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This book traces the remarkable lifelong friendship of Martin Niemoeller, the Evangelical minister who defied Hitler, and Karl Doenitz, the mastermind of Germany's submarine campaigns in World War II who ultimately succeeded Hitler. From their days as cadets at the German naval academy in the years 1910-1913 to their deaths in the early 1980s, their story is full of ironies and unexpected twists. After World War I, Doenitz served the Weimar Republic and shunned the far right, while Niemoeller briefly left his seminary studies to command a battalion in the right-wing Freikorps. Then, after World War II, when Niemoeller was hailed for his principled Christian resistance to Hitler and Doenitz indicted for war crimes, Niemoeller volunteered to help with his old friend's defense at the Nuremberg Trials. Finally, late in life, Doenitz, a hero for unrepentant Nazis, and Niemoeller, a world renowned pacifist, frequently shared a table at navy class reunions throughout the 1960s and 1970s. In the end, they and their friends and classmates learned to love their country in ways that differed from the chauvinistic nationalism of their youth. In this manner, their lives were emblematic of the transformation of their generation, and of Germany as a whole.
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This book traces the remarkable lifelong friendship of Martin Niemoeller, the Evangelical minister who defied Hitler, and Karl Doenitz, the mastermind of Germany's submarine campaigns in World War II who ultimately succeeded Hitler. From their days as cadets at the German naval academy in the years 1910-1913 to their deaths in the early 1980s, their story is full of ironies and unexpected twists. After World War I, Doenitz served the Weimar Republic and shunned the far right, while Niemoeller briefly left his seminary studies to command a battalion in the right-wing Freikorps. Then, after World War II, when Niemoeller was hailed for his principled Christian resistance to Hitler and Doenitz indicted for war crimes, Niemoeller volunteered to help with his old friend's defense at the Nuremberg Trials. Finally, late in life, Doenitz, a hero for unrepentant Nazis, and Niemoeller, a world renowned pacifist, frequently shared a table at navy class reunions throughout the 1960s and 1970s. In the end, they and their friends and classmates learned to love their country in ways that differed from the chauvinistic nationalism of their youth. In this manner, their lives were emblematic of the transformation of their generation, and of Germany as a whole.