, 1934 , "Ossietsky – A man speaks with a hollow voice from across the border", 1934 Ossietzky continued to be a constant warning voice against militarism and Nazism. In 1932, he published an article in which he stated: In the same essay, Ossietzky wrote: Intellectual anti-Semitism was the special prerogative of
Houston Stewart Chamberlain, who, in The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century, concretized the fantasies of Count
Arthur de Gobineau, which had penetrated to Bayreuth. He translated them from the language of harmless snobbery into that of a modernized, seductive mysticism... Contemporary anti-Semitic literature, insofar as it is not simple, crude Jew-baiting, in so far as it claims intellectual consideration, is satisfied to postulate an imposing Teutonism which, examined critically dissolves into thin air like a beautiful Epicurean god. The word blood plays a large part in its phraseology. Blood, the immutable substance, determines the fate of nations and men. Because of the secret laws of blood, Germans and Jews will never be able to mix, must be mutually antagonistic until doomsday. This is romantic but hardly deep. No real science of nationalities can be based on such flimsy premises. For German and Jewish are not fixed categories established once and for all in some mystic prehistoric age, but rather flexible concepts which change their content with spiritual and economic changes dependent on the general dynamics of history. Finally, Ossietzky warned: "Today there is a strong smell of blood in the air. Literary anti-Semitism forges the moral weapon for murder. Sturdy and honest lads will take care of the rest".
Adolf Hitler was appointed
Chancellor in January 1933, the
Nazi dictatorship began soon after in late March with the
Enabling Act of 1933, but even then Ossietzky was one of a very small group of public figures who continued to speak out against the
Nazi Party. On 28 February 1933, after the
Reichstag fire, he was arrested and held in so-called
protective custody in
Spandau prison. Wilhelm von Sternburg, one of Ossietzky's biographers, surmises that if Ossietzky had had a few more days, he would surely have joined the vast majority of writers who fled the country. In short, Ossietzky underestimated the speed with which the Nazis would go about ridding the country of unwanted political opponents. He was detained afterwards at the
Esterwegen concentration camp near
Oldenburg, among other camps. Throughout his time in the concentration camps, Ossietzky was mercilessly mistreated by the guards while being deprived of food. In November 1935, when a representative of the International Red Cross visited Ossietzky, he reported that he saw "a trembling, deadly pale something, a creature that appeared to be without feeling, one eye swollen, teeth knocked out, dragging a broken, badly healed leg . . . a human being who had reached the uttermost limits of what could be borne". == 1935 Nobel Peace Prize ==