My Father's Keeper: The Children of Nazi Leaders - An Intimate History of Damage and Denial

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There are and always have been ways of escaping one's own past. But there are some who have never had this chance: the children of prominent Nazis. On one hand they have the memories of the nice, kind man who was their father, on the other they are confronted with the facts of history: with the madness, the murders, the personal purgatory. The Leberts, father and son, spoke at an interval of forty years - 1959 and 1999 - to these men and women who bore a tainted name and were crushed by the burden of the past: Gudrun Himmler - 75, runs a network for old Nazis in Munich, denies her father did anything wrong; Martin Boorman (junior) - 70, believes his father was a monster; Etta Goring - 70, will hear no bad word about her father; Nicholas Frank (father was in charge of Auschwitz) believes his father was the incarnation of evil. The result is a series of snapshots of rare intensity and a demonstration of how these destinies have more to do with the twenty-first century than many would care to think.

*Name and date in black on title page; small corner fold on front cover.*

More Information
AuthorStephan Lebert
PublisherAbacus
PlaceLondon
Year2002
ISBN9780349114576
BindingPaperback
ConditionGood
CommentsName and date in black on title page; small corner fold on front cover.
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