Hanns Kerrl Explained

Native Name:instead.-->
Office:Reichsminister of Church Affairs
Term Start:16 July 1935
Term End:15 December 1941
Leader:Adolf Hitler
Predecessor:Office established
Successor:Hermann Muhs
Office2:Reichsminister without Portfolio
Term Start2:17 June 1934
Term End2:16 July 1935
Office3:Chief of the Reich Office for Spatial planning
Term Start3:June 1935
Term End3:15 December 1941
Predecessor3:Office established
Successor3:Hermann Muhs
Office4:Prussian Minister of Justice
Term Start4:23 March 1932
Term End4:17 June 1934
Successor4:Franz Gürtner
Office5:First Deputy President of the Reichstag
Term Start5:12 December 1933
Term End5:15 December 1941
Predecessor5:Thomas Esser
Successor5:Office abolished
Office6:President of the Landtag of Prussia
Term Start6:24 May 1932
Term End6:14 October 1934
Vicepresident6:Wolfgang von Kries
Josef Baum Hoff
Heinrich Haake
Predecessor6:Ernst Wittmaack
Successor6:Office abolished
Birth Date:11 December 1887
Birth Place:Fallersleben
Resting Place:Waldfriedhof Dahlem
Party:Nazi Party
Cabinet:Hitler Cabinet
Rank:Leutnant
Battles:World War I
Mawards:Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class

Hanns Kerrl (11 December 1887 – 15 December 1941) was a German Nazi politician. His most prominent position, from July 1935, was that of Reichsminister of Church Affairs. He was also President of the Prussian Landtag (1932–1933) and head of the Zweckverband Reichsparteitag Nürnberg and in that capacity edited a number of Nuremberg rally yearbooks.

Early life

Kerrl was born into a Protestant family in Fallersleben; his father was a headmaster. He served in the German Army in the First World War as a Leutnant earning the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd Class. He joined the Nazi Party (NSDAP) in 1923 and soon afterwards went into regional politics. A member of the Sturmabteilung, Kerrl would ultimately hold the rank of SA-Obergruppenführer.

Early Nazi career

Joining the Nazi Party in 1923, he founded and led an Ortsgruppe (Local Group) in Peine, a suburb of Hanover. In the fall of 1925, Kerrl became a member of the National Socialist Working Association, a short-lived group of north and northwest German Gaue, organized and led by Gregor Strasser, which unsuccessfully sought to amend the Party program. It was dissolved in 1926 following the Bamberg Conference.[1]

An associate of Bernhard Rust, the local Gauleiter, in 1928 Kerrl became the Kreisleiter of Peine District. Also elected to the Landtag of Prussia in 1928, he served as head of the Nazi faction and, on 24 May 1932 after the Nazis won the largest number of seats in the April election, he became President of the assembly. He remained in this position until the Landtag was finally dissolved on 14 October 1933, in the wake of the Nazi subordination of the German States to the Reich government. After the Nazi seizure of power, Kerrl was appointed Reich Commissioner to the Prussian Ministry of Justice on 23 March 1933 and on 21 April was made Minister of Justice, serving until June 1934. In this position, Kerrl placed a ban on Jewish notaries preparing official documents and banned Jewish lawyers from practicing in Prussia. In September 1933 he was made a member of the Prussian State Council. He also was named to the Academy for German Law and sat on its präsidium (standing committee).[2] Kerrl was elected to the Reichstag for electoral constituency 16, South Hanover-Brunswick, in November 1933. When the Reichstag convened on 12 December, he was named First Deputy President to Reichstag President Hermann Göring and would serve in this capacity until his death. On 17 June 1934, Kerrl entered the national Reich cabinet as a Reichsminister without Portfolio.[3]

Minister of Ecclesiastical Affairs

In the following year, on 16 July 1935, he was appointed Reichsminister of the newly created Reich Ministry for Church Affairs. On the one hand, Kerrl was supposed to mediate between those Nazi leaders who hated Christianity (for example Heinrich Himmler) and the churches themselves and stress the religious aspect of the Nazi ideology. On the other hand, in tune with the policy of Gleichschaltung, it was Kerrl's job to subjugate the churches—subject the various denominations and their leaders and subordinate them to the greater goals decided by the Führer, Adolf Hitler. Indeed, Kerrl had been appointed after Ludwig Müller had been unsuccessful in getting the Protestants to unite in one "Reich Church."

In a speech before several compliant church leaders on 13 February 1937, Kerrl revealed the regime's growing hostility to the church when he declared: "Positive Christianity National Socialism ... True Christianity is represented by the party ... the Führer is the herald of a new revelation."[4] Kerrl regarded Hitler as replacing Jesus as far as the Nazis were concerned.[5] [6] He also pressured most of the Protestant pastors to swear an oath of loyalty to Hitler.

Gregory Munro (Australian Catholic University, Brisbane) states that:

Increasingly marginalized by Hitler, who did not even grant him a personal conversation, Kerrl became desperate and embittered. A completely powerless minister, he died in office on 15 December 1941, aged 54. He was succeeded by Hermann Muhs.

Aryanization of the Lindemann house

From 1935 to 1941 Kerrl lived at Rupenhorn 5 at Stößensee in Berlin in a house that had been Aryanized, that is forcibly sold, from its Jewish owner, Paul Lindemann. The Lindemann Haus, built in 1928/29 by architect Bruno Paul, was acquired in 1935 by Kerrl when Lindemann was forced to sell by the Nazis.[7] [8] [9]

Personality

The American diplomat, William Russell wrote in his memoir (Berlin Embassy) that Kerrl frequented "Berlin dives" and bars "until the wee hours of the morning".[10]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Alan Bullock: Hitler, A Study in Tyranny, Harper & Row, 1964, p. 137, .
  2. Book: Klee, Ernst . Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945 . Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag . Frankfurt-am-Main . 2007 . 305 . 978-3-596-16048-8.
  3. Robert Wistrick: Who's Who in Nazi Germany, Macmillan Publishing Co., New York, 1982, p. 170,
  4. Book: Shirer, William . The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich . New York . Simon and Schuster . 1960 . 238–239 . 978-0-831-77404-2.
  5. Brüning Out. 6 June 1932. Time. 17. https://web.archive.org/web/20080509073756/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,789288,00.html. dead. 9 May 2008. 2008-08-10.
  6. News: 1940-12-23 . Religion: German Martyrs . 2024-06-03 . Time . en-US . 0040-781X.
  7. Web site: Am Rupenhorn 5 (Leseprobe) by be.bra.verlag - Issuu. 2022-01-20. issuu.com. 14 April 2016 . en.
  8. Web site: Datel. Edward. About Us Touro College Berlin American College Business Psychology. 2022-01-20. TOURO COLLEGE BERLIN. en-US. The home of our campus originally belonged to the Lindemann family and was designed by German architect Bruno Paul. When the Nazis seized power in the 1930’s, the Lindemann home at Am Rupenhorn became the official residence of Hanns Kerrl, the Reichskirchsminister (The Reich’s Church Minister). When the war ended in 1945, the house was handed over to Allied Forces and was used as a learning center for the British Military in the years following the war..
  9. Web site: Datel. Edward. 2015-05-20. Guided Campus Tour by Prof. Dr. Johannes Tuchel Touro College Berlin American College Business Psychology. 2022-01-20. TOURO COLLEGE BERLIN. en-US. Constructed by architect Bruno Paul, the Bauhaus-inspired villa was first inhabited by the Jewish Lindemann family, who had to sell the property when they were forced to leave Germany in 1935. The villa then housed the Nazi minister for church affairs, Hanns Kerrl, and after the war was used first by the British military administration and, later, by the Senate of Berlin..
  10. Book: Russell, William. Berlin Embassy. 2003. Elliott & Thompson. UK edition. 1-904027-14-8. 187.