Hartford Courant (Sunday)

World War II spy didn’t live to tell tale, so descendant will

Great-great-niece researches life of Nazi resister Mildred Harnack

- By Kate Dwyer

NEW YORK — Every year when Rebecca Donner visited her great-grandmothe­r’s home in Chevy Chase, Maryland, she and her brother would stand against the kitchen wall to have their heights marked in pencil. When she turned 9, she noticed a letter M near one of the faintest lines.

“Who’s that?” she asked her great-grandmothe­r Harriette, who muttered, “Oh, that’s Mildred.”

Donner’s curiosity was piqued, but it wasn’t until she was 16 that she learned the truth: Mildred Harnack was an American spy during World War II. Along with her husband, Arvid Harnack, she led a resistance organizati­on in Berlin, risking her life to leak informatio­n from Germany’s Ministry of Economics, where he worked, in hopes of defeating the Nazis. Despite nearly escaping, she was executed by guillotine in 1943 on Adolf Hitler’s direct order.

Though the lore surroundin­g Harnack is riddled with inaccuraci­es, Donner sets the record straight in “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days.”

“My grandmothe­r Jane said to me, ‘You must write Mildred’s story.’ I very much took that to heart,” Donner said in an interview at her home in Brooklyn. “I thought, well, yes, but maybe it won’t be my first book,” because she wanted to do the story — and her lineage — justice.

She had a feeling her grandmothe­r had more to say, but she died in a boating accident a few years later.

“I was left with this shimmer of mystery,” Donner said. “It was endlessly fascinatin­g.”

Over the years, Donner graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, completed a Master of Fine Arts at Columbia, directed a fiction series at KGB Bar in New York’s East Village and wrote “Sunset Terrace,” a novel set in Los Angeles, followed by “Burnout,” a graphic novel about ecoterrori­sm. Just before “Burnout” was published in 2008, she visited Berlin and went to the German Resistance Memorial Center, since she knew her grandmothe­r had been in touch with archivists there.

“I thought, maybe they’ll have a little plaque or something about Mildred,” Donner said, but when the elevator doors opened, she was greeted by a portrait of her greatgreat-aunt at the entrance to an art exhibition about her life. “There were actually two rooms devoted to her. And this was a huge exhibition,” she said. Still, she didn’t feel ready to tackle a biography.

Instead, she spent several years working on a novel based on her grandmothe­r’s untimely death. But in 2016, when Donald

Trump’s campaign started gaining momentum, “I had this sense that resistance was in the zeitgeist a little bit,” she said. “I thought, this is actually really important for me to write right now.”

Donner had also learned from her grandmothe­r that Harnack employed the 11-year-old son of a diplomat to deliver coded messages to his parents,

who sent the informatio­n back to the United States. His name was Donald Heath Jr., he now lived in California, and he was nearly 90.

She contacted him, and in 2016 they met. Heath told her how he would take a different route to Harnack’s apartment every time they met for “tutoring sessions,” how he would use the aquarium glass at the Berlin zoo as a mirror to check for tails and how every time he accompanie­d Harnack and his parents for picnics in the countrysid­e, he would wear a stolen Hitler Youth uniform and whistle different songs to let them know whether the coast was clear.

After the interview concluded, Donner remembers, Heath said, “I’ve told you more than I’ve told anybody, but we’re like family.” His eyes welled up. “Now I can die.”

Donner replied, “Don’t do that, Don,” but a month or two later, he was indeed gone.

In the weeks after Heath’s death, she received

a call from his family, offering access to 12 steamer trunks full of documents from Berlin, where she discovered his mother’s diaries. Louise Heath and Mildred Harnack were good friends, it turns out, and Donner also discovered top-secret intelligen­ce documents offering new insight into the Heaths’ and Harnacks’ espionage.

Though jetting off to Europe for research might sound glamorous, most of Donner’s hours were spent poring over documents in her apartment. The wall behind her desk is covered in paper where she mapped out the intersecti­ng anti-Nazi resistance networks, “to figure out what the connection­s are,” she said. “Are they meaningful, or are they not? Are these just coincidenc­es, or not?”

Her literary agent, Jim Rutman at Sterling Lord Literistic, was “persistent­ly dazzled” by her ability to complicate existing narratives about the resistance.

“World War II feels as

gendered a category of books as we have. It is the quintessen­ce of the ‘dad book,’ broadly speaking,” he said. “To put a woman at the center of the story and to complicate the convention­s through which the story is usually told — all of that felt very right and very overdue.”

Donner has emphasized the importance of historiogr­aphy, or examining how history is written. In existing accounts, for example, Arvid Harnack is often called a “scholar” while Mildred Harnack is called a “teacher,” which Donner said is incorrect.

“She got a job at the University of Berlin, he did not, so properly speaking, she was the scholar.”

While her family connection provided unparallel­ed access, Donner does not believe it made her biased in her rendering of Harnack.

“I’m not interested in hagiograph­y,” she said. “The greatest honor I can do her is not to put her up on a pedestal but to show how human she was.”

 ?? ELIZABETH D. HERMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rebecca Donner, author of “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days,” examines the life of Mildred Harnack, part of the anti-Nazi resistance in Germany.
ELIZABETH D. HERMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Rebecca Donner, author of “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days,” examines the life of Mildred Harnack, part of the anti-Nazi resistance in Germany.
 ??  ?? ‘All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days’
By Rebecca Donner; Little, Brown, 535 pages, $32
‘All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days’ By Rebecca Donner; Little, Brown, 535 pages, $32

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