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Amerian Characters
BY GENE SMITH
MARTHA DODD’S SHINING SEASON
It took a long time for the truth about Nazi Germany
to sink in. And when it did, she learned the wrong lesson.
The only complaint Martha Dodd had about her
father as she grew up was that sometimes he’d
start going on to the family about the Bible and
history and economics, politics, and social problems. Too boring. She wanted to be a poet and writer, and
such discussions held no interest for her. At the University
of Chicago, where her father taught history and she majored
in English, she ran with a crowd talking literature and art, poetry and painting.
After college she got a job
doing book reviews for the
Chicago Tribune. One day
her mother called. Her father,
Prof. William E. Dodd, had
been asked by the new President of the United States
to become the American ambassador to the government
headed by the new chancellor of Germany. Professor
Dodd had nearly thirty-five
years earlier received his Ph.D.
at Leipzig and retained sentimental memories of his
young days there. He knew
German literature and traditions and, it seemed to President Roosevelt, would be
seen as a scholarly historian-
diplomat. That would be appealing to those of the old
German culture with whom
Dodd might join as a moderating force upon an Adolf
Hitler whose pre-chancellorship years and early days in
office showed anything but moderation.
Ambassador and Mrs.
Dodd and their son, William,
Jr., who had been a graduate student and was teaching at American University
in Washington, D.C., and
Martha, who gave up her
Tribune job, arrived in Germany in the summer of 1933.
The ambassador’s daughter
was a very good-looking young woman in her early
twenties, with a delightfully charming grin and manner.
“Pretty, vivacious,” noted the foreign correspondent William L. Shirer. The Chicago Tribune’s correspondent Sigrid
Schultz called on her former colleague and told her fearful things about the country in which she had just arrived.
Exaggeration, “and a bit hysterical” at that, Miss Dodd
decided. In fact, she quickly concluded, Germany was
wonderful. She had been in
France a few years earlier to
find the people impatient,
cold, hard, overly mannered.
Germans, she thought, were
more genuine and honest,
sympathetic to her primitive
use of their language, kindly, simple, natural.
She enjoyed the tea dances
at the Eden Hotel and the
good German beer, the glamorous diplomatic receptions, walking trips through
groomed forests outside the
capital, swimming in the
lovely lakes, being sent flowers and notes by the politely heel-clicking young Reichswehr officers whose acquaintance she made. She
found deeply impressive the
enthusiasm of the brownshirted SA men and the
black-shirted SS ones for the
leader, the Führer who, they
told her, was giving the
country back its self-respect
and offering a future. A
month after their arrival
she and her brother, Bill,
went on a motor trip. Seeing a low-number license
plate from Berlin, people
took them for high officials
and flung up their hands
in the Heil Hitler salute.
She heiled back, “vigorously.” They came to a crowd
brutally shoving about a
young woman with a placard hanging around her neck.
The words on it were translated for the brother and sister: “I have offered myself to a Jew.”
A disturbing matter, yes, certainly, the ambassador’s
daughter thought, yet an “isolated case” and not really
important, as it “did not reveal actually what was going
on in Germany” and had nothing to do with the “constructive work” being done, the important accomplishments. She heard of other excesses but found excuses
for them. Her father “gently label[ed] me a young Nazi.”
That made her defensive, and “I became temporarily an
ardent defender of everything going on,” the “glowing
and inspiring faith in Hitler, the good that was being
done for the unemployed.” She wrote home that the rebirth
of the country was as exciting as any thing she had ever
seen, that press stories and atrocity reports were blown
up out of proportion. Berlin was clean and orderly, the
people warm and openhearted. When the reporter Edgar
Ansel Mowrer told her that “all the decencies had been
violated in Germany” and that the
German soul was being “crippled and
distorted,” she speculated that perhaps he was a Jew. (He wasn’t.)
Hitler’s eyes captured
Dodd: “They are
unforgettable, intense
and unwavering.”
But he was “gentle and modest.”
She moved in high circles, attending teas, lunches, dinners, balls, and
receptions, went to movies and nightclubs, was often at the Potsdam palace of the crown prince, whose father, the former kaiser, had fled to
the Netherlands. Prince Louis Ferdinand, the crown prince’s son and
heir to the throne after his father, became one of her closest friends. The
Führer’s aide Ernst (“Putzi”) Hanfstängl, said, “Hitler
needs a woman. Hitler should have an American woman—
a lovely woman could change the whole destiny of Europe. Martha, you are the woman!” He took her to tea with
the Führer, who kissed her hand. She had expected “a
glamorous and brilliant personality who must have great
power and charm” but found instead someone “excessively gentle and modest in his manners” with “almost a tenderness of speech and glance.” He kissed her hand again
when they parted. Ambassador Dodd sardonically told
his daughter she ought not to wash the site of the kisses.
“He said I should remember the exact spot and if I must
wash, could wash carefully round it.” Her father had come
to hate the new Germany of Nazi flags, shouts, singing,
military parades, the blaring display of what he considered
medieval concepts. Hitler’s eyes had captured his daughter—
“They are unforgettable, intense and unwavering”—but the Hitler-Martha romance Putzi had envisioned did not take.
Yet it began to come to her that not everything was happy
and carefree and constructive in Germany. People she had
met suddenly vanished into concentration camps to emerge
months later, if at all, with broken bodies and spirits. They
had, they whispered to her, been forced to stand at attention for days on end until their legs and feet swelled and
they could not walk. They had been beaten with clubs in
which nails were embedded. Human waste had been flung on them, in their mouths. “I was sobered and silenced.”
In June of 1934 there came what was called the Night
of the Long Knives, when Hitler dispatched without
indictment or trial anyone who might present him
with a problem. A prominent victim was one of his
most intimate associates in the days of his rise of power,
Ernst Röhm. Martha Dodd had been to a party at Röhm’s house a week earlier.
No one was now safe in Germany. People came broken
and tragic to plead for help from the American ambassador. He could do little. At soirees Martha Dodd moved
among people pale, jumpy, preoccupied, frightened, with
deep circles under their swollen eyes, while Gestapo agents
took note of what was said by everybody—including the
ambassador and his family, whose mail was tampered
with, whose phones were tapped. Their
servants were spies. “We lost even the
faintest resemblance to a normal American family. Whenever we wanted to
talk we had to look around corners and behind doors, watch for the telephone and speak in whispers.”
Ambassador Dodd could hardly bear
to shake hands with murderers, as his
work required, and although she liked
Frau Goering personally and found
Frau Goebbels highly intelligent, Mrs.
Dodd’s health declined from the strain
of living amid fear, rumors, the sense
of great threat everywhere. Martha’s illusions about Germany vanished. “She got into a nervous state that almost
bordered on the hysterical [and] had terrible nightmares,”
according to her mother. At the 1936 Olympics she sat very
near Hitler. He had changed, she saw, his bearing become arrogant, face harsh, voice hard. He was a distorted, diseased, terrifying creature, she felt.
After four and a half years in what he thought of as
a hell, Ambassador Dodd resigned his position. The family left Europe on the last day of 1937. Mrs. Dodd was
dead within five months, the ambassador following a little
less than two years later. Martha Dodd married a investment broker, Alfred K. Stern. In 1957 she and her husband were indicted as members of a Soviet espionage ring.
They fled to Czechoslovakia, where she said the United
States persecuted the progressive-minded. A decade passed
and the Prague Spring came, and the invasion of Warsaw
Pact forces; another decade passed, and the Sterns remained
part of an expatriate group of people who could not go
home, exiled leftists, Greeks who had been on the Communist side of their country’s civil war. Life had turned
out oddly for a girl who hadn’t wanted to hear her father talk about history and politics.
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