Hanns and Rudolf: The True Story of the German Jew Who Tracked Down and Caught the Kommandant of Auschwitz
Hanns and Rudolf: The True Story of the German Jew Who Tracked Down and Caught the Kommandant of Auschwitz book cover

Hanns and Rudolf: The True Story of the German Jew Who Tracked Down and Caught the Kommandant of Auschwitz

Hardcover – September 3, 2013

Price
$28.90
Format
Hardcover
Pages
348
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1476711843
Dimensions
8.66 x 5.91 x 0.98 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

“Thomas Harding has written a book of two intersecting lives: His uncle, a German Jew and potential Nazi victim, and Rudolf Höss, Kommandant of Auschwitz. In a neat historical irony, his uncle became a British officer who tracked down war criminals, including one of the worst mass murderers. A fascinating account, with chunks of new information, about one of history's darkest chapters.” -- Richard Breitman, Author of The Architect of Genocide: Himmler and The Final Solution and Editor-in-chief of the U.S. Holocaust Museum's Holocaust and Genocide Studies.“This important and moving book describes the unlikely intersection of two very different lives—that of Hanns Alexander, the son of a prosperous German family in Berlin who became a refugee in London in the 1930s and Rudolf Höss, the Kommandant of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp. Well-researched and grippingly written it provides a unique insight into the fate of Germany under National Socialism.” -- Antony Polonsky, Albert Abramson Professor of Holocaust Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Brandeis University"Thomas Harding’s Hanns and Rudolf not only declines to forget, but challenges and defies the empty sententiousness characteristic of those who privately admit to being “tired of hearing about the Holocaust.” In this electrifying account of how a morally driven British Jewish soldier pursues and captures and brings to trial the turntail Kommandant of Auschwitz, Thomas Harding commemorates (and, for the tired, revivifies) a ringing Biblical injunction: Justice, justice, shalt thou pursue". -- Cynthia Ozick"Outstanding, outstanding, outstanding! I was riveted to the text. Thomas Harding writes superbly, the storyline is better than any contrived mystery, and a compelling part of history. I see a movie here....because while there is almost a saturation of Holocaust books and movies, this is most compelling because it is about PEOPLE, the deranged Nazi who didn¹t give any thought to what he was doing and murdered in cold blood and the German Jewish refugee, a charming but rather regular fella, who got caught up in a history-making capture that turned the course of the Nuremberg trials." -- Rabbi Dr. Stuart Altshuler, Belsize Square Synagogue“A remarkable book: thoughtful, compelling and quite devastating in its humanity. Thomas Harding’s account of these two extraordinary men goes straight to the dark heart of Nazi Germany.” -- Keith Lowe, author of Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II"A fascinating, well-crafted book, entwining two biographies for an unusual and illuminating approach to the history of the Third Reich, its most heinous crime and its aftermath." -- Roger Moorhouse, author of Killing Hitler and Berlin at War"This fascinating book, based on the gripping story of one man’s unrelenting pursuit of Rudolf Höss in his search for justice, confirms my belief that much of the most important knowledge of the Holocaust, comes from the personal accounts of those involved. Hanns and Rudolf vividly brings to life, not only the impact of Hitler’s anti-Semitic policies on the author’s German Jewish family, forced to flee Berlin in the 1930s; but shows how an ordinary German farmer became one of the most feared and notorious war criminals in history, implementing with chilling efficiency the extermination of over a million Jews in Auschwitz. As awareness of the full horror of these dark years continues to advance, this book fills a unique and vital role." -- Lyn Smith, author of Forgotten Voices and lecturer in International Politics at the Open University"Its climax as thrilling as any wartime adventure story, Hanns and Rudolf is also a moral inquiry into an eternal question: what makes a man turn to evil? Closely researched and tautly written, this book sheds light on a remarkable and previously unknown aspect of the Holocaust - the moment when a Jew and one of the highest-ranking Nazis came face to face and history held its breath." -- Jonathan Freedland"This is a stunning book. Rudolf Höss' descent into the horror of mass murder is both chilling and deeply disturbing. It is also an utterly compelling and exhilarating account of one man's extraordinary hunt for the Kommandant of the most notorious death camp of all, Auschwitz-Birkenau." -- James Holland, author of The Battle of Britain: Five Months That Changed History; May―October 1940"Only at his great uncle’s funeral in 2006 did Thomas Harding discover that Hanns Alexander, whose Jewish family fled to Britain from Nazi Germany in the 1930s, hunted down and captured Rudolf Höss, the ruthless commandant of Auschwitz, at the end of WW2. By tracing the lives of these two men in parallel until their dramatic convergence in 1946, Harding puts the monstrous evil of the Final Solution in two specific but very different human contexts. The result is a compelling book full of unexpected revelations and insights, an authentic addition to our knowledge and understanding of this dark chapter in European history. No-one who starts reading it can fail to go on to the end." -- David Lodge"Written with the verve of a writer and the sure touch of an historian, Thomas Harding's Hanns and Rudolf is a fascinating, fresh, and compelling work of history." -- Jay Winik, author of April 1865 and The Great Upheaval “Hanns & Rudolf packs an extraordinary punch about the nature of evil, told in a cool, dispassionate voice. As these two lives wrap around each other, the quality of evil becomes ever clearer, and more shocking.” -- Rabbi Julia Neuberger, Baroness Neuberger, West London Synagogue of British Jew"The protagonists' individual choices and family backgrounds give this biographical history a unique, intimate quality" ― Kirkus "A gripping thriller, an unspeakable crime, an essential history." -- John Le Carré"Thomas Harding has shed intriguing new light on the strange poison of Nazism, and one of its most lethal practitioners... Meticulously researched and deeply felt." -- Ben Macintyre ― The Times, Book of the Week "Fascinating and moving...This is a remarkable book, which deserves a wide readership." -- Max Hastings ― The Sunday Times "Written with admirable restraint... [Hanns and Rudolf] fascinates and shocks." -- Evan Thomas ― Washington Post “[A] hair-raising account… Höss and Alexander are drawn in vivid contrast. The narrative also extends beyond the postwar Nuremberg and other war crimes trials, adding historical perspective for 21st-century readers.” -- Buffalo News“[M]eticulously researched and rivetingly reported… Harding’s book is factual but reads like an edge-of-the-seat thriller…. [I] applaud Harding’s clear-eyed narration and objectivity — that and his talent to produce a book that fascinates and disturbs in equal measure” ― Forward Thomas Harding is a former documentary filmmaker and journalist who has written for the Financial Times and The Guardian , among other publications. He founded a television station in Oxford, England, and for many years was an award-winning publisher of a newspaper in West Virginia. Hanns and Rudolf is his first book. He lives in Hampshire, England. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Hanns and Rudolf PROLOGUE ALEXANDER. Howard Harvey, lovingly known as Hanns, passed away quickly and peacefully on Friday, 23rd December. Cremation on Thursday, 28th December, 2.30 p.m. at Hoop Lane, Golders Green Crematorium, West Chapel. No flowers please. Donations, if desired, to North London Hospice. Daily Telegraph, December 28, 2006 Hanns Alexander’s funeral was held on a cold and rainy afternoon three days after Christmas. Considering the weather, and the timing, the turnout was impressive. More than three hundred people packed into the chapel. The congregation arrived early, and in full force, grabbing all the seats. Fifteen people from Hanns’s old bank, Warburg’s, were in attendance, including the former and current CEO. His close friends were there, as was the extended family. Hanns’s wife of sixty years, Ann, sat in the front row, along with the couple’s two daughters, Jackie and Annette. The synagogue’s cantor recited the Kaddish, the traditional Jewish prayer for the dead. He then paused. Looking down upon Ann and her two daughters, he delivered a short sermon, saying how sorry he was for their loss and how Hanns would be missed by the entire community. When he had finished, two of Hanns’s nephews stood to give a joint eulogy. Much was familiar: Hanns growing up in Berlin. The Alexanders fleeing the Nazis and moving to England. Hanns fighting with the British Army. His career as a low-level banker. His commitment to the family and his half-century of schlepping for the synagogue. But there was one detail that caught nearly everyone off guard: that at the war’s end Hanns had tracked down the Kommandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss. This piqued my interest. For Hanns Alexander was my grandmother’s brother, my great-uncle. Growing up, we had been cautioned not to ask questions about the war. Now I learned that Hanns may have been a Nazi hunter. The idea that this nice but unremarkable man had been a Second World War hero seemed unlikely. Presumably, this was just another of Hanns’s tales. For he was a bit of a rogue and a prankster, much respected for sure, but also a man who liked to play tricks on his elders and tell dirty jokes to us youngsters, and who, if truth be told, was prone to exaggeration. After all, if he had really been a Nazi hunter, wouldn’t it have been mentioned in his obituary? I decided to find out if it was true. * We live in an age when the waters are closing over the history of the Second World War, when we are about to lose the last remaining witnesses, when all that is left are accounts retold so many times that they have lost their original veracity. And so we are left with caricatures: Hitler and Himmler as monsters, Churchill and Roosevelt as conquering warriors, and millions of Jews as victims. Yet Hanns Alexander and Rudolf Höss were men with many sides to their characters. As such, this story challenges the traditional portrayal of the hero and the villain. Both men were adored by their families and respected by their colleagues. Both grew up in Germany in the early decades of the twentieth century and, in their way, loved their country. At times, Rudolf Höss, the brutal Kommandant, displayed a capacity for compassion. And the behavior of his pursuer, Hanns Alexander, was not always above suspicion. This book is therefore a reminder of a more complex world, told through the lives of two men who grew up in parallel and yet opposing German cultures. It is also an attempt to follow the courses of the two men’s lives, and to understand how they came to meet. And the attempt raises difficult questions. How does a man become a mass murderer? Why does a person choose to confront his persecutors? What happens to the families of such men? Is revenge ever justified? Even more, this story is an argument that when the worlds of these two men collided, modern history was changed. The testimony that emerged proved particularly significant in the war crimes trials at the end of the Second World War: Höss was the first senior Nazi to admit to executing Himmler and Hitler’s Final Solution. And he did so in great and shocking detail. This testimony, unprecedented in its description of human evil, drove the world to swear that such unspeakable atrocities would never again be repeated. From this point forward, those suffering from extreme injustice could dare to hope for intervention. It is also the story of surprise. In my comfortable north London upbringing, Jews—and I am one—were cast as the victims of the Holocaust, not its avengers. I had never really questioned that stereo-type until I fell into this story. Or, to be more accurate, it fell to me. This is a Jew-fighting-back story. And while there are some well-known examples of resistance—uprisings in the ghettos, revolts in the camps, attacks from the woods—such examples are few. Each should be celebrated, as an inspiration to others. Even when faced with profound brutality, hope for survival—and perhaps revenge—is still possible. This is a story pieced together from histories, biographies, archives, family letters, old tape recordings and interviews with survivors. And it is a story that was, for reasons that I think will become clear, never fully told by the men at its heart: Hanns and Rudolf. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • WINNER OF THE WINGATE PRIZE The untold story of the man who brought a mastermind of the final solution to justice.May 1945. In the aftermath of the Second Word War, the first British War Crimes Investigation Team is assembled to hunt down the senior Nazi officials responsible for the greatest atrocities the world has ever seen. One of the lead investigators is Lieutenant Hanns Alexander, a German Jew who is now serving in the British Army. Rudolf Höss is his most elusive target. As Kommandant of Auschwitz, Höss not only oversaw the murder of more than one million men, women, and children; he was the man who perfected Hitler’s program of mass extermination. Höss is on the run across a continent in ruins, the one man whose testimony can ensure justice at Nuremberg.
  • Hanns and Rudolf
  • reveals for the very first time the full, exhilarating account of Höss’s capture, an encounter with repercussions that echo to this day. Moving from the Middle Eastern campaigns of the First World War to bohemian Berlin in the 1920s to the horror of the concentration camps and the trials in Belsen and Nuremberg, it tells the story of two German men- one Jewish, one Catholic- whose lives diverged, and intersected, in an astonishing way.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Yin and Yang...

Nazi and Jew. Jew and Nazi. Can you imagine two more disparate people? In his book, British author Thomas Harding writes about Hanns Alexander, a German Jew who emigrated to England in the mid-1930's with almost his entire family, and Rudolf Hoss, a German Nazi who was the commandant of Auschwitz and self-confessed murderer of 2 million people. Could two men - in and of the world at the same time - be more different? In "Hanns and Rudolf", Harding, great-nephew of Hanns Alexander, tells the story of the two and how one man helped decide the fate of the other after that other man had decided the fates of millions.

"Hanns and Rudolf" is a double biography of those two men. Hanns was the son of German-Jewish parents. His father was a well-respected doctor and the Alexander family - with two older daughters and twin sons, Hanns and Paul - lived a good life in Berlin. During the 1930's, the family realised the Nazi governments restrictions on German Jews were not going to lessen and there was no future in Germany for the family. They were all able to emigrate to England, where the father reestablished his medical practice. The boys joined the British Army in a special unit made up of former German Jews who had emigrated. Hanns became a translator after the war for the British army's war-crimes division and was one of those officials tracking down Nazi war criminals. It was in this capacity that he captured Rudolf Hoss and brought him to justice.

Rudolf Hoss was the son of staunchly Catholic parents. He lied about his age in 1915 and joined the German army in the WW1. He served honorably but was one of the many "disconnected" Germans after the war and into the 1920s, searching for a direction in life. He discovered Adolf Hitler's Nazi party and was an early member. He rose up the party ranks and was eventually put in charge of directing concentration camps. He reached the height of his career when he was given the task of building up Auschwitz from the small camp in occupied Poland to the killing center it became with the additions of gas chambers and crematoriums to make more efficient the mass murder of millions. He and his wife and their five children lived in a villa on the grounds of the camp. After the war, the family fled to the British sector of divided Germany and Rudolf went into hiding. He was eventually tracked down by Hanns Alexander and testified at the Nuremberg Trials against other high-ranking Nazis. Then he stood trial in a Polish court where he was sentenced to death and was hanged in Auschwitz in 1947.

Thomas Harding's well-written book contrasts the lives - and deaths - of these two men. Hoss was hanged, a dishonorable life ending in noose. Alexander lived a life of honor in London after the war, dying at age of 90, with his wife and two daughters with him near the end. Could lives of yin and yang end any other way?
26 people found this helpful
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Can't Get This Book Out of My Mind. Superb. Exceptional.

Reading this even handed account of parallel biographies of a German Jew from an esteemed family and an animal loving German raised to be a priest, is like watching two trains roar towards each other on a single track.

Hans Alexander was born in 1917 Germany, a twin and the Jewish child of an esteemed and wealthy high society physician. `The Alexander residence took up the entire second floor of 219/220 Kaiseralle ('one of the smartest addresses in Berlin') ', and had 22 rooms. His father commissioned an architect and turned a four story structure into a sanatorium and furnished it with the latest equipment. Three doctors joined the practice with a team of nurses and technicians. There were family parties, a new car, and a country home.

Rudolf Hoss was a protected and lonely, child who grew up in Baden-Baden, and then the suburbs of Mannheim. He loved animals so much that he often smuggled his beloved pony into his bedroom. The author writes that he and the pony were inseparable and the pony followed Rudolf like a dog.
Rudolf's father taught him about the principles of the Catholic Church and took Rudolph on
pilgrimages to holy sites in Switzerland and to Lourdes in France. Rudolph reported that he took his religious duties seriously.
His father swore he would be a priest. Rudolf's education was planned to prepare him for a religious life.

Rudolf joined the Red Cross and impressed by soldiers' bravery he lied about his age and enlisted in the army when he was 14 years old.

The book recounts his war experiences; how he became involved in the Nazi Party and how he participated in the killing a former colleague who he believed to be a traitor and then Rudolph's Hoss' crucial and fatal decision to leave his beloved farm and new family to rejoin the military.

It follows his rise to become the Kommandant of Auschwitz/Birkenau.

We learn about life in the Hoss' family's villa in Auschwitz when Rudolph was the Kommandant. We learn of his wife's extravagance, what kind of family man Rudolf was and his increasing moodiness.

Hans Alexander's highly assimilated family had been optimistic about their future in Germany even with the rise of the National Socialists until storm troopers blocked their door and a crowd stood in front of their building shouting, `Don't buy from the Jews.'

Things got worse.

The author recounts the gradual realization that Hans Alexander's family had to leave, and leave everything behind as they struggle to relocate to England.

Hans becomes a soldier. In May, 1945 he enters the horror of Belsen concentration camp where corpses lay piled on top of each other and bulldozers push the dead into mass graves.

The story is about how Hans Alexander hunts down and captures Rudolf Hoss who was responsible for the deaths of three million people.

But it's more.

Hanns and Rulolf is about real people (thus the first names) and real decisions and real actions which, if can't be excused, or understood, in the case of Hoss, are deemed worthy of examination.
The author's success in capturing Hoss' motivations and personality are startling; so much that at times at tmes I could almost see Hoss' face and almost feel his breath.

This story is also remarkable because Hans Alexander is the author Thomas Harding's great uncle and Harding only learned about his uncle being a Nazi hunter after he died.

It is also a story of bravery and heroism and love and family.

The story begins with two little boys; one, the sheltered pampered son of a doctor and the other an animal lover poised to serve humanity as a priest.

One became a Nazi hunter and the other a mass murderer.

I can't get this story out of my mind.
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Bravo

This is not the sort of book I typically read, but it locked me in from the beginning. You have the stories of two men that had very different beginnings and endings based on the paths they chose to walk.

One man starts life living carefree and ends up narrowly escaping the horrors that the Jewish population would have to endure in Nazi held areas, eventually hunting those responsible for these acts and finally settling into what we would consider a normal life. The other man has a hard go of it from the beginning and for me he developed a sick logic that would lead him to blindly spearhead the most heinous of events in human history.

For me, this book illustrates just how narrow a line we walk in our lives. One tiny slip can lead one to spiraling into an abyss of pain and horror…one man went all the way down while the other managed to hang on to his humanity even in his dark moments. The history presented by the author was beautifully done and boldly reveals lessons that humanity still need to learn based on some of the current events unfolding now.

I think that this book should be required reading for older students when the holocaust is covered in class; I have made this a required read in my household.
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Modern Parallels

HANNS and RUDOLF is about Hanns Alexander the German Jewish soldier who eventually captured the Komandant of Auschwitz, Rudulph Hoss with an umlaut over the “o”.

Rudolf Hoss was a devoted family man who always wanted to be a farmer, but the aftermath of WWI ruined that for him, when he joined the Freikorps, the precursor of the SA, where he met Martin Borman and Heinrich Himmler, the future head of the SS.
In his letters to his wife after his capture, he would bitterly regret taking the wrong path in life.

We learn quite a bit from the book. Himmler for instance started out as the commander of the Bavarian political police. The SS was small compared to the SA and only grew as Hitler’s power skyrocketed. Himmler formed the first concentration camp at Dachau for fifty political prisoners. Himmler invited Hoss to assist the Kommandant at Dachau. Eventually the fanatical Hoss would be assigned to build a camp at Auschwitz to deal with the Final Solution. It was Hoss’s idea to use Zyklon B to murder millions of Jewish, Gypsy, Russian, and other prisoners. Hoss accepted Nazi propaganda that the Jewis were responsible for Germany’s economic plight.

Hanns Alexander and his twin brother Paul and his sisters grew up in Germany, but left for England when the Nazis forbade non-Jewish Germans to go to a Jewish doctor. Hanns’s father had a thriving medical practice.

Hanns and Paul joined the English army but were given jobs as translators and guards. The British didn’t trust Germans to bear arms. Hanns was a translator, but when he caught a rumor involving Gauleiter Gustav Simon, Nazi leader of Luxembourg, who was still at large after the war, Hanns took it upon himself to capture him. His success led to a promotion and his involvement in the capture of Hoss.

I was always under the impression that WWI and the Versailles treaty, which saddled Germany with heavy war reparations, was responsible for WWII, but the Weimar Republic was thriving until the stock market crashed in America. Inflation in Germany went through the roof, leaving an opening for radical politicians like Hitler. When you don’t know your history, you’re condemned to repeat it as we experienced a similar situation with the mortgage bubble and the Great Recession, which also affected Europe and radical politics.

Those who haven’t read THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH will learn a little about the Nuremburg trials and Rudolph Hoss’s testimony which greatly influenced the result. Contrary to what some might believe, Nazi prisoners were checked for cyanide capsules as was Hoss several times. Hanns Alexander was author Thomas Harding's great uncle, which gave him access to a lot of personal info about Hanns.
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SHAQ SAYS: "LIKE STUDYING THE HOLOCAUST BEFORE-DURING-&-AFTER ON A SPLIT SCREEN OF POOR VICTIMS... & HORRENDOUS MONSTERS

As part of the first Jewish post-Holocaust generation... my entire life has been affected in every imaginable way by this despicable blot on all of humanity. Emotionally... spiritually... familial... and in ways totally indescribable in words. I've made it a life's goal to constantly... and continually... educate myself... and my son in any way possible. I have read innumerable books... and watched many films on this deplorable subject. Each book... and each film... has its own uniqueness... and its unavoidable overlaps... but this book... really has a unique perspective and method of telling its story.

Reading this book... to me... can only be described as watching a split screen TV. On one side you have Hanns Alexander... the author's great-uncle... all his family... and of course all the Jews affected by the Holocaust. (There are other words... and sentences... I am refraining myself from using... due to my lifelong fury and hatred of the Nazi's... so I may overuse the word Holocaust in this review... so please bear with me.) On the other side of the screen (the extremely dark side)... is Rudolph Hoss (Note I don't know how to type the .. over the O.) ... the Kommandant of Auschwitz... and all the other disgraces to the human race... Hitler, Himmler, Simon... and countless others. Your stomach will have a fight over what to be more nauseated about... the escalation and soulless mass murder of millions of people as the Nazi's carry out their "Final Solution"... or the totally cavalier attitude of Hoss... as the ashes of millions of Jews fill the sky... and the air for miles around stinks of death... and thousands of living... walking... skeletons... are beaten... tortured... and starved... right before his eyes... at his command... he simply goes home to his ever growing luxury home... right near Auschwitz... to his wife and children... and they all act like they don't have a care in the world.

The reader is provided with such a unique view and perspective as Hanns Alexander... a German Jew... who grows up before your eyes... his family loses everything in Germany and are displaced... and low and behold at the end of the war Hanns winds up... heading up the team that tracks down Nazi war criminals... and Hanns is the one that actually captures Hoss.

On the other side of the screen... the putrid dark side... you see Hoss's life unfold... and he of course is responsible for millions of deaths in the concentration camps... you get to "see" his family grow and prosper... and then you "see" him go into hiding... get caught by Hanns... and executed by hanging... which was way to merciful!

Also... intriguing are the quotes directly from Hoss... from an autobiography he was forced to write while in captivity... and all of this... Hanns' life... and death... Hoss's life... and death... are expertly orchestrated in sequence by the author.

Any human being bestowed with even the smallest drop of empathy... would of course be nauseated by any description of the Holocaust... so I was prepared for that... but what perhaps... was the most disgusting fact in this book was Hoss's comments before his hanging:

"You can be sure that it was not always pleasant to see those mountains of corpses and smell the continual burning," he continued, "but Himmler had ordered it and had even explained the necessity and I really never gave much thought to whether it was wrong."

"But, crucially, he argued that it had been a mistake, not because this mass murder was immoral or monstrous, but because "it was that very policy of extermination that brought the hatred of the whole world down on Germany."

Reviewer's final note: **Ahm Yisrael Chai! **
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Contrasted lives...

Nazi and Jew. Jew and Nazi. Can you imagine two more disparate people? In his book, British author Thomas Harding writes about Hanns Alexander, a German Jew who emigrated to England in the mid-1930's with almost his entire family, and Rudolf Hoss, a German Nazi who was the commandant of Auschwitz and self-confessed murderer of 2 million people. Could two men - in and of the world at the same time - be more different? In "Hanns and Rudolf", Harding, great-nephew of Hanns Alexander, tells the story of the two and how one man helped decide the fate of the other after that other man had decided the fates of millions.

"Hanns and Rudolf" is a double biography of those two men. Hanns was the son of German-Jewish parents. His father was a well-respected doctor and the Alexander family - with two older daughters and twin sons, Hanns and Paul - lived a good life in Berlin. During the 1930's, the family realised the Nazi governments restrictions on German Jews were not going to lessen and there was no future in Germany for the family. They were all able to emigrate to England, where the father reestablished his medical practice. The boys joined the British Army in a special unit made up of former German Jews who had emigrated. Hanns became a translator after the war for the British army's war-crimes division and was one of those officials tracking down Nazi war criminals. It was in this capacity that he captured Rudolf Hoss and brought him to justice.

Rudolf Hoss was the son of staunchly Catholic parents. He lied about his age in 1915 and joined the German army in the WW1. He served honorably but was one of the many "disconnected" Germans after the war and into the 1920s, searching for a direction in life. He discovered Adolf Hitler's Nazi party and was an early member. He rose up the party ranks and was eventually put in charge of directing concentration camps. He reached the height of his career when he was given the task of building up Auschwitz from the small camp in occupied Poland to the killing center it became with the additions of gas chambers and crematoriums to make more efficient the mass murder of millions. He and his wife and their five children lived in a villa on the grounds of the camp. After the war, the family fled to the British sector of divided Germany and Rudolf went into hiding. He was eventually tracked down by Hanns Alexander and testified at the Nuremberg Trials against other high-ranking Nazis. Then he stood trial in a Polish court where he was sentenced to death and was hanged in Auschwitz in 1947.

Thomas Harding's well-written book contrasts the lives - and deaths - of these two men. Hoss was hanged, a dishonorable life ending in noose. Alexander lived a life of honor in London after the war, dying at age of 90, with his wife and daughters at his side. Could any two lives - or deaths - be different.
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Excellent book and true story about the lives of Hanns ...

Excellent book and true story about the lives of Hanns Alexander, German Jew serving in the British Army, and Rudolf Hoss, Kommandant of Auschwitz from 1901 - 1946. The author provides a detailed and fascinating description of family life in Germany in the early 1900's and how the two men evolved through WWI, onset of Nazism, and what they did in WWII. Their lives finally intersect in 1946 when Hanns is instrumental in the tracking down and capture of Rudolf Hoss in 1946. We all know the fundamental history of what happened during this time period, but this book helps us understand how things went so terribly wrong. An entirely different perspective -- thoroughly enjoyed this well-written book.
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No, we are not all equal

A real gem among the trash. The hero is not a hero, just a grateful refugee from Hitler's Germany doing his job for England. The villain is a villain but one without horns and a tail. He too is just doing his job, and the fact that that job required him to murder over 1 million people was of little concern to him. Indeed Rudolf was not worse that the average German of his time, just one who was given an opportunity to do what they all really wanted to do. It is fitting that he was undone by a German Jew and hung in the place where he murdered so many. Might make an interesting tv series.
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Holocaust legacy not to be forgotten

The author, Thomas Harding, is a great-nephew of Hanns Alexander. Harding narrates chronologically, in alternated chapters, the biographies of two protagonists; Rudolf Höss, a Catholic and Hanns Alexander, a Jew. Both grew up in Germany. Rudolf turned out to be a villain and Hanns a hero. Rudolf used all available sources to facilitate the murder, as efficiently as possible, to murder people, most of them Jews. Hanns Alexander manifested resourcefulness and bravery under difficult circumstances when the cause is just.

Hitler became the Chancellor of Germany in 1939. Soon after, many discriminatory laws against the Jewish people were enacted. Banning Jews and non-Aryans from working for the government, Jewish artists were restricted to performing to Jewish-only audience and many other senseless decrees. Hitler's propaganda minister, Joseph Gobbles said: "The age of a disproportionate Jewish intellectualism has come to an end." When the Law Against the Overcrowding of German Schools passed, Dr. Alfred Alexander, who was one of Berlin's prominent doctors, the President of the Berlin Chamber of Physicians, was told by the Nazis: `Your twin two boys, Hanns and Paul, will no longer be welcome at the Waldschule; either you remove the boys or they would be "slung out." When Nazi troopers came to apprehend Dr. Alexander, his neighbor Colonel Otto Meyer confronted the troopers telling them: "this man was a World War One hero; he had received the Iron Cross, go away troopers; they did. Afterwards, Dr. Alexander thanked Mr. Meyer for his brave intervention. As the persecution of the Jews in Germany worsened, Dr. Alexander decided to leave Germany for London England where his daughter lived. Eventually his wife Henny and the twin sons Hanns and Paul joined them. When World War broke out Hanns and Paul enlisted.

Rudolf Höss was an early member in Adolf Hitler's Nazi party. He reached a high rank and was eventually put in charge of directing concentration camps. In 1941 at the height of his career, he was designated to upgrade Auschwitz from a small camp in occupied Poland to a major killing center. Two or three hundred captives were ushered into a "disinfection room." The doors were closed tight. Then the Nazi guards on the roof dropped canisters of granulated Zyklon B into the room below. Ten minutes later all victims were dead. An hour later, the doors were opened by other captives called the Sonderkommandos-- Jewish prisoners forced to assist with the operations.-- They pulled gold teeth and rings from the bodies and piled the dead bodies high in deep pits. Then they were set on fire using old bits of cloth doused in gasoline. The fires took about seven hours to burn out. Once cooled, any remaining bones were removed and crushed on flat concrete mortars. The resulting ash was then loaded onto trucks and dumped in the river Vistula. After several months, Rudolf Höss and his team focused on improving their killing methods, new crematoriums were constructed so that larger numbers of new arrivals could be burned more efficiently than in pits. That mechanism for mass murder was created and constantly widened under the watchful eye of Rudolf Höss. Heinrich Himmler, the Reichsfuhrer-SS Schutztaffel (leader of the SS) told Höss "Auschwitz will become a site of mass murder" and it did. Höss had an ordinary family life and the brutality that his blind loyalty demanded became his second nature.

When the British troops entered Belsen concentration camp Hanns Alexander was chosen to be in war crimes investigation team, first as an interpreter and later as a war crimes investigator. In Belsen camp, Hanns was in shock and enraged. - He knew that what happened in the concentration camps could easily have happened to him had he stayed in Germany. Hanns became determined to hunt down missing war criminals, especially Kommandant Höss. Eventually he was captured and stood trial in a Polish court. He was sentenced to death and was hung in Auschwitz in April 1947. Hanns Alexander lived a life of honor in London; he died at the age of 90.

As a Holocaust survivor, I feel a need and an obligation to share my life story. I wrote my autobiography From a Name a Number, because a U.S.WWII veteran, a liberator of Buchenwald concentration camp, asked me to put my story in print, for his children and grand children. He believed that the Holocaust should not be forgotten; never be lost from the world's conscience. It took the Allies several years to free not just us, Holocaust captives, but to free the Nazis from the slaughter houses as well. I am grateful to Thomas Harding for his work in this endeavor. The moral anguish of Holocaust victims is indeed incontestable. It is also painful to realize that most nations had no scruples about not stopping earlier Kommandant Höss from building and operating crematoriums.
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engaging read, sloppy research

Thomas Harding has written an engaging and entertaining book about his great uncle, Hanns Alexander, who fled the Third Reich to serve in the British army in World War Two, and Rudolf Hoess, Commandant of Auschwitz for several years. Harding describes how Hanns got involved in hunting war criminals after World War Two, during which he hunted down and captured Rudolf. In alternate chapters, he gives parallel biographies of the two, from their childhood up to their deaths.
I can't give this book five stars because although I admire Harding's writing, his research is sloppy. For example, he claims that at Auschwitz Zyklon B gas poured out of fake shower heads. I believe it's commonly accepted today that Zyklon B, being lighter than air, and solid at room temperature, was thrown into pillars as pellets, which turned into gas when exposed to the temperature in the gas chamber, which then escaped through holes in the pillars into the chamber.
Overall, though, this book gives a good look not only at these two people, but at how their descendants dealt emotionally with the events described and what it was like in Germany in 1945-47.
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