Hitler's grandson teaches Talmud. The grandchildren of Hitler and Goering atone for the sins of the Nazis in Israel. Hitler did have a grandson.

Adolf Hitler promised his people greatness, which brought them to the brink of death. The Fuhrer and his faithful Eva Braun ingloriously committed suicide in April 1945, leaving no offspring. But Hitler’s relatives survived, including his sisters Angela and Paula, as well as his cousin Maria. Their lives were inextricably linked with the life of the leader of the Third Reich and changed irrevocably after his death.

Elder sister

Angela was almost 6 years older than Adolf and was born in 1883 to Alois Hitler's second wife, Franziska. The girl was barely a year old when her mother died at 23 from tuberculosis. Soon the father became friends with his cousin Clara, who was much younger than her husband. Church permission for the marriage had to be sought in Rome - the local bishop refused the wedding due to the close relationship of the bride and groom.

Angela was raised together with the common children of Alois and Clara. Four of the six, including one and a half year old Ida, died at an early age. In addition to Adolf, Angela's older brother Alois Jr. and youngest sister Paula grew up in the family.

Angela was the only one in the family for whom the future Fuhrer had warm feelings and with whom he shared his childhood experiences. At the very beginning of 1903, their father died of a heart attack. Angela, who received a small inheritance, married Leo Raubal and settled separately.

At first, the life of the young family was happy. Leo Raubal and his older sister Giler had three children: Leo, Angela and Elfrida. Unfortunately, 8 months after the birth of her youngest daughter, Angela was left a widow. Her husband died of tuberculosis - the same disease that once deprived one-year-old Angela of her mother.

With three children and a younger sister in his arms

27-year-old Angela was left in the care of not only three small children, but also her younger sister Paula, who was barely 14 years old. Paulina and Adolf's mother died in 1907, briefly outliving her elderly husband.

The tiny child benefits and widow's pension were barely enough to make ends meet and help her sister, who was studying at the lyceum. In the summer of 1911, things became a little easier - Adolf gave up his allowance in favor of Paula.

Angela decides to move to Vienna, since it is easier to find work in a big city. Historians have found information that since 1915 she worked in one of the women's boarding houses in the Austrian capital, and by 1919 she became its director.

An interesting fact: in 1920, Angela Raubal worked at the University of Vienna as the head of the Jewish kitchen. Hitler lost contact with his sister for several years and managed to find her only in 1919.

Hitler's housekeeper

In 1928, Angela suddenly abandoned her leadership position and agreed to Adolf's offer to become his housekeeper. Together with her youngest daughter Elfriede, she moves to the Wachenfeld estate, located in Obersalzberg. Hitler rented it and subsequently bought it, making it his main residence until 1945. After reconstruction in the 1930s, the estate received the name "Bernghof" ("Mountain Yard").

Members of Hitler's apparatus recalled Angela as a respected, energetic and determined woman. She considered herself responsible for her brother's well-being, strictly monitored the servants, was an excellent cook and an impeccable housewife. Angela secured complete power in the house - any messages and notes for Hitler first of all fell into her hands. [C-BLOCK]

Life in the stepbrother's estate was not cloudless. Rumors persistently circulated about Hitler’s relationship with the “young charmer” Geli - Angela’s eldest daughter and namesake - which continued until the death of the Fuhrer’s niece. In September 1931, after a major quarrel with her uncle and potential lover, Angela Raubal's eldest daughter committed suicide by shooting herself with Hitler's pistol. According to some reports, she was pregnant at the time of her death.

Angela was devoted to her brother more than anything else, and even the death of her daughter did not prompt her to leave the service of Hitler. However, with the appearance of Eva Braun in the life of the Fuhrer, whom Adolf’s sister categorically did not accept, Angela Raubal had to accept the loss. In 1935, she left the Fuhrer's estate and moved to Dresden, where a year later she remarried the architect Martin Hammitz.

Paula Wolf

As a child, Paula did not see affection from her brother. At the beginning of the 21st century, German historians found her diary, the authenticity of which was confirmed by examination. An eight-year-old girl writes about her 15-year-old brother: “I feel my brother’s heavy hand on my face again.”

German scientist Timothy Ryback, head of the Institute of Contemporary History of the city of Obersalzberg, commented on the find as follows: “Adolf replaced the girl’s early deceased father. He was extremely harsh with his sister and beat her repeatedly. However, Paula justified him, thinking that such an approach was necessary for her upbringing.” [C-BLOCK]

Adolf's younger sister worked as a secretary at a Viennese insurance company. In 1930, she lost her job, after which Hitler began to provide her with constant financial assistance, which only stopped with his death. Not needing money, Paula limited herself to temporary part-time jobs.

At her brother's request, she changed her last name to Paula Wolf. Hitler advised her such a move “for her own safety.” After Angela left the Bernghof estate, the farm passed into the hands of her younger sister.

For many years it was believed that Hitler's younger sister was only an innocent relative of the bloody Fuhrer. However, German historians found out that she was going to marry one of the most brutal organizers of the Holocaust, doctor and euthanasia specialist Erwin Jekelius, who was responsible for the death of 4,000 Jews in the gas chambers. Only Hitler's direct ban prevented this marriage.

War and last years of life

During the Second World War, Angela lived in Dresden. She made peace with her brother and even, at his request, passed on the necessary information to those relatives with whom he did not want to communicate. Paula worked throughout the war as a secretary in a military hospital. After the Allied bombing of Dresden in February 1945, the Führer convinced both sisters to move to Berchtesgaden, in western Germany, away from the advancing Red Army troops and ensured their relocation. Angela did not live long after the war. She died of a stroke in the fall of 1949.

Paula was arrested by the Americans, interrogated, but soon released. She lived in the Austrian capital for several years, gradually spending her savings, then worked in an art store. In 1952, she moved again to Berchtesgaden under the name of Paula Wolf, where she lived secludedly in a small apartment until her death in 1960.

Hitler's sister in the Urals

Maria Koppensteiner (nee Schmidt) was the daughter of Hitler's maternal aunt Theresa. During interrogations after her arrest by the Counterintelligence Directorate of the 3rd Ukrainian Front, she said that the last time she communicated with Hitler was in 1906. Nevertheless, it was thanks to their relationship with the leader of the Third Reich that Maria and her husband became the owners of 19 hectares of fertile land.

Ignaz Koppensteiner, Maria's husband, joined the Nazi Party in 1932, and Maria followed his example 6 years later. During the war, farm laborers worked on their estate - Ukrainians driven away by the Nazis from their native places. Maria Koppensteiner was sentenced to 25 years in prison for using forced labor. For five of them she was kept in Lefortovo prison, then she was transferred to a special MGB prison located in Verkhneuralsk. [C-BLOCK]

An elderly woman learned to speak Russian while in prison. She read a lot until she lost her sight. Due to her leg disease, she could hardly go for a walk. Hitler's sister was bullied by fellow inmates and prison staff. Warden Vasily Selyavin recalled: “The poor thing spent seven winters in slippers with thin soles. A woman who always had a cold begged for felt boots, but the head of the colony replied: “You’ll manage!” She was even denied glasses.”

In 1955, German Chancellor Adenauer achieved the repatriation of German prisoners and internees held there from the USSR. Maria Koppensteiner did not wait for this day - she died, according to some sources, in the Upper Ural prison on August 6, 1953 (according to other sources, December 18, 1954).

The Second World War ended almost 70 years ago, but humanity will not forget about it soon. The largest global military conflict in history resulted in millions of lives and destroyed families for the participating countries, not to mention material losses.


Most of the responsibility for all this lies with the main Nazi criminal of all times - Adolf Hitler. It is known that the Fuhrer had no direct heirs, and currently the fate of his family is in the hands of the five surviving family members: Peter Raubal and Heiner Hohegger, two grandchildren of Adolf's sister Angela, and three descendants of the Fuhrer's nephew William Patrick Stewart-Houston - Alexander , Louis and Brian.

Peter is now 82 years old, he was born in the Austrian city of Linz and is there to this day, he worked as an engineer before his retirement. Heiner Hohegger, 68, lives in Düsseldorf, and the Stewart-Houston brothers were born and raised in the United States. Although all the descendants of the leader of the National Socialist Party are older people (the youngest of them, Brian Stewart-Houston, is 45 years old), none of them have children and, most likely, will not have children - the Fuhrer’s closest relatives agreed that his family should stop at them.

It must be said that the Stewart-Houstons, Hohegger and Raubal are not direct descendants of Hitler - the first descend from Adolf's half-brother Alois Hitler Jr., and Hochegger and Raubal from the Fuhrer's elder half-sister Angela, thus they have a common great-grandfather - Alois Hitler -senior.

The head of the Third Reich did not leave any children, and his closest relatives, in particular his nephew William Patrick Hitler, who in 1947 changed his last name to Stewart-Houston, tried to either use his high position for personal gain, or blackmailed him and threw mud at him if he received there was no benefit. William even managed to fight a little against his uncle: since 1944, he served in the US Navy as a medic.

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The so-called incest was very common among Adolf Hitler's relatives. This term refers to incestuous intraclan marriages between cousins, nieces and uncles, etc. The leader of the Third Reich knew this very well and was afraid to become a father.

His fears were completely justified: when crossing closely related lines, there is a high chance of sick offspring. However, some sources claim that Hitler did have children. In fact, the Nazi leader was an ordinary bourgeois with respect for family values ​​and love for children inherent in this class.

British researchers' version

A few years ago, the British magazine The Globe published sensational material. The article examined different versions of where, when and in relationships with which women Adolf Hitler could have had children. There is no 100% reliable documentary evidence of this, but there are many indirect facts indicating the possibility of the birth of heirs to the instigator of World War II.

Psychologists and researchers of all stripes attributed to Hitler asexuality, homosexuality, and all sorts of deviations from the norm. In reality, the Fuhrer was heterosexual. He had as many mistresses and common-law wives as any average man in his position could have.

Unrecognized sons of the leader

In his early youth, Adolf had a relationship with a German woman, Hilda Lokamp. She gave birth to a son for the future Fuhrer. It is not possible to trace the boy's fate. Hitler had a love affair with his mother for a short time and what became of her after that is not known.

The second time he could have had children was during the First World War. At that time, Corporal A. Hitler ended up in France, where he had more than one love affair. In 1981, Frenchman Jean-Marie Lauret claimed to be the illegitimate son of the leader of Nazi Germany. He even published a book with the eloquent title “Your Father's Name Was Hitler.”

Project Thor

Already at the helm of the Third Reich, the Fuhrer launched the secret Thor project. According to the plan, it was planned to give birth and raise many of his brilliant followers and “true Aryans” from Hitler’s seed. Young, healthy German and Norwegian women 18-27 years old were selected for fertilization. 22 babies were born.

These children were first kept in secret laboratory number 1146, which was owned by the Lebensborn organization. In 1945, this farm for the artificial reproduction of Aryan offspring was evacuated. Hitler's children were distributed to peasants from neighboring villages. Many of them could survive and give birth to grandchildren to the Fuhrer.

Son overseas

He also had a legitimate son, who was even raised by his father for some time. Now Werner Schmedt - and this is exactly him - lives in the USA. Hitler's official heir kept photographs with his father and mother, as well as a birth certificate with a secret note in the “parents” column: G. (father) and R. (mother).

The Second World War was so cruel and bloody that its ghost will hover over the modern world for a long time, and perhaps it is a reminder of it that will help us avoid repeating this nightmare.

The Third Reich is no more. The standard of living, as well as democracy, in today's Germany is high, and we do not feel any fear towards it.

The Nuremberg trials dealt with those who were involved in the bloody events, and many took their own lives, like Adolf Hitler, as well as their children, like the Goebbels family. We are accustomed to thinking that the fascist regime did not leave behind any heirs. We are not talking about possible like-minded people, but rather about the blood descendants of those who drowned Europe in blood.

For fifty years now, the world has been periodically asking the question: Are there any direct descendants of Hitler among us?

We remember that during the reign of Hitler, unwanted people who were considered unworthy to live among the great Aryan race were simply destroyed, and some Germans were sterilized, since they were found unable to continue the line of the great people.

At the same time, carefully selected German women gave birth to children from the SS military who were supposed to become the future of Germany. In 1935, Himmler ordered the construction of a network of maternity centers for this purpose, and all babies born there were automatically considered adopted by Hitler himself.

Rudolf Hess, devoted to the Fuhrer, went further than Himmler and in 1940 declared that the Fuhrer should have his own children, in whom the sacred blood would flow, and who could subsequently become the supreme rulers of Germany. Hitler was practically asexual, so he was not inspired by the idea. But the example of Stalin, whose sons could take their father’s place, prompted the tyrant to agree.

The secret project was called "Thor". They decided to inseminate the same carefully selected Aryan women from 18 to 27 years old with the Fuhrer's sperm. The expectant mothers themselves did not know about the great mission, and thought that the children's fathers would be SS soldiers.

Also secret, each child was sent to the Bavarian Alps, where he grew up unaware of his origins. For the first time, SS Obersturmführer Erich Runge reported about the secret complex and dozens of Hitler's offspring. The press did not believe the former SS man, but when he suddenly died of a heart attack, they suspected something was wrong.

The next person to raise the conversation about Hitler's children was a doctor from Brazil, Alessandro Giovenese. In 1943-1945, he personally participated in the Thor project, as an SS medical officer. Giovenese learned from the laboratory staff that before the war ended, there were 20 people in the secret complex in whom Hitler's blood flowed.

When the evacuation was announced in May 1945, the documents were destroyed and the children were distributed to sympathizers, under the pretext that the maternity hospital in which they were born had been blown up by the Allies.

The mothers of these children were supposed to be women of the Aryan race, but an exception was made for two. The Fuhrer ordered his blood to be diluted with Viking blood, and the two women were Norwegian.

Consequently, the descendants of the dictator still walk among us. The same Giovenese assures that they do not pose a danger to humanity. If the world has not yet shown us a new tyrant who could be considered the offspring of Hitler, it means that this will not happen in the future. Upbringing can still compete with genes. At least from this side the birth of a new Fuhrer does not threaten us.

The Second World War, the worst in human history, is over. The people who unleashed it were convicted at the Nuremberg trials. Almost all the leaders of the Third Reich were either childless, or their families died with them, like the Goebbels family. And there are no successors left of those who retained the genes of the people who drenched all of Europe with blood. But it turns out that this is not so. Hitler, having committed suicide with his wife Eva Braun, left no half-blooded heirs. But despite this, the world press has been debating for more than half a century: “Does Adolf Hitler have descendants?” In December 1935, by order of Himmler, a network of special maternity centers was created in Germany. They were supposed to give birth to “blond beasts” - children born from SS troops and carefully selected racially German women. It was to them, according to the Reichsführer SS, that the future should belong. All children born in maternity centers were officially considered “adopted by Hitler.” The deputy Fuhrer for the party, Nazi No. 2, Rudolf Hess, decided to go further than his main competitor, who was fighting for closeness to Hitler, and in 1940, at a secret meeting in the Reich Chancellery, he made a statement that surprised everyone: “Hitler must have his own children. Only those in whose veins the sacred blood of the Fuhrer flows have the right to inherit his supreme power in Germany." Hitler had an aversion to physical sex and at first lukewarmly accepted this idea. But he envied Stalin, who had sons who could replace their father at the helm of government, therefore, in the end, he agreed. Thus, the carefully secret Thor project was “born.” It was planned to fertilize about one hundred specially selected “Aryan” women aged 18 to 27 with Hitler’s sperm. The future mothers of the Fuhrer’s children did not know about that great one. mission that was destined for them. They believed that they would bear the descendants of SS soldiers - “ideal Aryans.” When the child was born, he was transported to a secret complex in the Bavarian Alps, near the Austrian border. Journalists learned about the existence of a nursery for Hitler’s children in the Alps. from former SS Obersturmführer Erich Runge, who made a sensational statement that dozens of the Fuhrer’s sons and daughters live and work in many countries. Moreover, none of them even knows about their origin. The press was skeptical about the Obersturmführer's words. But they changed their minds when Runge, who was completely healthy, according to doctors, unexpectedly died of a heart attack. Time passed, and even more extensive information about the Fuhrer’s children was released by Dr. Alessandro Giovenese, who lives in Brazil. From 1943 to 1945 he was an SS medical officer and was directly involved in the highly classified project. From conversations among the laboratory staff, Alessandro Giovenese knew that before the end of the war there were about twenty children in the complex whose biological father was Adolf Hitler. On May 6, 1945, an evacuation order was received. All documents were destroyed, and the children were distributed to the families of compassionate peasants, who were told that these were orphaned babies from a maternity hospital destroyed by Allied aircraft. The babies were born as a result of fertilization with Hitler's "biological material" of women of the "Aryan race". True, one exception was made. Among the mothers of Hitler's children were two Norwegians. The Fuhrer of the Third Reich wanted his blood to “mix with the blood of the Vikings.” So, Hitler's children and grandchildren are walking around Europe. “But they do not pose any threat to humanity,” Giovenese is sure, “If they have not yet manifested bloodthirstiness and thirst for ambition, then it will not manifest itself in the future. Blood and genes play a big role in determining who a person will become, but the standard of living and upbringing play an even greater role... A second Hitler will never appear in Europe.”
Tyrant, dictator, despot in the role of a loving “father of the nation” - in the memory of millions of Germans at the beginning of the 20th century, Adolf Hitler remained exactly like that...