Roland Freisler
Roland Freisler (
October 30,
1893 â€"
February 3,
1945) was a prominent
Nazi. He became State Secretary at the
Reich Ministry of Justice and President of the
Volksgerichtshof.
In contrast to most of the Nazi leadership, little beyond basic details is known about Roland Freisler the man. He was born in
Celle, the son of an engineer, and saw active service during
World War I: he was an officer cadet in
1914, and by
1915 he was a lieutenant and was decorated before becoming a
prisoner of war in Russia in October 1915. While interned in Russia, he learned the language and developed an interest in
Marxism. He returned to Germany in
1920 a fanatical
Communist to study law at
Jena University, becoming a Doctor of Law in
1922. From
1924 he worked as a lawyer in
Kassel and also as a city councilor for the Völkisch-Social bloc. He joined the
Nazi Party in July
1925. During this period, he served as defense counsel for members of the nascent Party who got into trouble with the law. He was also a delegate to the Prussian Landtag, or state legislature, and later he became a member of the
Reichstag.
In 1927 the
Gauleiter of the
Gau Kurhessen characterized Freisler in the following manner: "Rhetorically he is equal to our best speakers, if not superior to them. Particularly on the broad masses, he has influence, but thinking people mostly reject him deep down. Party Comrade Freisler is only usable as a speaker. He is unsuitable for any leadership post, since he is unreliable and is a moody person."
In 1933 and 1934 he was State Secretary in the Prussian Ministry of Justice, and in the Reich Ministry of Justice between 1934 and 1942; he represented the latter at the
Wannsee Conference, where he stood in for
Franz Schlegelberger. His absolute mastery of legal texts, mental agility and overwhelming verbal force jelled with strict adherence to the party line and the corresponding
misanthropic ideology, so that he became the most feared judge and the personification of the Nazis' "blood justice." Despite his undisputed legal competence, he could not rise further. According to
Uwe Wesel, this can be attributed to two factors:
* Freisler was regarded as a lone fighter and had no influential patron at his disposal who could have championed him.
* In the eyes of the Nazi elite, Freisler was compromised by his brother Oswald's rise to prominence. Oswald Freisler committed offense against the party line appearing as defense counsel, in politically significant trials which the Nazi regime sought to debase for propaganda purposes. In so doing, he wore his Nazi Party badge in a clearly visible way, which made an unambiguous interpretation of the party's position more difficult. Propaganda minister
Joseph Goebbels accordingly reproved Roland Freisler and reported the incident to Hitler, who, for his part, decreed the immediate exclusion of Oswald Freisler from the party.
On
August 20 1942, Hitler promoted
Otto Thierack to Reich Justice Minister and named Freisler to succeed Thierack as president of the
Volksgerichtshof ("People's Court"). This court had jurisdiction over a rather broad array of "political offenses", which included crimes like black marketeering, work slowdowns, and defeatism. These crimes were viewed by Freisler's court as
Wehrkraftzersetzung ("destruction of defensive capability") and were accordingly punished severely, the death penalty being meted out in numerous cases.
The number of death sentences rose sharply under Freisler's stewardship. Approximately 90% of all proceedings ended with sentences of death or life imprisonment, the sentences frequently having been determined before the trial. Between 1942 and 1945 more than 5000 death sentences were handed out, and of these, 2600 through the court's First Senate, which Freisler headed. Thus, Freisler alone was responsible, in his three years on the court, for as many death sentences as all other senate sessions of the court together in the entire time the court existed, between 1934 and 1945.
Freisler acted as judge, prosecutor and jury all embodied in a single person. He was particularly known for humiliating defendants and barking loudly at them. A number of the trials for defendants in the
July 20 plot before the People's Court were filmed and recorded. In the 1944 trial against
Wilhelm Graf Schwerin von Schwanenfeld, for example, Freisler screamed so loudly, the technicians who were filming the proceeding had major problems making the defendants' words audible. Count Schwerin, like many other defendants in the plot, was sentenced to death by hanging. Among this and other show trials, Freisler headed the 1943 proceedings against the members of the "
White Rose" resistance group.
Freisler chaired the First Senate of the People's Court. Insofar as he led the proceedings, he designated himself as court reporter. That way, he was also responsible for the composition of written grounds for the sentences, that he wrote up in his own unique fashion, namely in accordance with his own notions of a "National Socialist criminal court." Meanwhile, he introduced judgment advisories with remarks like "Off with his head," and "The beet must be uprooted," and so forth.
During an Allied air raid on Berlin on
February 3 1945, Freisler was fatally struck by a beam in the cellar of the courthouse. His body was found crushed beneath a fallen masonry column, clutching the file on anti-Hitler conspirator
Fabian von Schlabrendorff.
* Freisler has been portrayed by screen actors at least three times: by
Rainer Steffen in the 1984 German television movie
Wannseekonferenz, by
Owen Teale in the 2001
BBC/
HBO film
Conspiracy, and by
André Hennicke in the 2005 film
Sophie Scholl â€" Die letzten Tage.
*
Hans-Joachim Rehse*
Hans Frank*
Carl Schmitt*
Otto Georg Thierack*
Anna Freisler