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Magda Goebbels

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Magda Goebbels

Johanna Maria Magdalena Goebbels (November 11, 1901 - May 1, 1945) was the wife of Joseph Goebbels and First Lady of the Third Reich.

Biography

Childhood and youth

Magda was born in Berlin, Germany to twenty year old Auguste Behrend who was a servant working for a family in Bülowstrasse. The identity of her father was unknown but is most likely the engineer Oskar Reitschel. When Magda was five her mother sent her to stay with Ritschel in Cologne. Ritschel then travelled with her to Brussels and placed her in a convent. At convents Magda found it difficult to make any friends with fellow pupils. Her mother Auguste met the businessman Max Friedländer and they decided to move to Brussels, Belgium where they got married. All three lived peacefully until the outbreak of World War I when Germans were forced to leave and their shops pelted with stones from the Belgian people. By adolescence she was drawn to Zionist ideas after a relationship with Victor Arlonsoroff, who eventually left her for another woman.

Marriage to the Industrialist Günther Quandt

She soon escaped into marriage with the German entrepreneur Günther Quandt, a widower with two sons. He made her change religion from Catholicism to Protestantism and they were married on January 4, 1921. Not long after their marriage she bore Quandt her first child Harald who was born on November the first 1921.

High Society and the National Socialist Party

She reportedly grew bored of marriage with Quandt and divorced him. After joining the NSDAP (the Nazi party) she found herself hypnotised by Hitler. Joseph Goebbels was immediately attracted to her. Magda's high society connections and bearing may have influenced him. As the highly visible propaganda minister's wife, since Hitler was unmarried, she was often referred to as first lady of the Third Reich.

Marriage and family with Joseph Goebbels

The marriage of convenience to Joseph Goebbels was most beneficial to her and she was now in what she deemed high society. She married Goebbels on December 19, 1931 at Günther Quandt's farm in Mecklenburg with Hitler as their witness. They subsequently had six children:

File:Goebbels02.jpg
The Goebbels family on October 29, 1942 :(back row) Hilde, Harald Quandt, and Helga, (front row) Helmut, Holde, Magda, Heide, Joseph and Hedda
  • Helga Susanne (born, Sep 1 1932 † 12)
  • Hildegard (Hilde) Traudel (born Apr 13, 1934 † 11)
  • Helmut Christian (born Oct 2 1935 † 9)
  • Hedwig (Hedda) Johanna (born Feb 19, 1937 † 8)
  • Holdine (Holde) Kathrin (born May 1, 1938 † 7)
  • Heidrun (Heide) Elisabeth (born Oct 20, 1940 † 4)


Marriage in Crisis and the Second World War

Joseph Goebbels was a known philanderer and had many affairs with other women during his marriage with Magda, one of the most scandalous was with the popular Czech actress Lída Baarová. When faced with the possibility of divorce, Magda called Hitler for help and he stepped in to mediate. Joseph was told that he should change his ways and Baarova was sent away. When Hitler invaded Belgium, due to Magda's experience of the Belgians before the first world war she was cold and indifferent to them. As the Germans started losing the war (as early as 1942), Goebbels had little time to continue his affairs and the Goebbels family moved into Hitler's personal Bunker.

Murder and Suicide

By late April 1945 the Red army was entering Berlin and the Goebbels family had taken refuge in Hitler's bunker beneath the now bombed out chancellory. Hitler and his bride Eva Braun committed suicide on the night of April 30 and on the following afternoon, May 1, 1945, Magda poisoned all six of her children with cyanide, possibly believing (in a highly distressed state of mind) they would be reincarnated into better lives if they died innocent (there was evidence the eldest, twelve year old Helga, had awakened and struggled before she was killed and the children's bodies were still in the two-tiered bunk beds they were murdered in when Russian troops entered the bunker). Later Magda and Joseph went upstairs to the garden (avoiding the need for anyone to carry their bodies), where they were shot by an SS trooper at their own request. Afterwards their bodies were doused in petrol, only partially burnt and not buried. The charred corpses were found on the afternoon of May 2, 1945 by advancing Russian troops and a photograph of Goebbels' incinerated face was widely published. Their remains, along with those of their children, were later secretly buried by the Soviets with those of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun and in April 1970 all were reburned and scattered in the Elbe river.

Quotes

  • "I hold it as my duty to appear as beautifully as I possibly can. In this respect, I will influence German women. They should be beautiful and elegant. One has assigned to me the highest leadership of a German fashion institute. In this capacity, I will try through my own example, to make the German woman into a true, genuine type of her race. The men are very masculine in Germany; therefore the women must be as feminine as possible. The German woman of the future should be stylish, beautiful and intelligent. The Gretchen type is finally conquered" from 1933 Newspaper interview

References and further reading

  • E. Ebermayer, Hans Roos: Gefährtin des Teufels - Leben und Tod der Magda Goebbels, Hamburg 1952
  • Joseph Goebbels: Tagebücher 1945 - Die letzten Aufzeichnungen, Hamburg 1977, ISBN 3-40401-368-9
  • Anja Klabunde: Magda Goebbels - Annäherung an ein Leben München 1999, ISBN 3-57000-114-8
  • Hans-Otto Meissner: Magda Goebbels - Ein Lebensbild, München 1978
  • Erich Schaake: Hitlers Frauen, München 2000
  • Wolfgang Schneider: Frauen unterm Hakenkreuz, Hamburg 2001
  • Anna Maria Sigmund: Die Frauen der Nazis. Band 1, Wien 1998, ISBN 3-80003-699-1
  • Spiegel Nr35/04 Hitlers Ende Spiegels (H. 35, 2004)
  • Robert Wistrich: Wer war wer im dritten Reich. Frankfurt a.M. 1987
  • Dieter Wunderlich: Göring und Goebbels, Regensburg 2002
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