Klara Pölzl was born in Austria in 1860. She was kind and gentle and set out to live the life of the typical girl of her time and place, intending to become a devoted wife and mother. Her cousin, Alois Hitler, brought her to his home to serve as maid for his children while is wife was ill with tuberculosis. While the wife was dying, Klara became pregnant with Alois's child, and as soon as the man was widowed, they petitioned the Church in Rome to be married. Because they were cousins, the Church needed to issue a special dispensation. Incest is an unpleasant business.
Klara and Alois had six children, but only two survived their childhood—a daughter named Paula and a son named Adolf. Yeah, that Adolf. Alois had other children from his previous marriage, but Klara stayed focused on her own. She was so focused, she spoiled them rotten. Her step-son Alois, Jr. asked for money for school, but Klara convinced her husband to save his money for Adolf's education. She wanted him to attend a school for architecture, although his grades were so mediocre at best, he didn't show much promise for admittance into any school at all.
Alois, Sr. was so determined his son would become a successful civil servant, a position requiring a solid education, he used all of his inbred parenting skills, like yelling and daily beatings and threats, to get Adolf to be disciplined in his studies. None of those things worked, and by the time little Adolf was sixteen, he had been expelled and was without a certificate of education that would have helped him get a reasonable job or be accepted by a university.
After her husband died, Klara could finally stop weakly protecting her prized son from baton beatings, but she continued to lavish him with affection, the dear boy. He had a reputation for being an arrogant, uncooperative and spoiled brat—"argumentative, autocratic, self-opinionated and bad-tempered, and unable to submit to school discipline"—but she kept trying to give him a leg up. Adolf so desperately wanted to be an artist that Klara paid for his training in a drawing school. He lacked discipline and lasted not quite four months, and then he was right back in his mother's house—no job, no education, no friends.
Klara watched as her weasel of a son floundered through his limited options with his limited education. He failed at school, he failed at art, he failed at piano lessons because of those darned scales, and he was expelled from singing in the church choir after being caught smoking in the gardens. When Adolf was eighteen, Klara was diagnosed with breast cancer, and she died soon after. She left him plenty of money, but he was without the unconditional emotional support only his mother provided.
It's easy to second-guess Klara Hitler's mothering, to judge her in retrospect. So, let's give it a shot. To a large extent, we can only guide our children. We can't mold them or create what they will become. But Klara might have tried encouraging her son to develop some personal discipline. Of course there is only so much you can do when your husband is a stick-wielding tyrant who is eager to leave welts and bruises on your kids. One thing Klara might have done differently is to marry someone other than her blood relative. Incest really is an unpleasant business.
Klara and Alois had six children, but only two survived their childhood—a daughter named Paula and a son named Adolf. Yeah, that Adolf. Alois had other children from his previous marriage, but Klara stayed focused on her own. She was so focused, she spoiled them rotten. Her step-son Alois, Jr. asked for money for school, but Klara convinced her husband to save his money for Adolf's education. She wanted him to attend a school for architecture, although his grades were so mediocre at best, he didn't show much promise for admittance into any school at all.
Alois, Sr. was so determined his son would become a successful civil servant, a position requiring a solid education, he used all of his inbred parenting skills, like yelling and daily beatings and threats, to get Adolf to be disciplined in his studies. None of those things worked, and by the time little Adolf was sixteen, he had been expelled and was without a certificate of education that would have helped him get a reasonable job or be accepted by a university.
After her husband died, Klara could finally stop weakly protecting her prized son from baton beatings, but she continued to lavish him with affection, the dear boy. He had a reputation for being an arrogant, uncooperative and spoiled brat—"argumentative, autocratic, self-opinionated and bad-tempered, and unable to submit to school discipline"—but she kept trying to give him a leg up. Adolf so desperately wanted to be an artist that Klara paid for his training in a drawing school. He lacked discipline and lasted not quite four months, and then he was right back in his mother's house—no job, no education, no friends.
Klara watched as her weasel of a son floundered through his limited options with his limited education. He failed at school, he failed at art, he failed at piano lessons because of those darned scales, and he was expelled from singing in the church choir after being caught smoking in the gardens. When Adolf was eighteen, Klara was diagnosed with breast cancer, and she died soon after. She left him plenty of money, but he was without the unconditional emotional support only his mother provided.
It's easy to second-guess Klara Hitler's mothering, to judge her in retrospect. So, let's give it a shot. To a large extent, we can only guide our children. We can't mold them or create what they will become. But Klara might have tried encouraging her son to develop some personal discipline. Of course there is only so much you can do when your husband is a stick-wielding tyrant who is eager to leave welts and bruises on your kids. One thing Klara might have done differently is to marry someone other than her blood relative. Incest really is an unpleasant business.
Comments
You certainly know how to pick them.
Yes, it's a shame the wrong Hitler kid survived … even as a failed painter and an architecture student myself I have no sympathy for him.
What he did was too monstrous for words, but at least we can point and laugh at him.
You've inspired me to watch The Producers again tonight, and sing along to "Springtime For Hitler."
Franz: "You know, not many people know zis, but der Führer vos a terrific dancer."
Max: "Really? Gee, we didn't know that, did we Leo?"
Leo: "No, we sure didn't."
Franz: "That's because you were taken in by the BBC! FILTHY BRITISH LIES!
But did they ever say a bad word about Winston Churchill?
CHURCHILL! With his cigars and his brandy and his ROTTEN PAINTINGS!
ROTTEN!
Hitler! THERE was a painter! He could paint an entire apartment in one afternoon. Two coats!"
Great words to live by Robyn.
What if he had died? What if he had managed to stay in art school?
I mean, it is heady stuff. No Hitler? Imagine how differently the world would have spun. Or..I dunno, maybe another would have stepped up to the plate.
Ah, The Producers. I am humming along with 'Springtime for Hitler...In Germany...'
It's a concept that remains difficult to chew on. Probably easier to make a rash statement about a Big Offender than to include an irritating neighbor.
At any rate, I'm really pi$$ed off by the Holocaust deniers. Horrid insult on horrific injury.