to him than the grim reality that confronted inmates behind the closed
walls of the camps.75
The most prominent victim of Heydrich’s first wave of persecution in
Bavaria was the Nobel Laureate Thomas Mann. Closely observing the
dramatic political developments in Germany, Mann, who had left for a
reading tour of Holland, Belgium and France shortly after Hitler’s
appointment as chancellor, decided to extend his stay abroad by a few
months until the situation at home had stabilized. As a non-Jewish, liberal
conservative, he should have had little to fear, but he had attacked the
Nazis in a number of public speeches and articles in the early 1930s and
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HITLER’S HANGMAN
wisely decided to be cautious. In late April, his house in Munich was
raided by Heydrich’s political police. His cars, bank accounts and private
possessions were confiscated.76
On 12 June Heydrich went even further. In a letter to State Commis-
sioner von Epp, he demanded that upon his return to Munich Mann should
be placed in protective custody in Dachau, since the author was ‘an enemy
of the national movement and a fol ower of the Marxist idea’. As evidence,
Heydrich stated that Mann had cal ed for a general amnesty for al the
revolutionaries of 1918. Moreover, he insisted that Mann’s masterpiece,
The
Magic Mountain
(1924), contained a ‘glorifying passage’ on Jewish ritual
slaughter. In sum, Heydrich concluded, the writer’s ‘unGerman, anti-Nazi,
Marxist and Jew-friendly attitude provided the reason for decreeing protec-
tive custody against Thomas Mann, which could not be carried out so far
due to the absence of the accused. However, by order of the ministries al of
his assets were confiscated.’ When Epp enquired which ministries had
authorized this step, Heydrich did not respond. By this time the SS had
already developed into a largely autonomous force in Bavaria. Shortly there-
after, Heydrich employed the same arguments when he applied to have
Mann stripped of his German citizenship, a procedure completed in 1936
after the SD chief’s renewed request. Mann and Heydrich would never
meet, but remained connected in deep enmity. It was Mann who after
Heydrich’s assassination in 1942 issued one of the first obituaries on the
BBC, condemning him as one of Hitler’s most appal ing henchmen.77
The Thomas Mann case was an atypical example of Nazi persecution.
Unlike most middle-ranked Communist or Social Democratic Party
functionaries, Mann was financially independent and of sufficient inter-
national reputation to continue his career in exile without major disrup-
tions. At the same time, however, the case was paradigmatic both of
the increasing persecution of writers classified as unGerman and of the
gradual expansion of terror in order to encompass more and more broadly
defined enemy groups. In Bavaria, for example, the vast majority of the
more than 5,000 people arrested between March and June 1933 were
Communists and Social Democrats, but the target groups were soon
extended. In June, Himmler and Heydrich ordered the arrest of leading
functionaries of the conservative Bavarian People’s Party (BVP) in order
to force the party to dissolve itself. After this had been achieved and the
BVP functionaries had been set free again, Bavaria still had 3,965 persons
in protective custody, including 2,420 in Dachau as of August 1933. One
year later, in June 1934, the number was further reduced to 2,204 people
in SS custody, more than half of them in Dachau.78
Himmler and Heydrich had needed less than a year to create an effec-
tive system of terror in Bavaria. Towards the end of 1933, their ambition
B E C O M I N G H E Y D R I C H
71
grew and they began to seek control over the political police formations
in the other states outside Bavaria. Germany was a federal country with
independent political police forces of varying sizes in each state, and the
task of assuming control over them required patience and tactical skill.
During the autumn of 1933 and the summer of 1934, the political police
in most of the states were gradually brought under SS control.79 In this
process Himmler made good use of his negotiation skills and his personal
contacts with local Nazi leaders to place trusted allies in key positions in
the states’ political police forces. The political police branches in most
German states were tiny and their gradual takeover by the SS attracted
little attention from the SS’s political rivals. It was also helpful that the SS
was widely regarded as a disciplined elite organization loyal to the Nazi
Party leadership. The success of the SS in Bavaria in efficiently and quietly
fighting the political opposition was now seen as a model for Germany as
a whole, a model that was preferable to the uncoordinated and often spon-
taneous outbursts of SA violence that alienated Hitler’s conservative
coalition partners.
During these weeks and months, Heydrich accompanied Himmler on
several trips across Germany, recruiting new staff and negotiating
with political decision-makers. He made sure that the SS men appointed
by Himmler as heads of the local political police forces were simultane-
ously recruited into the SD, enabling Heydrich to access the political
information gathered by the local police commanders. Already in the
spring of 1934, seven of the eleven heads of the political police forces
in the individual German states were members of the SD. Heydrich
recruited a large number of staff members who would share and some-
times even shape his professional path and political beliefs over the
following years.80 In September 1933, for example, he met Dr Werner
Best, who would have a lasting intellectual influence on him. Born in
1903, Best had studied law and became a judge in the Weimar Republic.
In 1930 he joined the Nazi Party in Hessen and directed its legal depart-
ment in his spare time. When, in 1931, the authorities were supplied with
the so-called Boxheim documents, which indicated that Best had made
plans for a Nazi coup, he was dismissed from his judgeship. After the
Nazis’ rise to power, he became head of the police in Hessen where he
oversaw the first arrests of political opponents, but personal differences
with the new Nazi State Commissioner of Hessen, Jakob Sprenger, led to
his dismissal in September 1933. It was in this situation that he met
Heydrich for the first time.81
After the war, Best recalled his first encounter with Heydrich, a recol-
lection that showed how far the latter had developed since 1931 when
Wolff had described him as an ‘insecure youth’:
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HITLER’S HANGMAN
Heydrich was tall, of higher stature than most of his subordinates. He
appeared slender, while at the same time a certain width, particularly in
the hips, gave him a powerful, hefty touch. The narrow, long face beneath
the blond hair was dominated by the powerful aquiline nose and the
closely set blue eyes. These eyes often stared coldly, probing and
distrustful, frequently disconcerting others through a flickering restless-
ness . . . He immediately articulated his opinions and intentions with a
remarkable forcefulness and thus left others no choice but either to
agree and submit to his will or to undertake a counterattack for which
few had the courage. In this way, Heydrich immediately forced everyone
to position themselves as his friend or foe. . . . The forcefulness of his
demeanour and behaviour certainly left a lasting impression . . . He
frequently expressed his dissatisfaction towards his subordinates in
exceedingly tempestuous forms and with intentionally hurtful remarks.
On the other hand, when he was satisfied – particularly when a person
who had originally resisted him finally submitted to his will – he could
display the greatest friendliness and positively charm his counterpart.
But his behaviour was always characterized by an unconcealed subjec-
tivity and by the impetuous determination to assert himself at every
moment and at any cost.82
Best was considerably more intellectual than Heydrich and was often
surprised by his boss’s lack of interest in larger philosophical questions.
‘During a journey’, Best recalled, ‘we were talking about what we would
do if for any reason we were suddenly forced to leave the public service.
While I talked about studying areas of knowledge I had not previously
had time for, such as philosophy or history, Heydrich declared that he
would devote himself entirely to sport.’83 Because of his intellectual
superiority and Heydrich’s inexperience in legal and policing matters,
Best exercised a powerful influence on his superior throughout the
1930s, acquainting him with theories that appeared to support Heydrich’s
own value system. Through Best, Heydrich learned more about ‘heroic
realism’, a notion propagated by Ernst Jünger and other prominent right-
wing intellectuals in the 1920s and early 1930s. While it had originally
emerged as a ‘coping mechanism’ deriving from the lost world war and
from the right-wing critique of the Weimar Republic, heroic realism
exerted a particular fascination on those members of the younger genera-
tion who had not been able to fight as soldiers themselves and who had
thus not been permitted to prove themselves in battle.84
In Best’s worldview, ideas emanating from hereditary biologists, demog-
raphers and racial hygienists merged with other ideological constructs of
the extreme right. Heydrich’s strength, so Best observed, was to translate
B E C O M I N G H E Y D R I C H
73
these abstract ideas and doctrines into actual policies and to apply
them rigorously. For Heydrich and Best, life was a constant struggle, a
permanent state of emergency, in which the enemy was to be fought
mercilessly, not out of cruelty or hatred, but out of the ‘objective’ biological
necessity of winning the struggle of peoples for the survival of the
fittest.85
This struggle demanded toughness, both towards oneself and towards
others. It demanded the suppression of emotions and the cultivation of
callousness, hardness and mercilessness towards all opponents. By being
hard in the present, so they believed, they would be kind to the future.
Unconditional toughness set one apart from those who had no stomach
for the life-and-death struggle for Germany’s survival. The keyword
‘sobriety’ was used to propagate an ideal of cold, pragmatic ideological
soldiers whose actions would no longer be guided by irrational emotions,
an attitude which also helped to conceal moments of social inadequacy or
uncertainty.86
Over the coming years, such attitudes and beliefs would meld into a
whole catalogue of ‘virtues’, which became aspirational for the SS as a
whole and which Heydrich himself genuinely tried to live by. It was
Himmler’s intention that ideals such as honour, loyalty, obedience,
decency and camaraderie should guide the behaviour of his SS men.
Drawn from the standard vocabulary of authoritarian movements, these
virtues gained special meaning in Nazi Germany, as they were increasingly
deprived of their wider content. For the SS members, loyalty, for example,
referred solely to their relationship with Adolf Hitler. This loyalty formed
the core of a special code of honour that distinguished SS men from all
others. A breach of loyalty was the gravest offence an SS man could
commit and automatically resulted in a loss of honour. Camaraderie
bound the organization together and made it into a unit in which conflicts
and petty jealousies were unacceptable.87
Guided by such principles, Heydrich began to develop his characteristic
leadership style, one which even his closest associates described as
‘despotic’.88 He often behaved more impulsively than the cautious
Himmler and frequently bullied his way through problems. Even when
among close colleagues, Best observed, Heydrich ‘approached people in
that enquiring, distrustful way which immediately struck everyone as his
dominating characteristic’, thus creating a permanently ‘tense atmosphere
full of mistrust and friction’. Throughout his life, he found it difficult to
accept criticism, and within his immediate working environment he did
not tolerate it at all. Aided by a phenomenal memory for detail, he often
liked to intimidate his conversation partners by reminding them of things
they had once said and long forgotten. In the most accurate post-war
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HITLER’S HANGMAN
characterization of Heydrich’s leadership style, Werner Best maintained