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How Himmler’s masseur saved 100,000 Nazis from the

The extraordin­ary story of the therapist known as the Magic Buddha who used regular sessions with the architect of the Holocaust to persuade him to free prisoners...

- YSENDA MAXTONE GRAHAM

KERSTEN’S LISTS: A SAVIOUR IN THE DEPTHS OF HELL by François Kersaudy (Headline £25, 416pp)

ON FEBRUARY 3, 1945, heinrich himmler’s enormous, bear- like masseur Felix Kersten sent his secretary Frau Wacker to himmler’s headquarte­rs north of Berlin with an urgent message: please could the ss chief himmler be good enough to sign a stay of execution for the dissident Major theodor steltzer, who was due to be executed in prison the following morning?

steltzer had been sentenced to death for his part in the July plot to kill hitler, and Kersten had received an urgent appeal from a Lutheran bishop to do what he could to save him.

expecting to be shot in handcuffs, steltzer was astonished when the prison doctor appeared and removed them from his wrists. he had no idea to whom he owed his good fortune.

A month later, Kersten came to Germany in person to ask himmler for stelzer’s release from prison. himmler agreed to his request, saying: ‘one life more or less makes no difference.’

What a chilling remark from the architect of the holocaust, who by then had the death of six million Jews on his conscience.

in Kersaudy’s extraordin­ary and gripping account of the relationsh­ip between himmler and his indispensa­ble masseur, we’re given a close-up look at how the mind of a Nazi holocaustp­erpetrator worked.

the fanatical anti-semite himmler was in overall charge of mass murder on an industrial scale — taking the place of the assassinat­ed Reinhard heydrich as the chief organiser of the Final solution.

HIMMLER inspected the facilities at Auschwitz on July 17, 1942, and witnessed the gassing of 449 Jews freshly arrived from holland, just to check that the machinery of murder was properly up and running.

But he also fancied himself as a kind, considerat­e, noble humanitari­an, amenable to signing release forms for individual­s at the behest of his marvellous masseur Kersten, whom he nicknamed the Magic Buddha — magic for his ability to cure pain with the pressure of his deft fingers; Buddha for his enormous weight: Kersten ate marmalade directly from the bowl, devoured cakes, and crushed any small chair he sat down on.

Clearly, ‘one life more or less’ made no difference to himmler; but to theodor steltzer, and each and every one of the countless other prisoners who were released from Nazi prisons and concentrat­ion camps between 1940 and 1945 thanks to Kersten’s extraordin­arily persuasive influence over his puny patient, the saving of ‘one life’ was a miraculous deliveranc­e from hell.

And, like steltzer, most of the released prisoners had no idea that they owed their freedom to the gentle persuasion of himmler by his masseur.

himmler first met the sought-after estonian-born massage genius in 1939, when he urgently needed treatment for crippling stomach cramps. he was dazzled by the effectiven­ess of Kersten’s tibetan-style treatment and demanded his presence by his side from that moment on. Kersten wanted to get away, but himmler blackmaile­d him, saying he had informatio­n about his in-laws which ‘could prove dangerous’. so, to protect his family, Kersten had no choice but to accept the role of himmler’s masseur, even submitting to living on the ss leader’s special train near the eastern Front while he was stationed there.

he developed a quietly brilliant scheme. While pummelling away at himmler’s aching body, he would say things like: ‘i have a list of 12 Dutch prisoners, six Frenchmen and three French women . . . i appeal to your humanitari­an compassion

and your Germanic sense of equity . . . would you be kind enough to sign their release warrant?’

Amazingly, more often than not, Himmler agreed to do so. When Kersten was massaging him, he turned to putty in his hands, so grateful was he for being released from his agony. Kersten was brilliant at appealing to whatever kindness and humanity he still possessed.

Kersaud emphasises that the prisoners Himmler agreed to release were political ones, not Jews. For Jews, Himmler (just like Hitler) retained a fanatical disdain. To his warped mind, the Jews were the ‘dregs of mankind’.

As Kersten knew to the bottom of his heart, ‘one life more or less’ did make a difference. He worked tirelessly, subtly and selflessly through his tyrannical patient to ensure the release of as many prisoners as he could.

What he dreaded was Himmler feeling well, because when he wasn’t in agony, he didn’t need a massage, so Kersten’s hold over him was temporaril­y halted.

But, thankfully, Himmler’s stomach cramps kept returning.

Kersten sometimes blackmaile­d him in return, one day saying that if he returned without his Dutch friend the antiquaria­n and auctioneer Charles Bignell being freed from prison, ‘my morale would be so affected that my treatments would be ineffectua­l’. And Himmler meekly complied. Gradually, Kersten grew more daring in his requests.

The jacket of this book says: ‘The story of Felix Kersten, Himmler’s doctor, who saved more than 100,000 lives.’ It could be even more. During one treatment, for example, Himmler mentioned that Germany was thinking of ordering Finland to surrender all of its Jews in return for being given enough grain by Germany. Kersten persuaded him against that course of action.

So the plan was dropped and thousands of lives were saved.

Later, when Germany was losing the war, Himmler mentioned to Kersten Hitler’s plan to blow up all the concentrat­ion camps when the Allies were within 8km of each one. Luckily, as that plan was being developed, Himmler went down with terrible flu, severe stomach cramps and a near-nervous breakdown. While massaging him, Kersten asked him not to pass on Hitler’s order for this dastardly plan which would have killed hundreds of thousands of concentrat­ion camp inmates.

COWARDLY Himmler was terrified of annoying Hitler, whom he both worshipped and feared. He said to Kersten that he didn’t want ‘the traitors to the great Germanic cause’ (as he called the Jews) ‘ emerging victorious. They won’t live to see that day. They’ll croak with us’. But, thanks to Kersten having a few middle- of-thenight urgent conversati­ons with key people in Himmler’s entourage, he was persuaded not to pass on Hitler’s order.

In conjunctio­n with the Swedish diplomat Folke Bernadotte, Kersten organised the mass evacuation of 20,000 concentrat­ion camp prisoners to Sweden on buses in 1945 — an impressive rescue operation. After the war, Bernadotte wrote a memoir in which he took all the credit for that operation.

It wasn’t until Hugh Trevor-roper wrote an article for the Atlantic Monthly in 1953, saying that Kersten should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, that Kersten’s life-saving deeds were noted.

Granted Swedish citizenshi­p in 1953, Kersten grew his massage practice in Stockholm and Paris — where he treated Greta Garbo, among other celebritie­s.

By which time Himmler was long dead. Cowardly to the last, he took cyanide on the day he was captured by the Allies while trying to escape into hiding.

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 ?? Picture: BETTMANN ARCHIVE ?? ‘One life more or less makes no difference’: Heinrich Himmler
Picture: BETTMANN ARCHIVE ‘One life more or less makes no difference’: Heinrich Himmler

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