Axis Sally: The American Voice of Nazi Germany (18 page)

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Authors: Richard Lucas

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Bisac Code 1: BIO022000, #Biography, #History

BOOK: Axis Sally: The American Voice of Nazi Germany
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Zimmerman was the second to be interviewed and was the most talkative of the prisoners.

 
 
G
ILLARS
:  

What’s the town, please?

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

Providence, Rhode Island.

 
G
ILLARS
:  

Oh, Providence, Rhode Island. Well, I spent some very happy hours there myself. (
laughs
) Probably not so happy as you.

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

What’s that?

 
G
ILLARS
:  

Not so happy as you.

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

Oh, no! (laughs)

 
G
ILLARS
:  

(laughs) Well, it’s home to you. And who are you calling in Providence?

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

My wife. Mrs. Blanche Zimmerman

 
G
ILLARS
:  

What street does she live on?

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

62 Doyle Avenue

 
G
ILLARS
:  

How do you spell that avenue?

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

D-O-Y-L-E

 
G
ILLARS
:  

Oh Doyle! An Irish name. All right, what would you like to say to your wife now?

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

Uh, nothing much just that I’m well and happy and, about all, just very happy.

 
G
ILLARS
:  

Well, you are happy you’ve got through a lot of air raids (unintelligible).

 
Z
IMMERMAN
:  

Well, after what I’ve been through I think I’m glad to be alive.

 
G
ILLARS
:  

I’ll bet that you’re glad for a lot of things.

 

This exchange is fascinating because it is between a virulently anti-Semitic broadcaster and a prisoner described in an FBI report as having “a very Jewish appearance.”
228
One must wonder what Midge knew of the fate of Europe’s Jews when she commented, “I’ll bet you’re glad for a lot of things.” Sharing a bed with an official of the Foreign Office, she was very likely exposed to the rumors if not the details surrounding the relocation of Jews to the East.

Midge asked Zimmerman if he was getting enough to eat. In a syrupy tone, she replied, “Well, lots of people aren’t, so that is something to be happy about too, isn’t it?”

Zimmerman’s reply, “Yes, if you call grass soup once a day enough to eat,” was edited out of the final broadcast. The
Survivor
interviews were, at times, heavily edited to dispose of comments that did not fit the profile of the happy and thankful prisoner. Zimmerman’s response about “grass soup” was just one incident. Listening to the recorded conversations today, the exchanges seem oddly disjointed.

The volatility of Mildred Gillars’s emotional state is evident from the broadcasts as well. The exchanges between Midge and the prisoners could go from extremely warm and chatty to cold, cutting and distant in a matter of seconds. Even the editing and splicing of the engineering room could not disguise the sudden change in tone. One prisoner from Ohio who preceded Carl Zimmerman on the August 22, 1944 broadcast made the mistake of assuring his wife that he hoped to be home by Christmas:

 
 
M
IDGE
:  
 
And the town, please?
 
POW:  
 
Cleveland, Ohio.
 
M
IDGE

 
Oh, Cleveland, Ohio? My goodness I know that awfully well. What part? What street?
 
POW:  
 
42 East 96th Street.
 
M
IDGE
:  
 
East 96th Street. And have you got any folks over there?
 
POW:  
 
My mother and dad.
 
M
IDGE
:  
 
Hmmm. Well, I’ll give you the microphone. Say what you want to now.
 
POW:  
 
Well, hello, mom and dad. I’m OK. Don’t worry too much, mom. I’ll be home by Christmas! I hope.
 

Midge’s voice suddenly became cold and caustic.

 
 
Midge:  
 
Good thing to add the “I hope” isn’t it?
 
POW  
 
… Yeah.
 
Midge:  
 
Cause you don’t want to give them any false hope. Anyway, you’re going to get there as fast as you can, anyhow.
 
POW:  
 
Soon as they end the war….
229
 

The idea that Germany would be defeated within four months was not the message that Midge wanted conveyed to the listeners in America or to her superiors in Berlin. For Mildred and Koischwitz, the month of July was filled with visits to prisoner-of-war camps, stockades and hospitals. At Chartres in mid-July, she accidentally lifted up her skirt when a soldier became entangled in the microphone wire. The watching prisoners began to whistle and catcall. She smiled and said tauntingly, “You like that, eh?” then raised her dress up around her thighs revealing her most attractive feature, the long legs of a former showgirl.
230
At the Hospital de la Pitiè near Paris, she interviewed severely wounded soldiers sporting a Red Cross armband.
231

Meantime, the disappearance of Koischwitz’s “breezy” commentaries that summer raised suspicions about the fate of “O.K.” William L. Shirer of CBS took notice of the Professor’s new role on the frontlines:

Goebbels, for some reason, sent the Professor to the firing line. As a “front-line reporter,” his specialty was broadcasting eyewitness accounts from the various battlefronts on which the Americans were facing Germans. Since General Bradley’s Americans began their race through France, I have not been able to catch any more broadcasts by him. Presumably, he began moving too fast to allow for a pause at the microphone.
232

 

Koischwitz was unexpectedly called back to Berlin at the end of July 1944. As Midge and O.K. waited for the train, she borrowed some money to buy a rare leather-bound set of books by Goethe. She gave it to him as an early Christmas present because she feared that they might not be together during the holidays. Before he left, Koischwitz made arrangements for the safe evacuation of Mildred with his German Foreign Office colleague, Werner Plack.
233
As the Americans approached the French capital in early August, Plack abandoned her. When she reminded him of his promise to Koischwitz to drive her back to Germany in his car, he refused, saying, “I am sorry. I have no room. There is so much baggage.”
234
In a panic, she telephoned Koischwitz in Berlin.

“When I telephoned Berlin,” she would remember, “I had a feeling that something had happened. I asked for Dr. Koischwitz and at that moment I knew that I’d never hear his voice again.…”
235

A voice came on the line: “Professor Koischwitz is dead.”
236
Mildred immediately fled Paris on August 15 for Holland in a military convoy. She then boarded a train bound for Berlin, paying for her ticket by bribing a conductor with coffee.
237
Despite rumors of suicide, Koischwitz died in the Berlin-Spandau Hospital on August 31, 1944 of tuberculosis and heart failure.
238
Crushed by the death, Mildred barely arrived in Berlin in time for his funeral on September 4.

Max Otto Koischwitz died alone. The war had taken his wife and infant son. The Germany he loved was crumbling around him. Although it is plausible that he could have taken his own life, it is more likely that Koischwitz, who had been diagnosed with incipient tuberculosis in 1929, and was looking for interviews with POWs in the sickrooms of the Hospital de la Pitié not more than four to five weeks before his death, had finally succumbed.
239
It is also possible that the deteriorating sanitary conditions in wartime Europe played a role in aggravating his already fragile state. Either way, Midge was now without the man to whom she had cast her fate. Her lover—the man who convinced her to betray her nation, who protected her and provided her access to the highest echelons of German society—was gone.

CHAPTER 8
Alone
 

“Well Sally, we’ll be in Berlin soon—with a great big kiss for you—if you have any kisser left.”—Corporal Edward Van Dyne in the
Saturday Evening Post,
January 1944
240

 

“Our fate is rolling in from the East…”
—Anonymous diarist, Berlin, April 20, 1945
241

 

SEPTEMBER 1944–JANUARY 1947

 

As Mildred said goodbye to Max Otto Koischwitz in September 1944, Allied forces were closing in on the Reich. On the Western Front, the US First Army stood north of Aachen poised to breach 400-plus kilometers of fortifications known as the Westwall. Patton’s Third Army had reached Metz farther south, while Montgomery’s British-Canadian forces were pushing into Belgium and Holland. The advance would slow in the ensuing months, culminating in the last great German offensive, in the sector of the Ardennes.

In the East, the military situation was dire. Following the destruction of Army Group Center that summer after a huge Soviet offensive, the W
ehrmacht
was in retreat from Finland and the Baltics, Ukraine and the Balkans. By October, Riga and Belgrade were in Soviet hands, while the Red Army had advanced to the outskirts of Warsaw. Despite the self-delusion that characterized Hitler’s inner circle in the last months of the war, more practical leadership prepared for the inevitable siege of Berlin. On October 18, the
Volkssturm
(Home Guard) announced the imminent call-up of all males between the age of 16 and 60 for the final defense of German soil.
242

It was in that desperate autumn that Axis Sally returned to the microphone. Shaken and grieving from the loss of her mentor and protector, she feared an Allied victory. Her attitude began to change toward her superiors at
Reichsradio
. Returning to the studios at
Köenigs Wusterhausen
, she was called into a meeting with Johannes Schmidt-Hansen and Eduard Dietze. In a blatant appeal to her ego, the two radio executives had plans for their “star”—a transfer to a new clandestine station in the Black Forest aimed at the advancing Allied forces:

They were opening a new station in the Black Forest and they were spending enormous sums of money on it, and said it was going to make me a world radio star and I told Mr. Schmidt-Hansen that I wasn’t the least interested in becoming that, and that I wanted nothing to do with the station.
243

 

Schmidt-Hansen’s description of the new effort amounted to nothing less than psychological warfare on the advancing US soldiers. “The soldiers would have the impression that this female voice was right in the bivouac with them,” she recalled.
244
Mildred was unmoved by the flattery and Dietze testily invoked the name of her late lover, insisting that Professor Koischwitz would not approve of such intransigence. She stood her ground:

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