What was klara hitlers occupation




















Klara still called Alois "uncle" after the marriage. Their first son, Gustav, was born four months later, on 15 May Their second child, Ida, was born on 23 September Both infants died of diphtheria during the winter of A third child, Otto, was born and died in Edmund died of measles on 28 February , at the age of five. Klara's adult life was spent keeping house and raising children. According to Smith, Alois had little understanding or interest in raising children.

Historian Alice Miller later wrote, "The family structure could well be characterized as the prototype of a totalitarian regime. Adolf's sister Paula recalled: "It was especially my brother, Adolf who challenged my father to extreme harshness and who got his sound thrashing every day," Hitler later told others that his father had sudden outbursts of temper and would hit out; that he did not love his father, but he feared him.

Klara was submissive to her husband, but highly protective towards her son. Paula thought she was "the compensatory element between the almost too harsh father and the very lively children who were perhaps somewhat difficult to train.

If there were ever quarrels or differences of opinion between my parents, it was always on account of the children. A later friend, Henriette von Schirach daughter of Hitler's photographer, Heinrich Hoffmann , reports that at the age of eleven, Adolf would have to fetch his father, who was often irascible, from the inn. When Alois tried to hit the boy, the mother and his sisters stood in front of him to protect him, "so Hitler must have seen women and girls as guardian angels from an early age".

When his father died suddenly in -at the local inn, as he was about to take a drink - Adolf became the man of the house. This liberated him from his father but, as the eldest of Klara's children, he became even more the focus of his mother's attention. Her devotion "might have had a number of impacts on his growing development", Brett Kahr suggests.

Dr Bloch described him at this time as a frail-looking young man, who "lived within himself". Frau Klara seemed more careworn than ever. One day Frau Hitler came to visit me during my morning office hours. I did not tell her of my diagnosis. I summoned the children to my office next day and stated the case frankly. Their mother, I told them, was a gravely ill woman Without surgery, I explained, there was absolutely no hope of recovery.

Even with surgery there was but the slightest chance that she would live. In family council they must decide what was to be done. Adolf Hitler's reaction to this news was touching. His long, sallow face was contorted. Tears flowed from his eyes,. Did his mother, he asked, have no chance? Only then did I realize the magnitude of the attachment that existed between mother and son. I explained that she did have a chance; but a small one. Even this shred of hope gave him some comfort.

The children carried my message to their mother. She accepted the verdict as I was sure she would- with fortitude. Deeply religious, she assumed that her fate was God's will.

It would never have occurred to her to complain. She would submit to the operation as soon as I could make preparations. I explained the case to Dr. Urban was one of the best-known surgeons in Upper Austria. He was - and is - a generous man, a credit to his profession. He willingly agreed to undertake the operation on any basis I suggested. After examination he concurred in my belief that Frau Hitler had very little chance of surviving but that surgery offered the only hope.

Frau Hitler arrived at the hospital one evening in the early summer of I do not have the exact date, for my records of the case were placed in the archives of the Nazi party in Munich. In any case, Frau Hitler spent the night in the hospital and was operated on the following morning. At the request of this gentle, harried soul I remained beside the operating table while Dr.

Urban and his assistant performed the surgery. Two hours later drove in my carriage across the Danube to the little house at No.

There the children awaited me. The girls received the word I brought with calm and reserve. The face of the boy was streaked with tears, and his eyes were tired and red.

He listened until I had finished speaking. He had but one question. In a choked voice he asked: "Does my mother suffer? As weeks and months passed after the operation Frau Hitler's strength began visibly to fail. At most she could be out of bed for an hour or two a day.

During this period Adolf spent most of his time around the house, to which his mother had returned. He slept in the tiny bedroom adjoining that of his mother so that he could be summoned at any time during the night.

An illness such as that suffered by Frau Hitler, there is usually a great amount of pain. She made no secret of these worries; or about the fact that most of her thoughts were for her son. On the day of December 20, I made two calls. The end was approaching So the word that Angela Hitler brought me the following morning came as no surprise.

Her mother had died quietly in the night. The children had decided not to disturb me, knowing that their mother was beyond all medical aid. But, she asked, could I come now? Someone in an official position would have to sign the death certificate The postmaster's widow, their closest friend, was with the children, having more or less taken charge of things.

Adolf, his face showing the weariness of a sleepless night, sat beside his mother. In order to preserve a last impression, he had sketched her as she lay on her deathbed I sat with the family for a while, trying to ease their grief. I explained that in this case death had been a savior. They understood. In the practice of my profession it is natural that I should have witnessed many scenes such as this one, yet none of them left me with quite the same impression.

Hitler consulted Dr. Bloch who recommended drastic treatment to save his mother's life. The painful, expensive treatment involved applying dosages of iodoform directly onto the ulcerations caused by the cancer. She was moved into the warm kitchen of the Hitler apartment where Adolf kept constant watch and even helped out with household chores such as cooking and washing the floor. The apartment, however, always smelled of iodoform.

She bore the pain well, but Adolf anguished over every moment of her suffering. Her condition steadily worsened and as the festive Christmas season approached in December , she was near death. In the early hours of December 21st, amid the glowing lights of the family's Christmas tree, she died quietly. Hitler wanted a career in the visual arts. He fought bitterly with his father, who wanted him to enter the Habsburg civil service.

As Klara was dying of breast cancer in the autumn of , Hitler took the entrance exam to the Vienna Academy of the Arts. He failed to gain acceptance.

In early , some weeks after Klara's death in December , Hitler moved to Vienna, ostensibly in the hope of renewing efforts to enter the Academy of Arts. Hitler lived in Vienna between February and May He had grown up in a middle-class family, with relatively few contacts with Jewish people, in a region of the Habsburg state in which many German nationalists had been disappointed that the German Empire founded in had not included the German-speaking regions of the Habsburg Monarchy.

Yet the legacy of the Vienna years is not as clear as Hitler depicted it in his political autobiography. His impoverishment and residence in homeless shelters began only a year after his arrival and after he had frittered away a generous inheritance left by his parents and rejected all arguments of surviving relatives and family friends that he embark upon a career in the civil service.

By the end of , Hitler knew real poverty as his sources of income dried up. That winter, however, helped briefly by a last gift from his aunt, he began to paint watercolor scenes of Vienna for a business partner. He made enough to live on until he left for Munich in It is likely that Hitler experienced, and possibly also shared, the general antisemitism common among middle-class German nationalists.



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