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Helmuth Hübener
born: Jan. 8th - 1925 in Hamburg
executed: Oct. 27th - 1942 in Berlin
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Helmuth Hübener
Helmuth Hübener, born 8 January 1925 in Hamburg – executed
27 October 1942 in Berlin, came from an unpolitical family. Like his
mother and grandparents, he belonged to the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints. His adoptive father, an SS officer, gave him the
name Hübener.
Helmuth Hübener was once a Boy Scout, but after the organization
was suppressed by the Nazis, he belonged to the Hitler Youth, although
he was not always comfortable with its drilling, nor did he find Kristallnacht
to his liking. When the church congregation to which he belonged undertook
to bar Jews from its religious services, Hübener found himself
repelled by the new policy.
After Hübener finished middle school in 1941, he began an apprenticeship
in administration at the Hamburg Social Authority (Sozialbehörde).
He met other apprentices there, some of them with a communist family
background, and they got him listening to enemy radio broadcasts, which
was strictly forbidden in Nazi Germany, being considered a form of treason.
In the summer of that same year, Hübener began listening to the
BBC by himself, and used what he had heard to compose various anti-fascist
texts and anti-war leaflets, of which he also made many copies. The
leaflets were designed to bring to people's attention how skewed the
official reports about the war from Berlin were, and also to point out
Adolf Hitler's, Joseph Goebbels's, and other leading Nazis' criminal
behaviour. Other themes covered by Hübener's writings were the
war's futility, and Germany's looming defeat. He even mentioned the
mistreatment sometimes meted out in the Hitler Youth.
In the autumn of 1941, he managed to involve three of his friends in
his unlawful listening, Karl-Heinz Schnibbe and Rudolf Wobbe, who were
later also co-workers, and later Gerhard Düwer as well. Hübener
also had them help him distribute about 60 different pamphlets, all
containing material from the British broadcasts, and all consisting
of typewritten copies. They distributed them all over Hamburg, using
such methods as surreptitiously pinning them on bulletin boards, sticking
them through letterboxes, and stuffing them in coat pockets.
In early February 1942, Helmuth Hübener was arrested by the Gestapo
at his workplace at the Hamburger Bieberhaus. While trying to translate
the pamphlets into French, and trying to have them distributed among
prisoners of war, he had been noticed by a Party member, Heinrich Mohns,
who had denounced him. (Mohns was jailed after the war, but freed by
the Bundesgerichtshof by the early 1950s).
On 11 August 1942, Hübener's case was tried at the Volksgerichtshof
in Berlin, was found guilty of conspiracy to commit high treason and
treasonous furthering of the enemy's cause. He was sentenced not only
to death, but also to permanent loss of his civil rights, and on 27
October, at the age of 17, he was beheaded at Plötzensee Prison
in Berlin. His two friends, Schnibbe and Wobbe, who had also been arrested,
were given lengthy prison sentences of 5 and 10 years respectively.
It was highly unusual, even for the Nazis, to try an underaged defendant,
much less sentence him to death, but the court stated that Hübener
had shown more than average intelligence for a boy his age. This, along
with his general and political knowledge, and his behaviour before the
court, made Hübener, in the court's eyes, a boy with a far more
developed mind than was usually to be found in someone of his age. For
this reason, the court stated, Hübener was to be punished as an
adult.
It was not at all surprising that Hübener's lawyers and his mother
appealed for clemency in his case, hoping to have his sentence commuted
to life imprisonment, but truly astonishing was that the Berlin Gestapo
also did. In their eyes, the fact that Hübener had confessed fully
and shown himself to be still morally uncorrupted were points in Hübener's
favour. The Reich Youth Leadership (Reichsjugendführung) would
have none of it, however. They said that the danger posed by Hübener's
activities to the German people's war effort made the death penalty
necessary. On 15 October 1942, the Nazi Ministry of Justice upheld the
Volksgerichtshof's verdict. Hübener was only told of the Ministry's
decision at 1:05 p.m. on the scheduled day of execution and beheaded
at 8:13 p.m.
Owing to his political activities, Hübener was excommunicated
by his own church, but posthumously reinstated some years after the
war..
A youth centre and a pathway in Hamburg are nowadays named for Helmuth
Hübener. The latter runs between Greifswalder Straße and
Kirchenweg in Sankt Georg.
From one of Helmuth's many pamphlets:
"German boys! Do you know the country without freedom, the country
of terror and tyranny? Yes, you know it well, but are afraid to talk
about it. They have intimidated you to such and extent that you don't
dare talk for fear of reprisals. Yes you are right; it is Germany —
Hitler Germany! Through their unscrupulous terror tactics against young
and old, men and women, they have succeeded in making you spineless
puppets to do their bidding." —
(The article above, and some interesting pictures, can be found on
Wikipedia.)
Karl-Heinze Schnibbe, Rudi Wobbe, and Helmuth Hubener's two half brothers,
Hans and Gerhard Kunkel, were among the German immigrants who made Salt
Lake City their home in the early 1950s.
"We were not so naive to bring Hitler down to his knees. Helmuth
wanted the people to think ... think." Schnibbe says.
At the time, few in Germany dared to think for themselves. Fewer resisted.
Helmuth was eventually arrested and executed for his actions but not
before the church excommunicated him for “conduct unbecoming a
member of the church”
Rudi Wobbe talks about how even a branch president wasn't exactly helpful
and was discrimintory because young Huebener typed some of the leaflets
on the typewriterbelonging to his LDS branch and recruited two fellow
Mormons to distribute them. In doing so, Huebener alienated some Church
members, including his branch president, a member of the Nazi party,
who excommunicated the young political dissenter shortly after his 1942
arrest. Huebener’s membership was reinstated posthumously in 1946
with a note that reads, “Excommunicated by mistake.”.
Huebener’s life has been the subject of several films, articles,
books, and an award-winning play by Thomas F. Rogers. An article, “The
Führer’s New Clothes: Helmuth Hubener and theMormons in the
Third Reich” by Alan F. Keele and Douglas F.Tobler, was published
in the November 1980 SUNSTONE. (go to: page 20)
The following excerpts are from the article by Alan F Keele and Douglas
F. Tobler:
In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus drew the division between secular and
religious life with a single sentence: "Render therefore unto Caesar
the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's."
But the precise location of that boundary has proved to be a continuing
problem for members of the Mormon church. Whereas earlier Latter-day
Saints often faced the challenge of anarchic violence unchecked by civil
authorities, in our own time Saints have more often faced the opposite
dilemma: how should they respond to a totalitarian government's demands
for total, exclusive allegiance? Helmuth Hubener was one of many Saints
who struggled to sort out their conflicting loyalties. His decisions
as a devout Latter-day Saint ultimately led to his execution for high
treason against the German state.
These events, however, can only be understood in the context of a tense,
suspicion-filled situation. Gestapo men had been attending branch meetings,
contributing to the long-standing fears of some members for the continued
existence of the Church as well as for their very lives. Additionally,
there were no American Church authorities available to whom the local
German leaders could turn for counsel in this time of near-panic. Having
had little previous experience in Church government, some now tended
to see Hubener's actions, not as the religious and patriotic idealism
he claimed, but as an almost criminal disregard for Mormon doctrine.
The German Saints were not eager for a confrontation with their national
government, and they were happy to follow President Grant's advice.
By and large, the Mormons and the Nazis coexisted comfortably. Some
Church members even saw Hitler as God's instrument, preparing the world
for the millennium. Superficial parallels were drawn between the Church
and the Nazi Party, with its emphasis on active involvement by every
member. The women's auxiliary of the Party and the Hitler Youth were
regarded by some as secular equivalents to the Church's Relief Society,
MIA, and Scouting programs. The vital importance of "Aryan"
ancestry gave new significance to genealogical research. And the Fuhrer
himself, the non-smoking, non-drinking vegetarian who yielded to no
one in his desire for absolute law and order, seemed to embody many
of the most basic LDS virtues.
Hubener's own title for "Leaflet w" was "The Voice of
the Homeland." The Gestapo regarded this pamphlet as an "attempt
to involve theological issues in behalf of the enemy's seditious efforts."
The pamphlet does indeed seem to show that Hubener saw his opposition
to Nazism as a necessary consequence of his religious beliefs.
MVG recognizes the terible dillemmas isolated Latter-day Saints were
facing in the second world war. The following illustrates how tensions
ran high within branches of the church in the neighboring, occupied,
Netherlands:
"Certain tensions were created because of the presence of two
political groups in the church. One group consisted of members who sympathised
with the Germans, the other group rebelled against the German regime.
Even though they were all members of the Mormon church, each group refused
to speak with members of the other group.. During the meetings they
would each sit on opposite sides of the chapel. If the sacrament was
passed to the sympathisers first, then their opponents (Dutchmen) would
refuse the sacrament, as they believed it would be wrong to partake
of the sacrament with hateful hearts".
(Rond De Tweede Wereldoorlog - The History of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints in the Netherlands and Flanders. MVG-website)
As individual members of our faith communities we sometimes boast that
the truth is exclusively ours, but that confidence doesn't always carry
over into the world around us, beyond the comfort and safety of our
testimony meetings, and sometimes it takes a courageous 16 year old
to drive this point home to us. One wonders what the last hymn was that
young Helmuth sang out loud with the brothers and sisters in his branch,
could it have been hymn 272?
The sceptre may fall from the despot's grasp, when with winds of stern
justice he copes
But the pillar of truth will endure to the last
and its firm rooted bulwarks outstand the rude blast
And the wreck of the fell tyrant's hopes
Hymn
272 - O Say, What is Truth?
( Hymns of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)