Wilhelm Keitel
Was He Perhaps The Fuhrer's Father Figure?
(1882-1945)
Descended
from a wealthy landowning family, soon the army eagerly beckoned him. Not for
him the plough but instead the sword. During the Great War he served on the
Western Front with honour but was wounded in his right forearm and would later
serve in the German General Staff Office for the remainder of the War.
But
like so many disillusioned returning soldiers in 1918 and others returning to a
new republican Germany, Keitel it seems was disgusted by this and instead was attracted to
the Freikorps, then with its fierce emphasis towards the values of the Monarchy
and loyalty to Germany. Any Soviet styled ideas exported to Germany would have
been anathema to him and many others.
The
Freikorps then was under the strict and brutal command of the enigmatic
homosexual and an early supporter of the young Cpl. Adolph Hitler, this was
Captain Ernst Rohm. Incidentally he would
later claim that Hitler, the new up and coming political oratator, was his
protege.
As
Keitel had
been severely wounded in the War this may have put the brakes on his service as
an active soldier. But he still remained a professional and would see service
in various staff training academies.
However
during this turbulent period of post-War German politics, I suspect that Keitel would
have become acquainted with the young Hitler himself, also a disillusioned
soldier and artist. Remember both were then in the closed world of the Freikorp. Strangely Keitel later claimed that he
didn't make the acquaintance of Hitler until 1933, but I find it difficult to
accept this premise.
Berlin
and Munich then were small provincial towns. Both men would have trodden the
same streets in those turbulent times.
In
1937 he would become Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces (this was due to
a scandal which had erupted against General Bloomberg, the then head of
the armed forces. Interestingly his son would later marry the disgraced
general's daughter. After serving on the Russian front it remains unclear if
the young Keitel was killed in action in 1942.)
By
then Keitel's personal star was ascending and one can only guess what Hitler,
once a lowly corporal, recognized in this landowning officer-but something did
indeed attract him. Remember generals of his privileged background were the men
Hitler so openly despised and wasn't Wilhelm Keitel certainly one of this smug
breed of men he had known in the trenches and loathed.
Also
during the War new generals arrived and were disposed, some were fired on a
Monday only to be re-instated on a Tuesday. Crazy times no less. Yet through it
all Keitel survives and from 1939 onwards he is always filmed in the Fuhrer's
company, either in Rome meeting Mussolini or at Munich meeting Chamberlain.
Keitel is even sitting next to Hitler on his private plane, visiting naval
destroyers, and is seen in the War Room as Hitler pours over large battle maps.
Keitel always seems to be looking over his leaders shoulder. Always it seems
nodding to the Hitler's escalating demands.
During
the "good years" he witnessed the fall of France (going with Hitler
to the forest to sign the surrender document), of which he carefully and
militarily oversaw, as well as the fall of the Netherlands, Poland and other
conquered Nazi territories. Keitel was there in 1942 when the Wehrmacht went on
the defensive instead of the offensive in Russia. The Third Reich was now in
ruins and the future fate of both men was now sealed forever. It was the
beginning of the end for both men.
But
what did the Fuhrer see in him or in his grandiose personality (in one wartime
film clip taken on a moving train, Hitler leans over and affectingly touches
Keitels arm.) Privately other officers called him a lackey and always behind
his back. He was Hitler's poodle, they openly joked. Maybe he was just Hitler's
mascot.
Wilhelm Keitel
had never it seems requested membership to join the Nazi party in the 1930s. I
wonder why? But later during the War he was awarded the golden party badge and
accepted it. (He can be seen wearing this in a wartime newsreel.)
But
it all ended in tears when in 1945 he grudgingly ratified the German forces
surrender terms in Berlin, and from there his destination under armed guard was
to Nuremberg prison, where of course Hitler's race policies had been formulated
into the Nazi constitution some years ago. But for Keitel it would be at the
Allied war trials that he would have to give an account of his actions
against the Reich's enemies. (Both James and myself visited this historical
building some years ago and not much had changed either since 1945.
Unfortunately we were not allowed the opportunity to inspect the cells where
the main captives had been contained (they are still in use to this day!)
At
his trial he was naturally found guilty of war crimes. Then after the verdict
he was hanged on 16th October 1946. End of story.
But
at this point in our brief biography I now turn to The infamous at Nuremberg, a memoir by Col.
Burton C. Androus. I was very pleased
when this book came into my possession
Because
some years ago an American Bible teacher had mentioned that he suspected
several top Nazis had truly repented at Nuremberg and were saved. We are always
pleased when this sincerely happens to anyone because: "Joy shall be in
heaven over one sinner that repenteth" (Luke 15:7.)
And
he was quite categoric that one of the repenting men was in fact Wilhelm Keitel
no less. I then felt some further research was needed to confirm this bizarre
claim.
And
just looking at the book now with its 1969 cover, there is the man himself
seated next to Ribbentrop (who also may have repented.)
The
book most certainly presents Keitel at peace with himself as he prepares to
meet God's Judgment. ("It is appointed unto men once to die and after
this the judgement.") And much of the book's evidence comes from an Army
Lutheran Chaplin, who was sent to somehow try and minister to those who
requested his services in the prison before their appointment with the
hangman's noose. (Lutheran's in those days it should be stated were not part of
the wicked ecumenical movement that openly flourishes today.) He writes of
Keitel's Bible that he found him reading in his cell: "I
have carried it through two world wars I know from this book that God can love
a sinner like me."
How
true of a wretched man who seeks a Saviour. Was the Field Marshall searching?
Again
he concluded his devotions by saying, "God be
merciful to me a sinner. Keitel confessed his faith in the all redeeming love
of God in Jesus Christ as his personal Saviour," finally the
Chaplin could write: "I never heard a man pray the way he did."
This
must have made a deep lasting impression on this army Chaplin for him to commit
it to paper, but I'm glad he made the effort to recount his experience to the
author of the book.
And
so much for the Field Marshall's belief that it is never too late for a man to
cry out and repent. Again how true we would confirm.
And
did he call on the name of the Lord before his appointment with the hangman?
(Incredibly just looking at the picture of his corpse it is quite clear that
the American hangman botched the job, something Piermont would have called
amateurish.) But I rather like to think that Keitel was saved. I certainly hope
so. Maybe one day I will get to find out.
But of one
thing I am sure, Wilhelm Keitel is certainly not looking over Adolph Hitler's
shoulder anymore!
GPB
November 2010
(All Rights Reserved)
INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.excatholicsforchrist.com/mobile/wilhelm-keitel.html
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