Speranza
It is
difficult to believe that the National Socialists could find any sympathy with
Wagner's Parsifal, a work that tells of enlightenment through fellow-suffering.
A number of writers have claimed that Parsifal found favour with the Nazis.
Some
Nazi ideologues expressed serious doubts about this opera but the party was led
by Wagner enthusiast Adolf Hitler, who was as fanatical about Wagner's music as
he was in his beliefs about Aryan superiority and his destiny to rid the world
of communism.
At the age of twelve, I saw ... the first opera of my life,
Lohengrin. In one instant I was addicted. My youthful enthusiasm for the
Bayreuth Master knew no bounds.
[Mein Kampf, Volume 1, Adolf Hitler.]
Adolf Hitler first visited "Haus
Wahnfried" in September 1923.
After visiting the grave of Richard and Cosima
Wagner, the future Führer said:
"If I should ever succeed in exerting any
influence on Germany's destiny, I will see that Parsifal is given back to
Bayreuth."
He was referring here to the Lex Parsifal for which the Wagner family
and their supporters had campaigned a decade earlier, i.e. a special copyright
law that would restrict performances of Parsifal to Bayreuth.
However, when
German copyright law was being revised in 1934, Hitler decided that he could not
honour his earlier promise to the Wagners.
In November 1941 he told Goebbels
that the opera was not to be reserved for Bayreuth alone.
Adolf Hitler would portray as Parsifal.
In place of the Holy Spear, the German
leader carries a Nazi standard.
As in the closing scene of Wagner's opera, a
white dove descends from the sky.
This is in accordance with the identification
of Hitler with Parsifal by the musicologist Alfred
Lorenz.
The Spear of Destiny, to be seen in the
Hofberg museum in Vienna.
This is one of several spearheads that have been
claimed as the spear of Longinus.
The Spear of Destiny was carried into battle
by, amongst others, Henry the Fowler and Frederick Barbarossa.
It has been
claimed (Trevor Ravenscroft, Spear of Destiny, 1973) that it held a special
significance for Adolf Hitler.
At the end of Syberberg's Parsifal film, it
is a reproduction of the Spear of Destiny that the boy Parsifal brings into the
Grail temple.
According to Hermann Rauschning, Hitler interpreted
Wagner's Parsifal as a member of a master race, noble by virtue of his
blood:
What is celebrated is not the Christian Schopenhauerian
religion of compassion, but pure and noble blood, blood whose purity the
brotherhood of initiates has come together to guard.
The king then suffers an
incurable sickness, caused by his tainted blood.
Then the unknowing but pure
human being is led into temptation, either to submit to the frenzy and to the
delights of a corrupt civilisation in Klingsor's magic garden, or to join the
select band of knights who guard the secret of life, which is pure blood itself.
All of us suffer the sickness of miscegenated, corrupted blood.
How can we
purify ourselves and atone?
Note how the compassion that leads to knowledge
applies only to the man who is inwardly corrupt, to the man of contradictions.
And that this compassion admits of only one outcome, to allow the sick to die.
Eternal life, as vouchsafed by the Grail, to those who are truly pure and
noble!"
"Wagner's line of thought is intimately familiar to me", Hitler
continued more animatedly.
"At every stage of my life I come back to him. Only a
new nobility can bring about the new culture. If we discount everything to do
with poetry, it is clear that elitism and renewal exist only in the continuing
strain of a lasting struggle.
A divisive process is taking place in terms of
world history.
The man who sees the meaning of life in conflict will gradually
mount the stairs of a new aristocracy. He who desires the dependent joys of
peace and order will sink back down to the unhistorical mass, no matter what his
provenance.
But the mass is prey to decay and self-disintegration. At this
turning- point in the world's revolution the mass is the sum of declining
culture and its moribund representatives. They should be left to die, together
with all kings like Amfortas."
Hitler hummed the motif, "Durch Mitleid wissend".
[Gespräche mit Hitler, Hermann Rauschning, 1939; translated into English as
Hitler Speaks, 1940.²]
Hitler's interpretation seems to stand Wagner's
poem on its head.
In Parsifal, as Hitler knew, the sick are not allowed to die.
If we are to believe Rauschning's account, then Hitler's interpretation might
have been based upon a misreading of Wagner's late essays on Religion and Art.
However, there is no reliable evidence that Hitler had read any of Wagner's
prose writings.
If he had read the late essays, then it would seem that Hitler
chose to disregard Wagner's belief in the pure blood of Christ as the
cure.
Charles Lawrie has demonstrated that
Ravenscroft's book contains not only fact but also fiction. There are elements
of historical truth in his The Spear of Destiny ... but central things claimed
as historically true were not. Ravenscroft's book together with Rauschning's
book (see below) has been the inspiration and source for an entire literature
concerning Hitler and the occult, with very little (if any) basis in historical
facts.
In the early 1930s Hermann Rauschning was the leader
of the Nazi party in Danzig. After he defected from the party and from Germany,
Rauschning claimed to have been a close personal friend of Hitler, and he wrote
the book from which the above quotation has been taken. His book contains the
only "record" of Hitler speaking at length about his relationship with Wagner,
and the only account of Hitler discussing Wagner's ideas rather than his music.
As was often the case with defectors of later decades, Hermann Rauschning tried
to satisfy the curiosity of his new masters even when his information was very
limited; and like other defectors, he exaggerated his own importance and the
extent of his high-level contacts. In recent years it has been shown that
passages in this book were compiled, by Rauschning and his ghost-writer, from
Hitler's speeches or other sources; not recalled from conversations with Hitler.
As far as it has been established, Rauschning only met Hitler on a few occasions
at Nazi party functions and their conversations consisted of small-talk.
Although there is no direct evidence that the passage quoted above is
Rauschning's invention, like everything in his book that is not corroborated by
other sources, it might not be genuine. The balance of probability is that this
quotation (often quoted as evidence of Wagner's influence on Hitler) was made up
by Rauschning. In his acclaimed biography of Hitler, Ian Kershaw wrote: I have
on no single occasion cited Hermann Rauschning's Hitler Speaks, a work now
regarded to have so little authenticity that it is best to disregard it
altogether.
In his recent book Hitler and the Power of
Aesthetics, Frederic Spotts is sceptical concerning Kubizek's claim that the
young Hitler read Wagner's prose writings and letters.
Even more so concerning
Joachim Fest's claim that Wagner's prose was Hitler's favourite reading matter.
There is no corroborative evidence for either of these claims. Hitler never
ascribed any of his views to Wagner, not in Mein Kampf, his speeches, articles
or recorded private conversations... Indeed, there is no evidence that Hitler
ever read Wagner's collected writings, much less that they were "his favourite
reading". The origin of the myth is probably Kubizek's book [Adolf Hitler Mein
Jugendfreund, 1953; translated into English as Young Hitler: The Story of Our
Friendship, 1955], where the youthful Hitler was said to have read every
biography, letter, essay, diary and other scrap by and about his hero that he
could lay his hands on. But Kubizek himself contradicted that story in his
wartime Reminiscences, which he later expanded into the more marketable,
post-war book Young Hitler.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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