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We still live with father's evil legacy

How does it feel to discover your father was a Nazi?

November 26, 2015 12:46
Killer: Hans Frank was one of Hitler's most trusted aides

ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

5 min read

I had a wonderful childhood till 1945," says Niklas Frank, describing a life that sounds almost magical. He warmly recalls playing hide-and-seek among the "wonderful monuments" to ancient kings and queens in the cathedral of Wawel Castle in Krakow, Poland, where his family resided for half of the year, and visiting nearby parks with his beloved nanny Hilde. The family had the run of another castle at weekends, and would often return to their house by a lake in Upper Bavaria, where they'd fish, swim and ski.

Wawel Castle, though, was Niklas's father Hans's "kingdom". His mother, Brigitte, called herself Queen of Poland. The Franks weren't royalty, however, but a family in the top echelon of the Third Reich. In 1939, the year Niklas was born, Hitler had made his lawyer father Governor-General of Nazi-occupied Poland, a role that saw him implement the Final Solution with such ruthlessness, that he became known as the Butcher of Poland.

Hans was arrested in May 1945, four days before the end of the war, and put on trial at Nuremberg. Niklas had been protected from the truth about him; bloody reality now poured in. "When I saw the first pictures of corpses in newspapers in 1945, with the word Poland underneath, I knew there was a connection," he says. "My father was detained, so I knew he was responsible for these corpses."

Hans was found guilty of mass murder and hanged. Today, Niklas carries around the last ever photograph of his father, taken post mortem, as a reminder of his criminality. He once described him as a "typical German monster", but now corrects himself. "Monster was the wrong word. He was very educated, he knew by heart and brain what he was doing. Monster is an excuse. A monster is not responsible."