The Devil's Diary: Alfred Rosenberg and the Stolen Secrets of the Third Reich
by Robert K. Wittman & David Kinney
Harper Books
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
An influential figure in Adolf Hitler’s early inner circle from the
start, Alfred Rosenberg made his name spreading toxic ideas about the
Jews throughout Germany. By the dawn of the Third Reich, he had
published a bestselling masterwork that was a touchstone of Nazi
thinking.
His diary was discovered hidden in a Bavarian castle at
war’s end—five hundred pages providing a harrowing glimpse into the mind
of a man whose ideas set the stage for the Holocaust. Prosecutors
examined it during the Nuremberg war crimes trial, but after Rosenberg
was convicted, sentenced, and executed, it mysteriously vanished.
New York Times
bestselling author Robert K. Wittman, who as an FBI agent and then a
private consultant specialized in recovering artifacts of historic
significance, first learned of the diary in 2001, when the chief
archivist for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum contacted him to say
that someone was trying to sell it for upwards of a million dollars. The
phone call sparked a decade-long hunt that took them on a twisting path
involving a pair of octogenarian secretaries, an eccentric professor,
and an opportunistic trash-picker. From the crusading Nuremberg
prosecutor who smuggled the diary out of Germany to the man who finally
turned it over, everyone had reasons for hiding the truth.
Drawing
on Rosenberg’s entries about his role in the seizure of priceless
artwork and the brutal occupation of the Soviet Union, his conversations
with Hitler and his endless rivalries with Göring, Goebbels, and
Himmler, The Devil’s Diary offers vital historical insight of
unprecedented scope and intimacy into the innermost workings of the Nazi
regime—and into the psyche of the man whose radical vision mutated into
the Final Solution.
“. . . Good people taught and still teach racism
to their children without a second thought. This was true in the South
of my birth and remains so to the present . . . We teach that God
created the races to be separate from one another for a purpose, and we
preach that this purpose cannot be to mix, because why then would He
have created the separation in the first place? We teach that when
people are different from each other, one is better and the other worse .
. . We teach that black and white are not simply different but
opposite.”
More than sixty years ago, the Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Board of Education that America’s schools could no longer be segregated by race.
Critically acclaimed novelist Jim Grimsley was eleven years old in
1966 when federally mandated integration of schools went into effect in
the state and the school in his small eastern North Carolina town was
first integrated. Until then, blacks and whites didn’t sit next to one
another in a public space or eat in the same restaurants, and they
certainly didn’t go to school together.
Going to one of the private schools that almost immediately sprang up
was not an option for Jim: his family was too poor to pay tuition, and
while they shared the community’s dismay over the mixing of the races,
they had no choice but to be on the front lines of his school’s
desegregation.
What he did not realize until he began to meet these new students was
just how deeply ingrained his own prejudices were and how those
prejudices had developed in him despite the fact that prior to starting
sixth grade, he had actually never known any black people.
Now, more than forty years later, Grimsley looks back at that school
and those times—remembering his own first real encounters with black
children and their culture. The result is a narrative both true and
deeply moving. Jim takes readers into those classrooms and onto the
playing fields as, ever so tentatively, alliances were forged and
friendships established. And looking back from today’s perspective, he
examines how far we have really come.
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