executed by Nazi officials that afternoon. The prison guards were
so impressed with the calm and bravery of the prisoners in the face of
impending death that they violated regulations by permitting them to meet
together one last time. Hans, a medical student at the University of Munich,
was 24. Sophie, a student, was 21. Christoph, a medical student, was 22.
This is the story of The White
Rose. It is a lesson in dissent. It is a tale of courage of
principle of honor. It is detailed in three books: The White Rose
(1970) by Inge Scholl, A Noble Treason (1979) by Richard Hanser, and An
Honourable Defeat (1994) by Anton Gill.
Hans and Sophie Scholl were German teenagers in the 1930s. Like other
young Germans, they enthusiastically joined the Hitler Youth. They believed
that Adolf Hitler was leading Germany and the German people back to greatness.
Their parents were not so enthusiastic. Their father Robert Scholl
told his children that Hitler and the Nazis were leading Germany
down a road of destruction. Later in 1942 he would serve
time in a Nazi prison for telling his secretary: "The war! It is
already lost. This Hitler is God's scourge on mankind, and if the war
doesn't end soon the Russians will be sitting in Berlin."
Gradually, Hans and Sophie began realizing that their father was right.
They concluded that, in the name of freedom and the greater good of the
German nation, Hitler and the Nazis were enslaving and destroying the
German people.
They also knew that open dissent was impossible in Nazi Germany, especially
after the start of World War II. Most Germans took the traditional position
that once war breaks out, it is the duty of the citizen to support
the troops by supporting the government.
But Hans and Sophie Scholl believed differently. They believed that it
was the duty of a citizen, even in times of war, to stand up against an
evil regime, especially when it is sending hundreds of thousands of its
citizens to their deaths.
The Scholl siblings began sharing their feelings with a few of their friends
Christoph Probst, Alexander Schmorell, Willi Graf as well
as with Kurt Huber, their psychology and philosophy professor.
One day in 1942, copies of a leaflet entitled "The White Rose"
suddenly appeared at the University of Munich. The leaflet contained an
anonymous essay that said that the Nazi system had slowly imprisoned the
German people and was now destroying them. The Nazi regime had turned
evil. It was time, the essay said, for Germans to rise up and resist the
tyranny of their own government. At the bottom of the essay, the following
request appeared: "Please make as many copies of this leaflet as
you can and distribute them."
The leaflet caused a tremendous stir among the student body. It was the
first time that internal dissent against the Nazi regime had surfaced
in Germany. The essay had been secretly written and distributed by Hans
Scholl and his friends.
Another leaflet appeared soon afterward. And then another. And another.
Ultimately, there were six leaflets published and distributed by Hans
and Sophie Scholl and their friends four under the title "The
White Rose" and two under the title "Leaflets of the Resistance."
Their publication took place periodically between 1942 and 1943
interrupted for a few months when Hans and his friends were temporarily
sent to the Eastern Front to fight against the Russians.
The members of The White Rose, of course, had to act cautiously. The Nazi
regime maintained an iron grip over German society. Internal dissent was
quickly and efficiently smashed by the Gestapo. Hans and Sophie Scholl
and their friends knew what would happen to them if they were caught.
People began receiving copies of the leaflets in the mail. Students at
the University of Hamburg began copying and distributing them. Copies
began turning up in different parts of Germany and Austria.
Moreover, as Hanser points out, the members of The White Rose did not
limit themselves to leaflets. Graffiti began appearing in large letters
on streets and buildings all over Munich: "Down with Hitler! . .
. Hitler the Mass Murderer!" and "freiheit!
. . . freiheit! . . . Freedom! . . . Freedom!"
The Gestapo was driven into a frenzy. It knew that the authors were having
to procure large quantities of paper, envelopes, and postage. It knew
that they were using a duplicating machine. But despite the Gestapo's
best efforts, it was unable to catch the perpetrators.
One day February 18, 1943 Hans' and Sophie's luck ran out.
They were caught leaving pamphlets at the University of Munich and were
arrested. A search disclosed evidence of Christoph Probst's participation,
and he too was soon arrested. The three of them were indicted for treason.
On February 22 four days after their arrest their trial
began. The presiding judge, Roland Freisler, chief justice of the People's
Court of the Greater German Reich, had been sent from Berlin. Hanser writes:
"He conducted the trial as if the future of the Reich were indeed
at stake. He roared denunciations of the accused as if he were not the
judge but the prosecutor. He behaved alternately like an actor ranting
through an overwritten role in an implausible melodrama and a Grand Inquisitor
calling down eternal damnation on the heads of the three irredeemable
heretics before him. . . . No witnesses were called, since the defendants
had admitted everything. The proceedings consisted almost entirely of
Roland Freisler's denunciation and abuse, punctuated from time to time
by half-hearted offerings from the court-appointed defense attorneys,
one of whom summed up his case with the observation, "I can only
say fiat justitia. Let justice be done." By which he meant: Let the
accused get what they deserve.
Freisler and the other accusers could not understand what had happened
to these German youths. After all, they all came from nice German families.
They all had attended German schools. They had been members of the Hitler
Youth. How could they have turned out to be traitors? What had so twisted
and warped their minds?
Sophie Scholl shocked everyone in the courtroom when she remarked to Freisler:
"Somebody, after all, had to make a start. What we wrote and said
is also believed by many others. They just don't dare to express themselves
as we did." Later in the proceedings, she said to him: "You
know the war is lost. Why don't you have the courage to face it?"
In the middle of the trial, Robert and Magdalene Scholl tried to enter
the courtroom. Magdalene said to the guard: "But I'm the mother of
two of the accused." The guard responded: "You should have brought
them up better." Robert Scholl forced his way into the courtroom
and told the court that he was there to defend his children. He was seized
and forcibly escorted outside. The entire courtroom heard him shout: "One
day there will be another kind of justice! One day they will go down in
history!"
Roland Freisler pronounced his judgment on the three defendants: Guilty
of treason. Their sentence: Death.
They were escorted back to Stadelheim prison, where the guards permitted
Hans and Sophie to have one last visit with their parents. Hans met with
them first, and then Sophie. Hansen writes:
"His eyes were clear and steady and he showed no sign of dejection
or despair. He thanked his parents again for the love and warmth they
had given him and he asked them to convey his affection and regard to
a number of friends, whom he named. Here, for a moment, tears threatened,
and he turned away to spare his parents the pain of seeing them. Facing
them again, his shoulders were back and he smiled. . . .
"Then a woman prison guard brought in Sophie. . . . Her mother tentatively
offered her some candy, which Hans had declined. "Gladly," said
Sophie, taking it. "After all, I haven't had any lunch!" She,
too, looked somehow smaller, as if drawn together, but her face was clear
and her smile was fresh and unforced, with something in it that her parents
read as triumph. "Sophie, Sophie," her mother murmured, as if
to herself. "To think you'll never be coming through the door again!"
Sophie's smile was gentle. "Ah, Mother," she said. "Those
few little years. . . ." Sophie Scholl looked at her parents and
was strong in her pride and certainty. "We took everything upon ourselves,"
she said. "What we did will cause waves." Her mother spoke again:
"Sophie," she said softly, "Remember Jesus." "Yes,"
replied Sophie earnestly, almost commandingly, "but you, too."
She left them, her parents, Robert and Magdalene Scholl, with her face
still lit by the smile they loved so well and would never see again. She
was perfectly composed as she was led away. Robert Mohr [a Gestapo official],
who had come out to the prison on business of his own, saw her in her
cell immediately afterwards, and she was crying. It was the first time
Robert Mohr had seen her in tears, and she apologized. "I have just
said good-bye to my parents," she said. "You understand . .
." She had not cried before her parents. For them she had smiled."
No relatives visited Christoph Probst. His wife, who had just had their
third child, was in the hospital. Neither she nor any members of his family
even knew that he was on trial or that he had been sentenced to death.
While his faith in God had always been deep and unwavering, he had never
committed to a certain faith. On the eve of his death, a Catholic priest
admitted him into the church in articulo mortis at the point of
death. "Now," he said, "my death will be easy and joyful."
That afternoon, the prison guards permitted Hans, Sophie, and Christoph
to have one last visit together. Sophie was then led to the guillotine.
One observer described her as she walked to her death: "Without turning
a hair, without flinching." Christoph Probst was next. Hans Scholl
was last; just before he was beheaded, Hans cried out:
"Long live freedom!"
Unfortunately, they were not the last to die. The Gestapo's investigation
was relentless. Later tried and executed were Alex Schmorell (age 25),
Willi Graf (age 25), and Kurt Huber (age 49). Students at the University
of Hamburg were either executed or sent to concentration camps.
Today, every German knows the story of The White Rose. A square at the
University of Munich is named after Hans and Sophie Scholl. And there
are streets, squares, and schools all over Germany named for the members
of The White Rose. The German movie The White Rose is now found in video
stores in Germany and the United States.
Richard Hansen sums up the story of The White Rose:
"In the vogue words of the time, the Scholls and their friends represented
the "other" Germany, the land of poets and thinkers, in contrast
to the Germany that was reverting to barbarism and trying to take the
world with it. What they were and what they did would have been "other"
in any society at any time. What they did transcended the easy division
of good-German/bad-German and lifted them above the nationalism of time-bound
events. Their actions made them enduring symbols of the struggle, universal
and timeless, for the freedom of the human spirit wherever and whenever
it is threatened. "
Jacob Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future of
Freedom Foundation.
Copyright © 1996 Future of Freedom Foundation
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