How did Hitler really die?
12/29/2012 20:25
A new documentary claims the Nazi leader did not commit suicide in his bunker towards the end of WWII.
Eva Braun with Adolf Hitler Photo: Jerusalem Post Archives
Hitler’s last days were not spent in his Berlin bunker, but in tranquil luxury
in an Argentine hotel – at least, that’s the story that director/ producer Noam
Shalev and researcher Pablo Weschler are trying to prove in their upcoming
documentary, Revealed: Hitler in Argentina, set for release next
year.
“We will never know the truth,” Shalev cautions, sitting in the
offices of Highlight Films, the video production company he and Weschler run in
Bnei Brak. “But there is enough evidence to build an alternative theory about
what happened to Hitler.”
“No one believed the Russians’ story of
Hitler’s suicide in the bunker,” says Weschler. “As early as the summer of 1945,
there were headlines asking, ‘Where is Hitler?’ all over the world.”
One
difficulty in confirming the basic facts of Hitler’s suicide with his wife, Eva
Braun, in the final days of the Allies’ approach to Berlin, was that the Russian
troops did not give access to many forensic investigators. Shalev and Weschler
believe that British intelligence officer and historian Hugh Trevor-Roper’s
investigation was rushed and “unprofessional.”
But what inspired them to
begin making their film about the evidence they believe leads to proof of
Hitler’s secret flight to Argentina were recently declassified FBI
documents.
“In those days, the FBI, not the CIA, was responsible for
South America,” explains Weschler. “And in declassified documents, we see that
the FBI took very seriously the possibility that Hitler fled to
Argentina.”
The FBI set up a special unit to investigate this
possibility.
Shalev and Weschler are convinced they have gathered
significant evidence that pinpoints Hitler’s whereabouts during the years
following World War II. Inspired by the book Hitler’s Escape by Italian
journalist Patrick Burnside, they have done their own research as
well.
“When Burnside published his book, in 1998, he got thousands of
e-mails from people coming forward with information,” says Shalev. “Some of them
were crazy, of course, but he had enough information to do more research and
write another book.”
The manuscript of that book, which will be published
next year, was a useful guide for Shalev and Weschler, and led them to a famous
hotel.
“The Eden Hotel in La Falda, Cordoba [in Argentina] was owned by
Ida and Walter Eichhorn, who were close friends of Hitler,” explains Weschler.
“Hitler sent them a Mercedes Benz as a gift. It was the first Benz in
Argentina.”
The once-opulent hotel, now in ruins, was the site of lavish
parties, and a host of notables, including Albert Einstein, stayed there in the
Twenties and Thirties. The Eichhorns were very vocal in their support for the
Nazi party, and made financial contributions.
They also broadcast
speeches Hitler’s, whenever he spoke on the radio, throughout the
hotel.
Citing a September 1945 letter from the FBI (one of the documents
declassified in the Nineties), Weschler points to the lines that show that the
FBI believed that if Hitler got into trouble, he could always find a safe haven
with the Eichhorns if he could manage to get there. Weschler found former
employees of the hotel who say they met and waited on Hitler after the war
there.
“It was easy for them to recognize him, because his picture was
all over the hotel,” says Weschler. He says that his research shows that Hitler
moved on from the hotel to an isolated rural estate in Argentina, where he lived
out his days with Braun and their two daughters, and that he died in the
mid-Sixties.
Particularly persuasive evidence, according to Weschler, is
DNA testing done in 2009 on Hitler’s skull fragments that were recovered from
the bunker.
“They showed that they couldn’t have been Hitler’s skull
because they were from a woman under 40,” says Weschler, a finding that was
reported in the mainstream press.
“DNA doesn’t lie,” he says. “The more
you look into it, the less credible the official version becomes, and the more
plausible an alternative theory seems.”