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Monday, 27 April 2009 09:04 Written by Matthew Neckelmann The Deadly Seven Nazis who loomed large in Old Shanghai Lothar Eisenträger (aka Ludwig Ehrhardt) Born: Sohlis; December 9, 1896 Rank/Position: Chief of Abwehr (Military Defense) Years in Shanghai: 1941-1947 Fate: Sentenced to life imprisonment in 1947 His secretary once described him as a “babbler, boaster and spendthrift,” and wondered how such a man could be appointed to such an important position. A fun-loving womanizer who was rarely, if ever, seen working, Eisenträger (who also used the alias Ehrhardt) was renowned for his hedonism. He enjoyed drinking, good food, and couldn’t stand to be alone. Although he spent most of his time socializing, Eisenträger was insanely jealous of possible rivals and managed a coup against a troublesome intelligence agent, Louis Siefken, who was collaborating with Meisinger (Eisenträger accused Siefken of being a homosexual, and the charge stuck). Additionally, Eisenträger revealed suspicious relations between Siefken’s bureau and a Japanese commander, resulting in Siefken being sacked. A man of contradictions, he relentlessly climbed the Nazi career ladder but, as head of German military intelligence, was rather lackadaisical; the bureau obtained inferior intelligence on the Japanese, but succeeded in spying on the American navy, thanks in part to the unchanging US Navy Code. His lack of dedication to the Nazi mission didn’t discourage the American military from locking up the balding, dissipated goon in Ward Road Jail for life. His old rival, Siefkin, was the first to testify against him at his trial. Click here to read about the other six... The deadly seven Nazis who loomed large in old Shanghai Lothar Eisenträger (aka Ludwig Ehrhardt) Born: Sohlis; December 9, 1896 Rank/Position: Chief of Abwehr (Military Defense) Years in Shanghai: 1941-1947 Fate: Sentenced to life imprisonment in 1947 Did Hitler keep an eye on China? The Führer had other concerns, says one historian Adolf Hitler was simply too consumed with the war in Europe to concern himself with Shanghai, or even the war in the Pacific, says Bernard Wasserstein, author of 1999’s Secret War in Shanghai: An Untold Story of Espionage, Intrigue, and Treason in World War II. “Hitler had no time to worry about Shanghai,” the University of Chicago history professor told that’s Shanghai. “He had other things on his mind. He was preoccupied with events on his eastern front in Russia.” Robert Neumann (aka “the Butcher of Buchenwald”) Born: Nüssdorf; August 21, 1902 Rank/Position: Physiologist, professor, SS member Years in Shanghai: 1940-1945 Fate: Received a light sentence in Germany, where he lived and ultimately died of natural causes Medical doctor Neumann conducted numerous experiments as the leader of the ‘pathology division’ at Buchenwald in 1939, and later in Auschwitz. After conducting tests on corpses, Neumann later experimented with live prisoners, removing pieces of their liver and subjecting them to live autopsies. After he resigned from the SS, he left the camps and was sent to Shanghai, where he became renowned for his fanatical Nazism and his efforts as a propagandist. During his time in Shanghai, he was suspected of murdering another Nazi doctor, von Miorini, whom he later autopsied. His studies in Shanghai were largely confined to his obsession with race. Having established the German-Chinese Medical School in Shanghai, he gave numerous speeches like “Inheritance and Race” and “Race and People.” Despite all of the atrocities, crimes, and intrigues in which Neumann was involved, he served a light sentence in Germany (the trial’s records were mysteriously destroyed) and died peacefully of old age in his homeland. Franz Xaver Hasenöhrl Born: Vienna; August 2, 1891 Rank/Position: Regional Office Leader (Gauamtsleiter) Years in Shanghai: 1932-1934 Fate: June 1943 Hasenöhrl was a rather insignificant businessman who was one of the first Nazis to arrive in Shanghai. One colleague described his character and general demeanor as “very awkward.” Hasenöhrl’s insecurities initially made him extraordinarily unpopular among Shanghai’s German community. As one of the first Nazis in Shanghai, however, Hasenöhrl rose to power as he implanted Nazi ideology among Shanghai Germans. Although he officially traveled as a representative of the Reich Railway Center for Travel Traffic, Hasenöhrl, with his background in business, was granted the duty of establishing a Ministry of Propaganda and the Foreign Press Bureau while serving as a liaison between the German Consulate in Shanghai and Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels. He was diligent in developing a sophisticated propaganda system arrousing sympathy to Nazis among German expatriates. Although he succeeded in being the first to plant the Swastika flag in East Asia, his success was short-lived. Hasenöhrl returned to Europe in August, 1934, where he later died. Josef Meisinger (aka “the Butcher of Warsaw”) Born: Munich; September 14, 1899 Rank/Position: German Colonel of Police Years in Shanghai: 1941-1947 Fate: Hanged March 7, 1947 in Warsaw for atrocities committed in the Polish capital One of the most powerful Nazis in the city. The Bavarian bigwig joined the Nazi Party in the early 1920s, eventually earning a reputation for his brutal methods of examining witnesses. Before he arrived in Shanghai, Meisinger served under SS supremo Heinrich Himmler as director of investigations of homosexuals, abortion cases, and opponents of Hitler within the Nazi Party. In Shanghai his role was to oversee the activities of all Germans in the Far East and crush anyone whose loyalty to the Führer was “lukewarm.” Meisinger’s connection to Himmler granted him far-reaching power, and fellow Germans came to fear him after suspects began disappearing shortly after his arrival. Rumor linked him to plans for a ‘final solution’ for Shanghai’s Jews (though no evidence has ever emerged of such a plan, see p33). Meisinger wasn’t just a monster – he resembled one. According to one SS colleague, he was “a large, coarse-faced man with a bald head and an incredibly ugly face.” He brought with him to Shanghai his convent-educated wife (one of Himmler’s discarded mistresses), who was almost driven to suicide by his domestic abuse. Baron Jesco von PuttkamerBorn: Grunewald (near Berlin); March 19, 1903 Rank/Position: Chief of Propaganda Years in Shanghai: 1941-1947 Fate: Sentenced to 30 years imprisonment in 1947 Baron Jesco von Puttkamer, a handsome, stocky man with a wide, toothy smile, was the only child of a Major-General and a half-Jewish mother who wrote erotic poetry and novels. Before joining the Nazi Party in 1932, Puttkamer, taking after his mother, wrote for family magazines and advertising agencies. In 1935, he worked under ‘party philosopher’ Alfred Rosenberg and rose to power as chief of propaganda in Shanghai where he tried to elicit understanding and sympathy for Hitler’s Germany. He established his covert propaganda bureau in the penthouse suite of the Park Hotel and later in a villa next to the German church. Von Puttkamer was often seen traveling through town in a horse-drawn carriage with his Korean bodyguard by his side. At his trial, his attempt to portray himself as a reluctant bit player in the Nazi Party wasn’t persuasive enough. American interrogators found him to be a “rabid Nazi,” and he was given a 30-year sentence. Franz Huber Born: April 6, 1912 Rank/Position: Chief of Gestapo/SS (after Kahner) Years in Shanghai: 1943-? Fate: Unknown Slandered by Eisenträger for “his petty party intrigues and mud-slinging,” Huber was an ambitious party man stationed for two years in Tokyo before Japanese police and the German embassy pressured him to replace Kahner in Shanghai. Like Kahner, Huber had a background specializing in police work. Unlike Kahner, he had a distinguished party career. At 22, he joined the SS and quickly rose to the rank of Sturmbannführer (Storm Unit Leader). Huber, jealous of Meisinger’s seemingly limitless power, eventually attained a certain degree of autonomy. By the end of the war, his monthly salary had risen from RMB1,830 (already greater than Kahner’s RMB1,570) to about RMB5,000. Huber’s craving for importance was insatiable – in December 1944, Huber, in collaboration with Meisinger, asked the Japanese General Staff in Tokyo to give him authority over Eisenträger. But the Japanese mistrusted Huber, and he was denied. Orders from Berlin later directed Eisenträger and Huber to collaborate, but the paper-thin attempt at an Abwehr-Gestapo reconciliation had only one real success – the destruction of a Free French resistance group headed by a Jewish judge in the French Concession. For all the other stories on Nazis in Shanghai, click on these links:The Swastika and China: a history
The deadly seven: Nazis who loomed large in old Shanghai The Good Man: John Rabe and saving 250,000 from the Japanese The Nazi / Spy: Richard Sorge Gerhard Kahner Born: Hindenburg; July 17, 1911 Rank/Position: Chief of Gestapo/SS Years in Shanghai: 1940 – 1943 Fate: Unknown Kahner, described by the Secretary of the German Embassy in Tokyo as a “malevolent, sexually dissatisfied ruffian with an inclination to sadism,” was responsible for observing Jewish immigrants in Shanghai and conducting counter-espionage against British intelligence. He didn’t owe his post in the Gestapo to any party career but certainly embodied the cruel Nazi stereotype: a post-war report on Kahner’s activities as Gestapo chief in Shanghai noted that several Germans in the city who were not satisfied with the way things were going simply “disappeared.” For reasons unknown, Kahner was removed from his position in March 1942 by Meisinger and replaced by Franz Huber. Comments (3)
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... written by Joerg Kneip, May 20, 2009
I cross checked the story about the Nazis of Shanghai.
Nothing of it is true. Neither you will find the names of the supposed 7 in the Books or wikipedia, nor have they been mentioned elsewhere. Alledgly they were high ranked nazis so it should not be the problem to find them in literature. The whole story is invented by the "That's Shanghai". Quite innovative thats for sure but poorly researched. Unfortunately will some people believe in what they read. Write comment
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I would like to post on the site, if possible, for other readers a scan of a Third Reich passport issued in Shanghai 1939. Not to offend anyone and no political reasons, purely for historical purposes.
How can one add a scan?
Thanks,
Neil.