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The Prosecutor

One Man's Battle to Bring Nazis to Justice

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From the #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of The Volunteer, the powerful true story of a Jewish lawyer who returned to Germany after World War II to prosecute war crimes, only to find himself pitted against a nation determined to bury the past.

At the end of the Nuremberg trial in 1946, some of the greatest war criminals in history were sentenced to death, but hundreds of thousands of Nazi murderers and collaborators remained at large. The Allies were ready to overlook their pasts as the Cold War began, and the horrors of the Holocaust were in danger of being forgotten.

In The Prosecutor, Jack Fairweather brings to life the remarkable story of Fritz Bauer, a gay, Jewish judge from Stuttgart who survived the Nazis and made it his mission to force his countrymen to confront their complicity in the genocide. In this deeply researched book, Fairweather draws on unpublished family papers, newly declassified German records, and exclusive interviews to immerse readers in the shadowy, unfamiliar world of postwar West Germany where those who implemented genocide run the country, the CIA is funding Hitler’s former spy-ring in the east, and Nazi-era anti-gay laws are strictly enforced. But once Bauer landed on the trail of Adolf Eichmann, he wouldn’t be intimidated. His journey took him deep into the dark heart of West Germany, where his fight for justice would set him against his own government and a network of former Nazis and spies bent on silencing him.

In a time when the history of the Holocaust is taken for granted, The Prosecutor reveals the courtroom battles that were fought to establish its legacy and the personal cost of speaking out. The result is a searing portrait of a nation emerging from the ruins of fascism and one man’s courage in forcing his people—and the world—to face the truth.
1

Home

Ludwigsburg

February 1933

Fritz Bauer knew the Nazis were watching them from the moment he and his fellow marchers unfurled their flags and stamped through the cold, shuttered streets of Ludwigsburg. It was Sunday, February 26, 1933, a week before an election called by the new chancellor, Adolf Hitler, who was seeking to gain a majority for the Nazi Party in the German parliament, the Reichstag. Bauer and his small band of sixty aging World War I veterans and factory workers had taken to the streets to rally support for the country’s democratic order they had sworn to protect as members of the Reichsbanner militia. Bauer did not know if Hitler would follow through on his threats to overturn the constitution to rid the country of Jews and socialists. But he didn’t doubt that if Hitler won then the Nazis would pursue their enemies, and that he, as a Jewish judge and outspoken critic, was surely one of them.

The twenty-nine-year-old had already come to their attention after being appointed chairman of the Reichsbanner in the state of Württemberg and taking to the smoky auditoriums, men’s clubs, and beer halls of Stuttgart to rally against Hitler. “Bauer,” observed one Nazi informant, “[has] with genuine Jewish impudence agitated against the National Socialist movement at every opportunity. His weapons . . . : hatred, lies, and slander.”

Bauer was certainly an impressive speaker. Away from a stage, he could be shy and diffident, a slim delicate man in a suit that seemed too big for him, his head invariably stuck in a book as he walked down the street dodging lampposts. Indeed when Kurt Schumacher, the leader of the main progressive pary in Stuttgart, the Social Democrats, had first met Bauer he noted the younger man’s law doctorate, soft jawline, and gentle brown eyes and declared: “Workers don’t like intellectuals.” It was true that as the Goethe-quoting scion of a wealthy Jewish family and secretly gay, Bauer was a potential liability to the parties’ working-class base. But Schumacher had been impressed by Bauer’s quiet charisma and subtle gift for recognizing vulnerability in others. And when placed before a crowd, Bauer grew fierce and impassioned; his transformation onstage was so surprising, recalled one contemporary, that his words felt like a jolt of electricity.

Bauer sensed his men’s unease as he led them past the prim, swastika-lined shop windows in Ludwigsburg. Nazi spies were likely already watching them, noting down who was there and what was said. He roused his men as best he could at rallies in the working class districts of Pflugfelden, Eglosheim, Hoheneck, and finally Ossweil, where they chanted “Hail Freedom” and their breath rose in a cloud in the chill evening air. Defending the Weimar Republic, Bauer believed, was worth the risk. The republic’s constitution, established in the aftermath of World War I, had granted universal suffrage and rights to freedom of expression and assembly. Workers had gained protection for the eight-hour day and and better access to healthcare, while the country’s gay rights movement was openly calling for the decriminalization of homosexuality.

Yet the republic’s darker side was never far from Bauer’s mind. As a Jewish in Munich in the early 1920s, he’d been barred from joining most fraternities. He’d watched his right-wing classmates flock to Hitler’s beer hall speeches and then spill out onto the streets looking for socialists and Jews to beat up. These experiences had pushed Bauer to find his political voice, first by rallying students on campus to embrace a “tolerant way of life” and then by joining the Social Democratic Party, which had led several governments during the early years of the republic, and volunteering for the Reichsbanner.

Night fell and the marchers made their way back through Nazi territory toward Ludwigsburg train station. Bauer registered the police as they passed the market square. Then he heard an angry cry and suddenly a red-faced, slick-haired gang was upon them—Brownshirts, Hitler’s paramilitary. Bauer was caught in a flailing press of bodies as the Nazis beat the Reichsbanner down the hill to the station, where the police finally blew their whistles to intervene.

The next morning, a Monday, back in Stuttgart, Bauer shaved, brushed his hair, and got ready for court. He was lucky that he bore no marks from the confrontation, but that seemed a minor concern as he considered what would happen if the Nazis won the election. Was he prepared to keep fighting or even go to jail for his beliefs? His thoughts turned uncomfortably to the reasons why the Nazis would come for him. He didn’t think they knew he was gay, a secret he had shared with only a few friends, although he couldn’t be sure; the police regularly surveilled popular hookup spots in parks and public urinals. His activism certainly wasn’t a secret, but neither was it a crime—at least not yet.

Bauer still lived at home with his parents in their generous apartment on Wiederholdstrasse and kept his activism from them for their safety but also because his father, Ludwig, did not appreciate his son’s socialist convictions. Ludwig was a short man with a thrusting jaw, clipped mustache, and beady eyes who at age forty-five had volunteered for the frontlines of the Great War. He was proud of the way Jews like himself had fought for Germany and made sure to pass on his faith in the fatherland and belief in duty and obedience to Bauer and his younger sister Margot. As a child Bauer had sat in dread at the dining room table, awaiting a thrashing for some transgression—a hand moving too soon or a word spoken out of turn. Ludwig, now sixty-three disliked Hitler’s crude talk about the Volk and racial purity, and was offended by the Nazis’ refusal to acknowledge the sacrifices of Jewish soldiers. But he was skeptical of democracy—at least the Weimar kind—which he felt was an imposition of the Allies and thoroughly un-German. Like many Jews he was confident that Hitler’s antisemitic fervor would pass and broadly agreed with the Nazis’ plans to deal with political factionalism, violence on the streets, and the millions left unemployed by the Depression.

Ludwig’s values reflected the politics of an earlier generation that had come of age following German unification in 1871. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck had imposed an authoritarian style of government on an otherwise fractious array of German states and princely holdings and promoted the German language and culture as a unifying force. Jews were granted full legal equality, and families like the Bauers took advantage of rapid industrialization and the emergence of a mass society to grow their businesses. For Ludwig, Hitler’s promise to restore the Reich was appealing.

Bauer was close to his mother, Ella, eleven years Ludwig’s junior, a quietly determined woman who comforted young Fritz after her husband’s rages. Ella came from a family of rabbis in Tübingen and while she had allowed Ludwig’s secular views to prevail, her spiritualism filled the household. The family were members of the local synagogue and observed Passover and other high holidays; Bauer spoke regularly at a liberal Jewish organization and was treasurer of its youth group. Bauer felt that Ella trusted his judgment, and he shared with her most things, even his homosexuality. He often found Ella in the kitchen in the mornings with coffee ready, which he took with a cigarette by way of breakfast. Then he was off to work down the hill, past the family’s textile business on Seestrasse, and across Kriegsbergstrasse, the city’s main thoroughfare, to the Schlossgarten, an elegant park lined with poplars and plane trees.

Stuttgart was the largest city in southwest Germany, provincial compared to Berlin, but no less transformed by the forces of modernity. The city had erected its first skyscraper, the sixteen-story Tagblatt Tower, with a high-speed elevator and viewing gallery where visitors could admire the panorama: the half-timbered buildings of the old town; the grand city hall, the gleaming glass edifice of the Jewish-owned Schocken department store and the low hills on all sides, topped with vineyards and forests where Bauer liked to hike. Those who could afford distractions filled the cafés and restaurants under the linden trees or “briskly jazzed” at the Regina and Residenz Cafés.

Most of Bauer’s colleagues in the staid sandstone courthouse on Archivstrasse were older than him and deeply conservative. Several of his superiors supported Nazism and as Hitler rose to prominence they had sought to push Bauer out. Two years earlier, someone had leaked a story to the NS-Kurier, the local Nazi newspaper, that Bauer had passed on court details to a left-wing journalist. This in itself was not illegal, but the NS-Kurier had seized on the case as an example of perfidious Jewish infiltration of the judiciary. Bauer sued for libel and won, but he was still demoted to the civil courts and limited to handling minor offenses. He could have joined a lucrative private practice, but he felt that even in a lesser role inside the court he still had more value to the Left as a source of intelligence and counsel to activists targeted by the police.
“Haunting . . . [A] gripping and well-researched biography.”—The New York Times

“Fairweather tells this story with impressive clarity and pace. . . A compulsively readable account . . . with liberal democracies once more imperiled and indifference to the Holocaust stupefyingly widespread, The Prosecutor could hardly be more timely.”The Financial Times

“Not all superheroes wear capes. Some, as Jack Fairweather’s superb biography of the German prosecutor and judge Fritz Bauer shows, wear lawyer’s robes instead. . . . A magnificent book about a magnificent man.”The Telegraph

“Disturbing insights into a bygone era. . . . Stirring revelations of an unsung hero of postwar Germany.”Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“Despite the number of Holocaust-related titles that now appear in the book trade, there is usually one that becomes a beacon, or flagship for the genre. The Prosecutor could very well be seen as that in the years to come. . . . Jack Fairweather has achieved something quite remarkable.”—The Critic

“Jack Fairweather brilliantly captures the poignant and insightful story of one lonely, determined man’s quest to bring Nazis to justice for the Holocaust. Fritz Bauer sought to bend the arc of history, a noble pursuit of great inspiration and agony. This is history not to be missed.”—David E. Hoffman, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Dead Hand and Give Me Liberty

“This meticulously researched and well written biography brings to life one of the unsung heroes of the twentieth century. . . . Fairweather brilliantly evokes the dark, morally ambiguous atmosphere of postwar Germany and a man whose story . . . contains the moral lessons we need today.”―Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize–winner and bestselling author of Autocracy, Inc.

The Prosecutor is a tour de force of both historical research and absolutely terrific writing. Fairweather’s topic—the criminal prosecution of war criminals—is of the utmost importance, and the book itself reads like the best sort of cloak-and-dagger novel.”—Sebastian Junger, #1 New York Times bestselling author of War, The Perfect Storm, Fire, and A Death in Belmont

“Jack Fairweather, a brilliant researcher and compelling writer, tells the remarkable and inspiring story of German jurist Fritz Bauer. . . . A triumphant story.”—Mark Bowden, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Black Hawk Down

“A rich, compelling and deeply researched account of a little-known lawyer who fought long and hard to expose the criminals who underpinned Hitler’s monstrous regime. Another page-turner from Jack Fairweather.”―Giles Milton, bestselling author of The Stalin Affair

“Breathtaking scholarship delivered with a compelling flair for storytelling.”―Robert Jan van Pelt, award-winning writer and leading Holocaust expert

The Prosecutor is, quite simply, a stunning achievement.”—Jon Lee Anderson, bestselling author of Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life
© The Guardian
Jack Fairweather is the author of the Costa Book Award-winner The Volunteer, a #1 bestseller in the UK that’s been hailed as a modern classic and compared to Schindler’s List. He served as a correspondent for The Washington Post and the Daily Telegraph, where he was the paper’s Baghdad and Persian Gulf bureau chief. View titles by Jack Fairweather

About

From the #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of The Volunteer, the powerful true story of a Jewish lawyer who returned to Germany after World War II to prosecute war crimes, only to find himself pitted against a nation determined to bury the past.

At the end of the Nuremberg trial in 1946, some of the greatest war criminals in history were sentenced to death, but hundreds of thousands of Nazi murderers and collaborators remained at large. The Allies were ready to overlook their pasts as the Cold War began, and the horrors of the Holocaust were in danger of being forgotten.

In The Prosecutor, Jack Fairweather brings to life the remarkable story of Fritz Bauer, a gay, Jewish judge from Stuttgart who survived the Nazis and made it his mission to force his countrymen to confront their complicity in the genocide. In this deeply researched book, Fairweather draws on unpublished family papers, newly declassified German records, and exclusive interviews to immerse readers in the shadowy, unfamiliar world of postwar West Germany where those who implemented genocide run the country, the CIA is funding Hitler’s former spy-ring in the east, and Nazi-era anti-gay laws are strictly enforced. But once Bauer landed on the trail of Adolf Eichmann, he wouldn’t be intimidated. His journey took him deep into the dark heart of West Germany, where his fight for justice would set him against his own government and a network of former Nazis and spies bent on silencing him.

In a time when the history of the Holocaust is taken for granted, The Prosecutor reveals the courtroom battles that were fought to establish its legacy and the personal cost of speaking out. The result is a searing portrait of a nation emerging from the ruins of fascism and one man’s courage in forcing his people—and the world—to face the truth.

Excerpt

1

Home

Ludwigsburg

February 1933

Fritz Bauer knew the Nazis were watching them from the moment he and his fellow marchers unfurled their flags and stamped through the cold, shuttered streets of Ludwigsburg. It was Sunday, February 26, 1933, a week before an election called by the new chancellor, Adolf Hitler, who was seeking to gain a majority for the Nazi Party in the German parliament, the Reichstag. Bauer and his small band of sixty aging World War I veterans and factory workers had taken to the streets to rally support for the country’s democratic order they had sworn to protect as members of the Reichsbanner militia. Bauer did not know if Hitler would follow through on his threats to overturn the constitution to rid the country of Jews and socialists. But he didn’t doubt that if Hitler won then the Nazis would pursue their enemies, and that he, as a Jewish judge and outspoken critic, was surely one of them.

The twenty-nine-year-old had already come to their attention after being appointed chairman of the Reichsbanner in the state of Württemberg and taking to the smoky auditoriums, men’s clubs, and beer halls of Stuttgart to rally against Hitler. “Bauer,” observed one Nazi informant, “[has] with genuine Jewish impudence agitated against the National Socialist movement at every opportunity. His weapons . . . : hatred, lies, and slander.”

Bauer was certainly an impressive speaker. Away from a stage, he could be shy and diffident, a slim delicate man in a suit that seemed too big for him, his head invariably stuck in a book as he walked down the street dodging lampposts. Indeed when Kurt Schumacher, the leader of the main progressive pary in Stuttgart, the Social Democrats, had first met Bauer he noted the younger man’s law doctorate, soft jawline, and gentle brown eyes and declared: “Workers don’t like intellectuals.” It was true that as the Goethe-quoting scion of a wealthy Jewish family and secretly gay, Bauer was a potential liability to the parties’ working-class base. But Schumacher had been impressed by Bauer’s quiet charisma and subtle gift for recognizing vulnerability in others. And when placed before a crowd, Bauer grew fierce and impassioned; his transformation onstage was so surprising, recalled one contemporary, that his words felt like a jolt of electricity.

Bauer sensed his men’s unease as he led them past the prim, swastika-lined shop windows in Ludwigsburg. Nazi spies were likely already watching them, noting down who was there and what was said. He roused his men as best he could at rallies in the working class districts of Pflugfelden, Eglosheim, Hoheneck, and finally Ossweil, where they chanted “Hail Freedom” and their breath rose in a cloud in the chill evening air. Defending the Weimar Republic, Bauer believed, was worth the risk. The republic’s constitution, established in the aftermath of World War I, had granted universal suffrage and rights to freedom of expression and assembly. Workers had gained protection for the eight-hour day and and better access to healthcare, while the country’s gay rights movement was openly calling for the decriminalization of homosexuality.

Yet the republic’s darker side was never far from Bauer’s mind. As a Jewish in Munich in the early 1920s, he’d been barred from joining most fraternities. He’d watched his right-wing classmates flock to Hitler’s beer hall speeches and then spill out onto the streets looking for socialists and Jews to beat up. These experiences had pushed Bauer to find his political voice, first by rallying students on campus to embrace a “tolerant way of life” and then by joining the Social Democratic Party, which had led several governments during the early years of the republic, and volunteering for the Reichsbanner.

Night fell and the marchers made their way back through Nazi territory toward Ludwigsburg train station. Bauer registered the police as they passed the market square. Then he heard an angry cry and suddenly a red-faced, slick-haired gang was upon them—Brownshirts, Hitler’s paramilitary. Bauer was caught in a flailing press of bodies as the Nazis beat the Reichsbanner down the hill to the station, where the police finally blew their whistles to intervene.

The next morning, a Monday, back in Stuttgart, Bauer shaved, brushed his hair, and got ready for court. He was lucky that he bore no marks from the confrontation, but that seemed a minor concern as he considered what would happen if the Nazis won the election. Was he prepared to keep fighting or even go to jail for his beliefs? His thoughts turned uncomfortably to the reasons why the Nazis would come for him. He didn’t think they knew he was gay, a secret he had shared with only a few friends, although he couldn’t be sure; the police regularly surveilled popular hookup spots in parks and public urinals. His activism certainly wasn’t a secret, but neither was it a crime—at least not yet.

Bauer still lived at home with his parents in their generous apartment on Wiederholdstrasse and kept his activism from them for their safety but also because his father, Ludwig, did not appreciate his son’s socialist convictions. Ludwig was a short man with a thrusting jaw, clipped mustache, and beady eyes who at age forty-five had volunteered for the frontlines of the Great War. He was proud of the way Jews like himself had fought for Germany and made sure to pass on his faith in the fatherland and belief in duty and obedience to Bauer and his younger sister Margot. As a child Bauer had sat in dread at the dining room table, awaiting a thrashing for some transgression—a hand moving too soon or a word spoken out of turn. Ludwig, now sixty-three disliked Hitler’s crude talk about the Volk and racial purity, and was offended by the Nazis’ refusal to acknowledge the sacrifices of Jewish soldiers. But he was skeptical of democracy—at least the Weimar kind—which he felt was an imposition of the Allies and thoroughly un-German. Like many Jews he was confident that Hitler’s antisemitic fervor would pass and broadly agreed with the Nazis’ plans to deal with political factionalism, violence on the streets, and the millions left unemployed by the Depression.

Ludwig’s values reflected the politics of an earlier generation that had come of age following German unification in 1871. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck had imposed an authoritarian style of government on an otherwise fractious array of German states and princely holdings and promoted the German language and culture as a unifying force. Jews were granted full legal equality, and families like the Bauers took advantage of rapid industrialization and the emergence of a mass society to grow their businesses. For Ludwig, Hitler’s promise to restore the Reich was appealing.

Bauer was close to his mother, Ella, eleven years Ludwig’s junior, a quietly determined woman who comforted young Fritz after her husband’s rages. Ella came from a family of rabbis in Tübingen and while she had allowed Ludwig’s secular views to prevail, her spiritualism filled the household. The family were members of the local synagogue and observed Passover and other high holidays; Bauer spoke regularly at a liberal Jewish organization and was treasurer of its youth group. Bauer felt that Ella trusted his judgment, and he shared with her most things, even his homosexuality. He often found Ella in the kitchen in the mornings with coffee ready, which he took with a cigarette by way of breakfast. Then he was off to work down the hill, past the family’s textile business on Seestrasse, and across Kriegsbergstrasse, the city’s main thoroughfare, to the Schlossgarten, an elegant park lined with poplars and plane trees.

Stuttgart was the largest city in southwest Germany, provincial compared to Berlin, but no less transformed by the forces of modernity. The city had erected its first skyscraper, the sixteen-story Tagblatt Tower, with a high-speed elevator and viewing gallery where visitors could admire the panorama: the half-timbered buildings of the old town; the grand city hall, the gleaming glass edifice of the Jewish-owned Schocken department store and the low hills on all sides, topped with vineyards and forests where Bauer liked to hike. Those who could afford distractions filled the cafés and restaurants under the linden trees or “briskly jazzed” at the Regina and Residenz Cafés.

Most of Bauer’s colleagues in the staid sandstone courthouse on Archivstrasse were older than him and deeply conservative. Several of his superiors supported Nazism and as Hitler rose to prominence they had sought to push Bauer out. Two years earlier, someone had leaked a story to the NS-Kurier, the local Nazi newspaper, that Bauer had passed on court details to a left-wing journalist. This in itself was not illegal, but the NS-Kurier had seized on the case as an example of perfidious Jewish infiltration of the judiciary. Bauer sued for libel and won, but he was still demoted to the civil courts and limited to handling minor offenses. He could have joined a lucrative private practice, but he felt that even in a lesser role inside the court he still had more value to the Left as a source of intelligence and counsel to activists targeted by the police.

Reviews

“Haunting . . . [A] gripping and well-researched biography.”—The New York Times

“Fairweather tells this story with impressive clarity and pace. . . A compulsively readable account . . . with liberal democracies once more imperiled and indifference to the Holocaust stupefyingly widespread, The Prosecutor could hardly be more timely.”The Financial Times

“Not all superheroes wear capes. Some, as Jack Fairweather’s superb biography of the German prosecutor and judge Fritz Bauer shows, wear lawyer’s robes instead. . . . A magnificent book about a magnificent man.”The Telegraph

“Disturbing insights into a bygone era. . . . Stirring revelations of an unsung hero of postwar Germany.”Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“Despite the number of Holocaust-related titles that now appear in the book trade, there is usually one that becomes a beacon, or flagship for the genre. The Prosecutor could very well be seen as that in the years to come. . . . Jack Fairweather has achieved something quite remarkable.”—The Critic

“Jack Fairweather brilliantly captures the poignant and insightful story of one lonely, determined man’s quest to bring Nazis to justice for the Holocaust. Fritz Bauer sought to bend the arc of history, a noble pursuit of great inspiration and agony. This is history not to be missed.”—David E. Hoffman, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Dead Hand and Give Me Liberty

“This meticulously researched and well written biography brings to life one of the unsung heroes of the twentieth century. . . . Fairweather brilliantly evokes the dark, morally ambiguous atmosphere of postwar Germany and a man whose story . . . contains the moral lessons we need today.”―Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize–winner and bestselling author of Autocracy, Inc.

The Prosecutor is a tour de force of both historical research and absolutely terrific writing. Fairweather’s topic—the criminal prosecution of war criminals—is of the utmost importance, and the book itself reads like the best sort of cloak-and-dagger novel.”—Sebastian Junger, #1 New York Times bestselling author of War, The Perfect Storm, Fire, and A Death in Belmont

“Jack Fairweather, a brilliant researcher and compelling writer, tells the remarkable and inspiring story of German jurist Fritz Bauer. . . . A triumphant story.”—Mark Bowden, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Black Hawk Down

“A rich, compelling and deeply researched account of a little-known lawyer who fought long and hard to expose the criminals who underpinned Hitler’s monstrous regime. Another page-turner from Jack Fairweather.”―Giles Milton, bestselling author of The Stalin Affair

“Breathtaking scholarship delivered with a compelling flair for storytelling.”―Robert Jan van Pelt, award-winning writer and leading Holocaust expert

The Prosecutor is, quite simply, a stunning achievement.”—Jon Lee Anderson, bestselling author of Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life

Author

© The Guardian
Jack Fairweather is the author of the Costa Book Award-winner The Volunteer, a #1 bestseller in the UK that’s been hailed as a modern classic and compared to Schindler’s List. He served as a correspondent for The Washington Post and the Daily Telegraph, where he was the paper’s Baghdad and Persian Gulf bureau chief. View titles by Jack Fairweather
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