
'Tell Hitler that all the French s*** on him': Nazi death row victims' undelivered letters of defiance are revealed after 80 years
More than 50 messages penned by men and women who were put to death at the notorious Stadelheim prison in Munich were found in the Bavarian state archives.
Although most condemned inmates wrote to their families, two French prisoners chose to pen a virulent message of defiance to the Nazi authorities.
René Blondel and Victor Douillet appeared to write to the director of Stadelheim, telling him: 'You can send this letter to Hitler and tell him: all the French s*** on you.'
The start of the letter is not clearly legible, it either says 'Mr Director', or - in a sign they could have been writing directly to Adolf Hitler - 'Mr Dictator'.
Another was written by 19-year-old Jan Stepniak just minutes before he was guillotined.
He told his aunt and grandmother: 'I am writing you one last letter, because today, on 2/11/42 at 5 in the afternoon, my life will come to an end.
'As you know, I will meet death an innocent man, because this is just the way we Poles are punished.'
More than 50 letters that feature in 844 'execution files' held in the Bavarian state archives have been identified and digitised.
Between 1933 and 1945, more than 1,000 executions were carried out at Stadelheim. For most killings, the guillotine was used.
Among the most high-profile inmates executed at Stadelheim were Hans and Sophie Scholl, the brother and sister who led the White Rose resistance movement.
Many of the condemned came from the likes of Poland, France and Czechoslovakia, all of which suffered terribly under Nazi occupation.
Another unearthed letter was written by Johannes Fleischmann, who was handed a death sentence in November 1941 after being accused of crimes including burglary.
He wrote to his mother: 'When the judgment is enforced, I will be able to say with a clear conscience: I am the alleged thief, but the court is the murderer.'
Another victim, Maria Ehrlich, had just turned 81 when she was put to death in 1944. She was sentenced for 'subversion of the armed forces' in October 1943.
She wrote in one of four letters: 'Dear Wenger! I am writing to you my final letter. In three hours I will be dead.
'I am grateful for my life. I believe that my death will benefit my fatherland and my home city.
'I have helped many people, so all that is left is to stand before God.
'Finally: Yesterday, February 9, was my 81st birthday. It has been my turn to go for some time.
'Many kisses, and greetings to everyone – especially the children. Your Marie.'
The Bavarian authorities are now working with experts at the Arolsen Archives, which specialises in documenting Nazi crimes, to find the families of the people the condemned addressed their letters to.
Floriane Azoulay, the director of Arolsen, said: 'People on death row tended to use their final hours to say goodbye to loved ones.
'Our mandate today is to find the addressees of the letters and the relatives in order to fulfill the last wishes of the unjustly condemned and to right this historical wrong.
'This can be of incredible importance for the families.'
Bernhard Grau, director general of the Bavarian State Archives, said: 'The Nazi past will not let us rest!
Giving the victims of the regime of injustice a name and a voice is more important than ever.
'We are delighted to have found a partner in the Arolsen Archives who allows adding more information to the source material in our archives and so helps track down any living descendants of the victims.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Spectator
3 hours ago
- Spectator
Horst Mahler, far-left terrorist who became a neo-Nazi
One of the strangest German lives in the post-second world war era closed on 27 July 2025 with the death of Horst Mahler at the age of 89. Mahler's life epitomises the fatal German tendency for much of the 20th century to embrace extremist politics of the far-left and ultra-right, since he converted from being a hunted and jailed leader and lawyer of the Red Army Faction (RAF) terrorist group, also known as the Baader-Meinhof gang, to become Germany's most notorious neo-Nazi, an outspoken anti-Semite and a Holocaust denier – activities for which he also spent time in jail in his old age. Even more extraordinarily, Mahler was also a one-time legal partner of his friend Gerhard Schroeder, Germany's Social Democratic Chancellor from 1998 to 2005. As a young lawyer, Schroeder had defended Mahler and other RAF terrorists and led a successful campaign to readmit Mahler to the German Bar after he was briefly disbarred. If you want a British parallel, imagine Tony Blair defending members of the Angry Brigade in his youth. Mahler was born in Silesia (now in Poland) in 1936. The family was forced to flee west in the face of the advancing Soviet Red Army at the end of the war. Mahler's father was especially anxious to avoid the Russians, as he was an ardent Nazi, and appears to have passed his ideas on to his son. At university, where he studied law, young Horst joined one of the ultra-nationalist and conservative 'bursenschaften' – elite student societies that combined drinking and duelling with sabres. He also joined the youth arm of Germany's moderately left-wing Social Democratic Party (SPD) but soon migrated to the far-left Marxist wing of the movement. The late 60s were a period of foment among West Germany's students, with frequent violent clashes between police and students protesting against the Vietnam War and against the staunchly right-wing tabloid newspaper empire of Press tycoon Axel Springer. After the shooting of the leftist Student leader Rudi Dutschke, Mahler converted his left-wing legal practice into a hotbed of the so-called 'extra-Parliamentary opposition'. His lifelong journey into illegality under the cover of the law had begun. Mahler became an active terrorist in 1968 when he organised the springing from a Berlin courtroom of Andreas Baader, an early leader of the RAF, and Baader's girlfriend Gudrun Ensslin during the couple's trial for firebombing a department store. For much of the 1970s and 80s, West Germany was convulsed by the activities of the RAF, a violent group of middle-class radicals who pursued their version of the class struggle by shooting down working-class cops, bombing 'bourgeois' symbols like department stores and US army bases, robbing banks and kidnapping and killing business leaders. They moved between their targets in fast BMWs which were nicknamed 'Baader-Meinhof Wagons' as a result. I lived in Germany at the time among such student leftists, and many a night passed in anguished debates in our communal flats as to whether the RAF's violent acts were the right way of achieving a socialist society. One morning a flatmate seized me and pushed my face against the wall lest I should recognise and betray an on-the-run RAF fugitive who had spent the night in the apartment. The thoroughly alarmed West German state responded to the challenge with crackdowns of dubious legality, but eventually the RAF militants were all hunted down and jailed. Here, some of them emulated the IRA and starved themselves to death, while others committed suicide with pistols smuggled into their cells by their lawyers. Mahler was one of those lawyers before going on the run himself with a price on his head as a hunted terrorist. He spent some time with his comrades in Palestine, undergoing military training with the PLO which almost certainly fuelled his own growing anti-Semitism. Returning to Germany, Mahler was finally caught and jailed. Hailed as a martyr by Germany's far left, by the time of his release Mahler's political views had undergone a dramatic sea change. At the funeral of a far-right activist, Mahler claimed that Germany was an 'occupied land', controlled by foreign forces in the pay of an international Jewish conspiracy. He put his new beliefs into practice by joining the neo-Nazi NPD party and defended it in court against attempts to ban it as unconstitutional. He soon proclaimed such classic Nazi ideas openly, and for the last quarter century of his life the ageing Mahler was in and out of the jails where he had spent so many years, but this time for such crimes as Holocaust denial and trying to revive Nazism. By the end of his days Horst Mahler had returned to the warped ideas he had first learned at his father's knee.


Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
Sydney Sweeney registered Republican days after Trump's conviction
Some critics on the Left have called it a sexist attempt to appeal to Mr Trump's 'Maga' base, while others – noting the pun on 'jeans' and 'genes' – claimed it promotes eugenics and 'Nazi propaganda'. 'It seemed clear to me that they [American Eagle] were aligning themselves with a white nationalist, Maga-friendly identity,' Shalini Shankar, an anthropology professor at Northwestern University, told CNN. JD Vance, the vice-president, said the Left's 'crazy' reaction to the advert showed they had failed to learn from Mr Trump's electoral victory last year. 'Did you learn nothing from the November 2024 election?' he asked on Friday. 'I actually thought that one of the lessons they might take is we're going to be less crazy. The lesson they have apparently taken is 'we're going to attack people as Nazis for thinking Sydney Sweeney is beautiful'. Great strategy.' 'Wow. Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women,' said Ted Cruz, the Republican senator for Texas, this week. 'I'm sure that will poll well.' Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, called the criticisms 'cancel culture run amok' and hit out at the 'warped, moronic and dense liberal thinking'. Two years ago, Sweeney faced backlash from fans when she hosted a birthday 'hoe-down' for her mother's birthday where guests were pictured wearing red Maga-style caps with the words: 'Make Sixty Great Again.' The Euphoria star called the event an 'innocent celebration' and said it had been 'turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention'. 'Please stop making assumptions,' she added. 'Rigged' against Trump Last year, Mr Trump was convicted of 34 counts of falsifying business records to buy the silence of Stormy Daniels, a porn star with whom he was alleged to have had an affair shortly after the birth of his youngest son in 2006. The then-presidential candidate declared himself the victim of a 'rigged' justice system trying to stop his campaign to become president, prompting a groundswell of support from Republicans. His campaign said it raised a record-breaking $53m (£40m) in the hours after the verdict, around a third of which came from donors who had never previously given money to the party. Mr Trump was handed an unconditional discharge 10 days before he took office in January. The largely symbolic move meant he avoided any fines or jail time. The Republicans have enjoyed limited celebrity backing under Mr Trump, while the Democrats made celebrity endorsements one of the linchpins of Kamala Harris's campaign last year.


Metro
a day ago
- Metro
Protesters clash outside London migrant hotel
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Protesters from opposing sides are clashing outside a central London hotel, which houses migrants. Hundreds have gathered to protest against the Thistle City Hotel in Islington used to home migrants, which has also sparked a major counter-protest. People from Stand Up To Racism attracted a crowd with dozens of 'smash racism' placards and chants of 'Nazi scum off our streets,' while across the road anti-migrant group Patriots of Britain supporters flew Union Jack flags and chanted 'pedophiles' at the counter protest. Police have thrown a ring of steel around the hotel and are separating the two groups with hundreds of officers at the scene. Stand Up To Racism national officer Samira Ali, 25, said: 'We are here today to show our opposition to the far right who are trying to whip up hatred against refugees. 'We want Keir Starmer to stop blaming migrants for all our problems and stop appearing Reform. From the government's point of view they could start putting in place safe routes and make society welcoming for refugees.' Among the anti-migrant protesters, Epping resident Debbie Jones said she had come to the protest as she had previously lived in the area and believed it has become 'unsafe' for women and girls due to the migrant hotel. The 65-year-old said: 'I used to play on my own here until it was dark – now I would let my nine-year-old granddaughter out. 'We're surrounded by undocumented, inverter men who are coming over and assaulting our young girls. It's been happening in Epping. 'The first step is putting the Royal Navy in the Channel and stopping the boats. The second step is putting all the migrants in an army camp.' Debbie added that she did believe that migrants and refugees did deserve to be 'looked after' – and she had sympathy for refugees' plight as her Jewish grandparents had fled the Nazis in Germany during the Second World War. She said: 'We can be a generous country. I wouldn't be here if we hadn't let in my grandparents. You can come from Mars for all I care. But when you come here abide by our laws and you assimilate.' Luke Daniels, who has lived a short walk from the hotel for more than 40 years, said: 'This community has lived in harmony for a long time. In all that time there has not been any incidents of racist attacks – and we want to keep it that way.' Responding to other residents concerns about crime and anti-social behaviour from some hotel occupants, Luke said: 'There has always been anti social behaviour, it's been going on a long time. It's not surprising that some are committing bad behaviour but alot of them are coming from war zones.' The Islington resident believe that migrants in hotels should be allowed to work and that this would help integration. He said: 'Most of the migrants are fit. Let them contribute to society.' Paul Melbourne, 44, was campaigning against the hotel being used to house migrants and said it was a 'disgrace.' He said: 'They drag the area down. There's been an awful lot of problems and issues since they arrived. Crime has increased. Everyone is on edge.' Diane Abbott, MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, addressed the crowd with a speech against politicians 'appeasing fascism.' She said: 'We don't want politicians who appease racists, we don't want politicians who appease fascists, you're not fooling us.' Shortly after, dozens of police had to move swiftly to contain a hundred-strong group of anti-racism activists, many wearing black masks and flying Palestine flags, which broke away from the main group and was headed towards the anti-migrant crowd. They were yelling and shouting abuse. More Trending Anti-racist protesters – kettled by a half dozen police vans and dozens of officers- confronted the police with chants of 'Who do you serve, who do you protect'. Other chants included 'Where's your Tommy gone -far, far away', referencing Tommy Robinson leaving the UK as police look to speak to him about a suspected assault in St Pancras last week. Toni Hine, a 42-year-old receptionist who has lived in nearby Golden Lane her whole life, addressed the anti-migrant protesters, calling for the government to shut down the hotel. She said: 'I don't blame them in the hotel. I blame the government. They don't live here, they're not dealing with the issue.' It comes after hundreds of far-right protesters surrounded a hotel which once housed asylum seekers. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: This 'useless' Tube line is home to London's most expensive mortgages MORE: Oasis setlist in full and stage times as Gallagher brothers' London tour continues MORE: London's 'quaint' borough is the cheapest to rent at £1,485 — but it might not be for long