Willi Graf
Wilhelm Graf (better known as
Willi Graf) (2 January 1918 – 12 October 1943) was a member of the White Rose
(Weiße Rose) resistance group in Nazi Germany. The Catholic Church in Germany
included Graf in their list of martyrs of the 20th century. In 2017, his cause
for beatification was opened.
Early life Willi Graf was
born in Kuchenheim near Euskirchen. In 1922, his family moved to Saarbrücken,
where his father ran a wine wholesaler and managed the Johannishof, the second
largest banquet hall in the city. Graf attended school at the Ludwigs
gymnasium. It was not long before he joined, at the age of eleven, the Bund
Neudeutschland, a Catholic youth movement for young men in schools of higher
learning, which was banned after Hitler and the Nazis came to power in 1933. In
1934, Graf joined the Grauer Orden ("Grey Order"), another Catholic
movement which became known for its anti-Nazi rhetoric. It, too, was banned and for this reason, it
formed many splinter youth groups. Graf showed conviction in his beliefs
from a young age. Although compulsory at the time, he refused to associate with
the Hitler Youth, even when he was threatened with becoming ineligible to go to
University unless he joined the Hitler Youth. While other future members of the White Rose
initially embraced the Hitler Youth, Graf never did so. Moreover, in his
address book he crossed out the names of friends who had joined the Hitler
Youth, refusing to associate with them. In 1935, at the age of 17, Graf and a
few friends marched in an annual May Day parade. The parade was dominated by
swastikas, brown-shirted Hitler Youth troops marching in formation, and
"Sieg Heils." However, Graf and his friends marched under their
tattered school flag, making great effort to stand out from their peers. They
did not don any swastikas, or participate in any of the "Sieg Heil"
salutes. While his parents never placed much emphasis on literature and
written works (the only books the family owned were religious books), Graf was
a voracious reader. Serious and intelligently minded, he enjoyed reading
Christian works, with one of his favorite Christian authors being Romano
Guardini, one of the leading figures of the liturgical revival of the Catholic
Church in Germany. He conducted an in-depth study of Christian authors in his
teenage years, with a special focus on works by Romano Guardini. He also
enjoyed reading poetry, foreign works, and works banned by the Nazis.
Throughout his life, books were a lifeline for him: When he was serving on the
Eastern Front, he would write to his friends to see if they could send him more
books. In the last year of his life alone he read forty books.
Arrest After his Abitur,
the German equivalent of Baccalauréat, in 1937, Graf did his six-month
Reichsarbeitsdienst and afterwards began his medical studies at the University
of Bonn. In 1938, he was arrested along
with other members of the Grauer Orden and charged by a court in Mannheim with
illegal youth league activities–the Bünde having been banned–in relation with
his unlawful field trips, camping excursions and other meetings with the Grauer
Orden. The charges were later dismissed as part of a general amnesty declared
to celebrate the Anschluss. The
detention had lasted three weeks. His time in jail did not weaken his decision
to participate in anti-Nazi activities or organizations.
Studies at the University of
Bonn After his release, Graf was allowed to return to the University of
Bonn to continue his medical studies. While there, Graf was required to report
for military duty in August 1939. The next month, September 1939, the war
officially began. At this time, the University of Bonn was closed for the
course of the war. Graf had chosen the University of Bonn because his aunt and
uncle lived in Bonn and offered to let him live with them, as well as the fact
that many of his friends (including his then girlfriend Marianne Thoeren) went
to that University. After it closed, Graf transferred to Munich University. He
had completed four semesters at the University of Bonn.
German army In January
1940, Graf was officially drafted as a Sanitätssoldat (medic). After completing
preliminary medical training, he was shipped out to France in September 1940.
After serving in France for a few months, he was then transferred to a heavy
artillery unit in Belgium. In March 1940, he was transferred to the Eastern
Front, having medic duties in both Serbia and Poland. While in Poland in June
1941, he saw the Warsaw Ghetto. This experience caused him to write
"Terrible!" in his diary entry of 6 June 1941. He might have written
more, but unfortunately during this time of upheaval, he was worried what would
happen if others read his diary. On 22 June 1941, Germany declared war on
Russia. Soon after, Graf was transferred to Russia, where he would stay until
he was allowed to return to Munich to continue his studies in April 1942.
During these deployments, he saw terrible things that traumatized him and began
to destroy his faith in humanity. As he later wrote to a friend while stationed
in Russia, "A war has started that I can’t compare to anything else, even
here in this land that has always been a mystery to us." In his army medic
files it was observed that his care of the ill was "exemplary". Dr.
Webel, the Chief Medical Officer, said that Graf "showed himself to be an
intrepid medic who never thought about his own safety." Graf was granted
the Iron Cross, 2nd class with swords, for his actions.[6] In April 1942, Graf
was temporarily relieved of duty and sent to the University of Munich to continue
his studies. While there, he met Hans Scholl and Alexander Schmorell.
Work in the White Rose Summer
1942
(Grave in the St. Johann Cemetery
in Saarbrücken)
Graf met Hans Scholl and
Alexander Schmorell soon after transferring back to Munich. He was introduced
to them by Christoph Probst, who took part in fencing with Graf. When Scholl
met Graf, he remarked, "he is one of us." Around this time, Graf
began to take part in discussions with Scholl, Schmorell, Probst, and their
friends. The activities of the White Rose first started in the June 1942. After
their experiences at the Eastern Front, having learned about mass murder in
Poland and the Soviet Union, Scholl and Schmorell felt compelled to take
action. From end of June until mid of July 1942, they wrote the first four
leaflets. Quoting extensively from the Bible, Aristotle and Novalis, as well as
Goethe and Schiller, the iconic poets of German bourgeoisie, they appealed to
what they considered the German intelligentsia, believing that these people would
be easily convinced by the same arguments that also motivated the authors
themselves. These leaflets were left in telephone books in public phone booths,
mailed to professors and students, and taken by courier to other universities
for distribution. Graf was not part of the group at first. He was officially
brought in to the group on 10 July 1942.
Deployment to Russia
July–November 1942 A few weeks later, Scholl, Schmorell, and Graf were
deployed to the Russian Front over the Summer of 1942. Graf had already been
deployed to Russia, but it was Scholl and Schmorell's first time being deployed
on the Eastern Front. On the train ride to Russia, the train passed through
Poland. While there, Graf, Scholl, and Schmorell saw the Evacutation of the
Warsaw Ghetto. In Russia, Scholl, Schmorell, and Graf would sneak away
at night and go to the homes of Russian natives. Schmorell, who had been born
in Russia and spoke fluent Russian, introduced Graf and Scholl to the Russian
Culture. Graf and his friends were allowed to return to Munich in November
1942.
Work in the White Rose,
November 1942-January 1943 Soon after returning to Munich in November 1942,
Graf travelled to Bonn, officially to arrange a fencing tournament,
unofficially to ask Marianne Thoeren to marry him. While there, she told him
that she was already engaged to another man. After some deliberation, he
decided to still be friends with her. After this rejection, he threw himself
back into the White Rose activities with vigor. During this time, two more
leaflets were written, and efforts were made to expand the reaches of the White
Rose group. Graf was a recruiter for the group: from 20 to 24 January 1943, he
traveled to Cologne, Bonn, Saarbrücken, Freiburg, and Ulm, armed with copies of
the fifth leaflet and a hectograph machine. With the end goal in mind to
recruit some of his Graue Orden friends, he asks forty people to join. Only
four of his friends agreed to help. Two of the friends who agreed to help,
brothers Willi and Heinz Bollinger, forged travel papers for him. While they
agreed with the decision to resist National Socialism, they told Graf that they
believed that he and his friends had only a 2% chance of success.
Graffiti Campaigns of February
1943 On 3 February 1943, the news of the defeat of Stalingrad was broadcast
to the German public. Later that day, Graf, Schmorell, and Scholl snuck out at
night and graffitied public buildings with slogans such as "down with
Hitler" and "Hitler the Mass murderer!" During the campaign,
Schmorell would hold up the stencils while Graf painted the slogans on with tar
paint.[16] Scholl stood guard, armed with a pistol in case anyone walked in on
their graffiting. On 8 February 1943,
Graf and Scholl graffitied again. This time, they used green oil-based paint. On
15 February 1943, Scholl, Schmorell, and Graf snuck out and graffitied the
Feldherrnhalle, then a Nazi monument to
the Nazis who were killed during the failed Beer Hall Putsch. The graffiti
campaigns put the Gestapo on high alert.
Capture and Execution On
18 February 1943, Sophie and Hans Scholl went to the Ludwig Maximilian
University to leave flyers out for the students to read. They were seen by
Jakob Schmid, a custodian at the university who was also a Gestapo informer. At
around midnight on 18 February, Gestapo agents arrested Graf when he returned
to his apartment after meeting with his cousins. When he was captured, he asked to be allowed
to go to his bedroom and change into his Wehrmacht uniform. The agents agreed
to his request. While changing, he was able to hide his diary under his many
books. The diary was later found by his
sister Anneliese, who was also arrested by the Gestapo at the same time. She
was released a few months later.
Graf's trial was set for 19 April
1943. At his trial, Graf was sentenced to death at the Volksgerichtshof for
high treason, Wehrkraftzersetzung (undermining the troops' spirit), and
furthering the enemy's cause. Graf was
beheaded on 12 October 1943 at Stadelheim Prison in Munich, after around six
months of solitary confinement. During
this 6-month period the Gestapo used psychological torture to try to extract
information from Graf about other White Rose members and other anti-Nazi
movements. Graf never gave up any names, taking on blame for the White Rose
activities in order to protect others who had not yet been arrested. In his
last letter to his family, he wrote: “On this day I'm leaving this life and
entering eternity. What hurts me most of all is that I am causing such pain to
those of you who go on living. But strength and comfort you'll find with God
and that is what I am praying for till the last moment. I know that it will be
harder for you than for me. I ask you, Father and Mother, from the bottom of my
heart, to forgive me for the anguish and the disappointment I've brought you. I
have often regretted what I've done to you, especially here in prison. Forgive
me and always pray for me! Hold on to the good memories.... I could never say
to you while alive how much I loved you, but now in the last hours I want to
tell you, unfortunately only on this dry paper, that I love all of you deeply
and that I have respected you. For everything that you gave me and everything
you made possible for me with your care and love. Hold each other and stand
together with love and trust.... God's blessing on us, in Him we are and we
live.... I am, with love always, your Willi.”
Legacy In 1946, his remains were transferred to the St. Johann Cemetery in Saarbrücken. Eight schools in Germany have been named after him, among them the Willi-Graf-Gymnasium in Munich and Saarbrücken-St. Johann; a student residence in Munich also honours Graf by bearing his name. Graf's diary from 1942 to 1943, as well as his letters from that time, were published in 1988 under the title: Willi Graf:Briefe und Aufzeichnungen. In 2003, Graf was posthumously awarded the status of honorary citizen of Saarbrücken. The Catholic Church in Germany included Graf in their list of martyrs of the 20th century. In 2017, the Archbishop of Munich and Freising, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, initiated the first step in the process of beatification, a preliminary investigation in which theologians and historians will analyse the life and writings of Graf. In October 2020, the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising made it known that they are in the middle of preparing the process of beatification for Willi Graf.
In film There have been
two films about the White Rose that portray Graf. In the 1982 film Die Weisse
Rose, Graf was portrayed by Ulrich Tulkur. In the film Sophie Scholl: The Final
Days (2005), Graf was portrayed by Maximilian Brückner.
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