Traudl Junge, Hitler's personal secretary who typed his final political testament and private will on April 29, 1945, was classified as a 'youthful fellow traveler' by American denazification authorities and released without trial, yet she spent 55 years keeping her memoir hidden in a drawer, only speaking publicly at age 81 in 2001 when she confronted the Sophie Scholl memorial plaque, realizing she had 'no excuse to be ignorant' despite her official classification, demonstrating that historical accountability often requires personal moral reckoning beyond official records.
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What Happened to Hitler's Secretary After the War?Added:
The sound of a typewriter in an underground room. The date on the document, April 29th, 1945. The name at the bottom, Adolf Hitler. Three authorities made predictions about what would happen to the woman who typed those words.
Allied interrogators calculated that a 25-year-old who had worked in direct [music] personal proximity to the Nazi leadership for 2 and 1/2 years, who had handled private correspondence and final state documents, would be a significant intelligence subject. They held her for 6 months. American denazification authorities reached a different conclusion. She was classified as a youthful fellow traveler. No criminal charges, >> [music] >> no trial, file closed, sent home to Bavaria.
Traudl Junge herself made the third prediction. In 1947, she sat down and wrote everything she remembered. The Wolf's Lair, the Berghof, the bunker, the last dictation. She finished the manuscript. She put it in a drawer. It stayed there for 55 years.
The denazification file was closed. The drawer was locked. The woman who had typed Hitler's final document went back to Munich and spent the next five decades working as a secretary, a copy editor, a science reporter. She died on February 10th, 2002.
On the same day her documentary was released. She never saw it screened.
Gertraud Humps was born March 16th, 1920 in Munich. Her father was a master brewer, a participant in the Munich Putsch of 1923, and an early NSDAP member who left for Turkey when Traudl was young. Her mother raised her on 4 marks 50 a day for four people.
When there were school outings, she had to report sick. Her mother couldn't spare 2 marks 70 for the cost. She wanted to be a dancer.
>> [music] >> She was not accepted by the dance school.
She trained instead as a secretary, learning shorthand and typing, >> [music] >> and through her sister in Berlin heard about an opening in the Chancellery typing pool. She was selected from a pool of 10 typists and sent to the Wolf's Lair, Wolfsschanze, Hitler's [music] field headquarters in the forests of East Prussia.
She became his personal secretary in December 1942.
>> [music] >> She was 22 years old.
"I was 22 and I didn't know anything about politics," [music] she said decades later.
"It didn't interest me."
But here is what the denazification file did not and could not record.
Hitler encouraged her marriage.
In June 1943, Traudl married Hans Hermann Junge, an SS officer who had been Hitler's own valet and orderly.
In August 1944, Hans Junge was killed in action during the Normandy campaign.
>> [music] >> She did not remarry. She continued working. She was at the Wolf's Lair, the Berghof, aboard the Führer's personal train, [music] and from January 1945 in the Führerbunker beneath Berlin [music] as Soviet forces closed the encirclement of the city.
She ate lunch with Hitler regularly. She was among the last people to see Eva Braun alive.
On the morning of April 29th, 1945, Hitler summoned her.
>> [music] >> He dictated his political testament. She typed what he said, the blame assigned, the appointments specified, [music] the final ideological document of a collapsing regime.
Then, his private will.
She typed that, too.
He died in the bunker the following day.
After April 30th, Junge was among a group that attempted to escape Berlin through Soviet lines in civilian clothes.
The city was under artillery fire.
The Red Army had entered the streets.
She was captured, interned for approximately 6 months, processed by American denazification authorities, and classified youthful fellow traveler.
In May 1946, she returned to Bavaria.
The Independent's obituary noted the verdict was probably a fair summing up, while also observing that she had grown up in a system where Nazi ideology was presented not as politics, but as established fact, where the Nuremberg laws were discussed in classrooms as settled science. None of that resolved anything for Traudl Junge. It resolved it for the file.
She wrote the memoir in 1947.
She put it in a drawer.
>> [music] >> Then she tried to move to Australia twice, and both times the file followed her.
In the late 1940s, with the memory still immediate, she wrote down everything, "objectively," she said in the forward, >> [music] >> "trying to record the outstanding events and episodes of the immediate past."
She put the manuscript away. She went to work.
>> [music] >> Secretary, copy editor, science reporter. She lived in West Germany through the 1950s, '60s, '70s.
The Nuremberg trials happened. The Eichmann trial happened. The West German reckoning with its own past accumulated around her.
She gave one interview in this period in 1974 for the British documentary series The World at War.
She spoke briefly, then she went [music] back to silence. In approximately 1975, she moved to Sydney, Australia, where her younger sister Inge had built a life.
She stayed roughly 2 years.
"She loved it," her sister later said, "the beach, the distance."
She returned to Germany, then went back to Sydney again in the early 1980s for another 18 months.
She applied for permanent Australian residency.
>> [music] >> She was refused.
Australian immigration authorities classified her as a Nazi sympathizer.
Friends who spoke to the Australian press in 2005 described the photographs. Traudl relaxing in Noosa Heads, visiting Melbourne, trying to beat depression.
Trying to find somewhere the weight of what she had done did not follow her.
The file followed her to Australia.
>> [music] >> She came back to Munich.
She found the evidence against herself not in a courtroom, not in an interrogation room, but on a street corner in Munich.
Walking past a plaque.
At some point in her later years, Traudl Junge walked past the Geschwister-Scholl-Platz.
A memorial for Sophie Scholl and her brother Hans, members of the White Rose resistance group that had distributed anti-Nazi leaflets from inside the University of Munich.
Sophie Scholl was born May 9th, 1921, 1 year after Traudl. Sophie Scholl was executed by the Nazi regime on February 22nd, 1943.
Killed by the state she had spent years resisting at age 21.
In February 1943, Traudl Junge was at the Wolf's Lair typing Hitler's correspondence.
>> [music] >> She described the plaque on camera in 2001 for a documentary being made by a director whose Jewish family members had died in Nazi death camps.
She said, "At that time, I could not imagine that he was dangerous.
But one day I walked past a memorial plaque for Sophie Scholl, and I realized that she had been the same age as me when the National Socialists had her killed. And she had known what was happening even in those days. I had no excuse to [music] be ignorant. The official denazification record had said she was a youthful [music] fellow traveler. She had spent decades managing the distance between that verdict and her own.
Standing in front of a plaque on a [music] Munich street corner, the distance collapsed.
In the spring of 2001, Austrian author Melissa Müller [music] contacted Junge.
Müller had been tracking the decades of silence and the suppressed manuscript.
She introduced Junge to filmmaker André Heller, who had Jewish family members who had died in the camps.
>> [music] >> He wanted to make a documentary. He wanted her to speak. She agreed.
>> [music] >> More than 10 hours of footage was condensed into a 90-minute documentary.
>> [music] >> Im toten Winkel, in English, Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary.
The title referred to the zone of limited visibility that exists in any field [music] of perception, the area that falls outside the range of sight, the thing [music] you cannot see from where you are standing.
Simultaneously, Müller and Junge finalized the 1947 memoir.
Müller added biographical context and a section titled Confronting Guilt, a chronological study examining the five decades of reckoning the official record had never required. The memoir was titled Until the Final Hour.
Traudl Junge died of cancer on February 10th, 2002.
Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary was released on February 10th, 2002.
She died the day her documentary opened.
She did not see it screened. She did not see the memoir reviewed.
Two and a half years after her death, in September [music] 2004, a German film called Der Untergang, Downfall, was released. It depicted [music] the final days in Hitler's bunker.
The film opened with actual footage from Blind Spot. Traudl Junge herself at 81 speaking directly to camera.
It closed with the same footage. Her real voice. Her real words about the Sophie Scholl plaque.
Downfall became the highest grossing German film of that year.
It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
The bunker scenes became among the most viewed sequences in internet history.
Subtitled, repurposed, seen by tens of millions of people across a decade.
Traudl Junge was already dead for all of it.
The epigraph she had chosen for the memoir was a line from the German poet Reiner Kunze. [music] We cannot put our lives right in retrospect. We must go on living with the past. We can put ourselves right, however. She spent 55 years with a manuscript in a drawer.
She spent two attempts in Australia being turned back by a file that classified her.
She found the evidence against herself on a Munich street corner.
At 81 she finally spoke it into a camera. In a room with a director whose family the regime had killed and died the day the world received it.
The denazification file called her a youthful fellow traveler and closed.
She called herself something she never fully named. The plaque for Sophie Scholl is still on the Geschwister Scholl Platz in Munich.
Traudl Junge walked past it. She saw what it said.
She spent the last year of her life making sure the record preserved that she had.
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