"Hitler's Table Talk" Study Hour: Episode 39
Dec. 11, 2014
President Paul Hindenburg, Minister-General Werner von Blomberg and Chancellor Adolf Hitler at the Garrison Church on the 'Day of Potsdam,' March 1933.
Carolyn Yeager and Ray Goodwin read and comment on the May 20-June 4, 1942 lunch and dinner table monologues by the German Leader, as taken down in shorthand by aide Henry Picker. 1h46m. Included in this episode:
- Hitler explains how he raised the standard of living for showgirls in Berlin;
- He describes in detail his assumption of power, including negotiations with Von Papen, Generals Schleicher and Hammerstein, and the "Old Gentleman" Hindenburg;
- How his relationship with Hindenburg became very warm and close;
- Treatment of spies and war-time criminals must be the most severe--compares them to the idealist at the Front;
- Approves of a movie film about Lola Montez and Ludwig 1 of Bavaria;
- Artists should be recognized in their lifetimes--Mozart, Bruckner and Haydn--Vienna compared to Munich as art capitals;
- Hitler advises to follow nature in designing aircraft and ships--the importance and difficulty of invention;
- Murder in Prague--Hitler reacts angrily to the assassination death of the "irreplaceable" Reinhard Heydrich and orders that all must obey regulations intended to ensure their safety.
The edition of Hitler's Table Talk being used was translated by Norman Cameron and R.H. Stevens, published by Enigma Books, New York, and can be found as a pdf here.
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