Gerda Christian
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Gerda Christian (née Daranowski; 13 December 1913 – 14 April 1997), nicknamed Dara, was one of Adolf Hitler's private secretaries before and during World War II.
Biography
Gerda Daranowski worked for Elizabeth Arden before beginning to work for Hitler.[1] In 1937 Hitler's other secretaries, Johanna Wolf and Christa Schroeder, complained about having too much work. They asked for assistance but Hitler reportedly hesitated: he did not wish to see a new face in his inner sanctum. He finally relented and hired Daranowski.
World War II
Daranowski had been engaged to Hitler's driver Erich Kempka and later married Luftwaffe officer Eckhard Christian on 2 February 1943.Template:Sfn After her marriage she took a break from her employment for Hitler and her work was taken over by Traudl Junge.
In mid-1943 Gerda Christian returned to Hitler's staff as one of his private secretaries.Template:Sfn Eckhard Christian was promoted to Generalmajor and Chief of the Luftwaffe Command Staff at Hitler's request on 1 September 1944.Template:Sfn In April 1945 he was stationed in Berlin at the Führerbunker HQ. He left the bunker complex on 22 April 1945 to become Chief of the liaison staff of the Luftwaffe to OKW Command Staff North.Template:Sfn Gerda and Traudl Junge both volunteered to remain with Hitler in the Führerbunker.Template:Sfn While in the bunker complex the women also looked after the Goebbels children.Template:Sfn
During Hitler's last days in Berlin he would regularly eat lunch with Junge and Christian.Template:Sfn After the war Junge recalled Christian asking Hitler if he would leave Berlin. He firmly rejected the notion.Template:Sfn Christian recalled that Hitler made it clear in conversation that his body must not fall into the hands of the Soviets. He would shoot himself and wanted to be cremated "without a trace".Template:Sfn Eva Braun said she would take cyanide poison.Template:Sfn At one of these mealtime conversations Hitler gave Christian a cyanide ampoule for use.Template:Sfn
In the early afternoon of 30 April 1945 Hitler and Braun said farewell to members of the Führerbunker staff and fellow occupants, including Bormann, Joseph Goebbels and his family, the secretaries and several military officers.Template:Sfn After the farewells Christian returned to the secretary quarters located in part of the large cellars under the Reich Chancellery. Later she returned to the Führerbunker and learned from the chief valet, Heinz Linge, that Hitler was dead and his corpse had been carried upstairs and out into the Chancellery garden where the cremation was still in progress.Template:Sfn She walked into Hitler's study and saw a bloodstain "about the size of a hand" on the rug next to the sofa.Template:Sfn
After Hitler's death Christian tried to escape from Berlin on 1 May 1945. She was part of a group led by SS-Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke, which included secretaries Else Krüger and Traudl Junge. Members of the group were taken prisoner by the Soviets on the morning of 2 May while hiding in a cellar off the Schönhauser Allee.Template:Sfn However, Christian would be among those who escaped, only to later be captured by American forces in March 1946.Template:Sfn
Post-war
In 1946 Christian divorced her husband because he had not remained with her in the Führerbunker until the death of Hitler.Template:Sfn She moved to Düsseldorf, where she worked at the Hotel Eden.Template:Sfn She was a friend of Werner Naumann, a former state secretary in the Third Reich's propaganda ministry. In 1953 Naumann was arrested by the British Army and accused of being the leader of a neo-Nazi group, although he was never convicted. Christian died of cancer in Düsseldorf in 1997, aged 83.[2]
Portrayal in the media
Christian has been portrayed by the following actresses in film and television productions.
- Sheila Gish in the 1973 British-Italian film Hitler: The Last Ten Days.[3]
- Mitzi Rogers in the 1973 British television production The Death of Adolf Hitler.[4]
- Birgit Minichmayr in the 2004 German film Downfall (Der Untergang).[5]
References
Sources
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