In 1937, Misch received a call-up notice for military service. In Offenberg, he joined the
SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT), the predecessor to the
Waffen-SS, instead of the German Army as the SS-VT did not require
Reichsarbeitsdienst (National Labour Service) time. Along with eleven others, he was selected for Hitler's personal bodyguard unit, the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH). In August 1939, he was promoted to the rank of SS-
Rottenführer.
World War II For the
invasion of Poland in September 1939, his regiment was attached to the
XIII Army Corps, a part of the
8th Army. Near Warsaw on 24 September, he was one of four men selected by his company commander, then SS-
Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Mohnke, to negotiate the surrender of Polish troops during the
Battle of Modlin. He was picked because of his ability, although very limited, to speak Polish. After the negotiations failed, the Germans headed back to their lines. When they were about 80 metres from the fort, firing began. Several rounds struck Misch, who fell down and lost consciousness. Some German soldiers carried him to an aid station. Later, he was transferred to two different hospitals. Thereafter, he spent six weeks at a convalescent home. For his actions, Misch was awarded the
Iron Cross, Second Class. As Misch was the last living member of his
Lower Silesian family, Mohnke recommended him for the
SS-Begleitkommando des Führers (Führer Escort Command; FBK). This was made up of SS members, including men from the LSSAH, who were not serving on the front lines. Misch was transferred to the FBK in early May 1940. As a junior member of Hitler's permanent bodyguard, Misch travelled with Hitler throughout the war. When on duty, the FBK members were the only armed men Hitler allowed to be near him. They never had to surrender their weapon and were never searched when they were with Hitler. It did cause Misch some concern that they were armed only with
Walther PPK 7.65 pistols. On 16 January 1945, following the Wehrmacht's defeat in the
Battle of the Bulge, Misch and the rest of Hitler's personal staff moved into the
Führerbunker and
Vorbunker under the
Reich Chancellery garden in
Berlin. His FBK commanding officer,
Franz Schädle, appointed Misch to be the bunker telephone operator. Misch handled all of the direct communication from the bunker. He did not leave it for any significant period of time until the war ended in May 1945. On 22 April 1945, Schädle called him on the phone and told him there was a place reserved for his wife and young daughter on one of the last planes out of Berlin. Misch was temporarily released from duty and drove to pick up his family to take them to the aircraft. However, his wife refused to take their daughter and leave him and her parents in Berlin. Upon returning to the Reich Chancellery, Misch learned Hitler was releasing most of the remaining staff to leave Berlin. By that date, as the
Red Army was entering Berlin, propaganda minister
Joseph Goebbels and his wife
Magda brought their
six young children to stay in the
Vorbunker. Joseph Goebbels moved into the room next to Misch's telephone exchange in the lower level of the
Führerbunker. The Goebbels children would play in the corridor around Misch's post. On 30 April, the Soviets were less than from the bunker. That afternoon, Hitler and
Eva Braun committed suicide less than 40 hours after they were married. Misch followed
Otto Günsche and Hitler's chief valet
Heinz Linge to the door of Hitler's private room, but only shared what he briefly observed over 50 years later and in two main versions. In 2005, he stated that he saw Hitler's head facedown on the table and contradicted himself about whether he saw blood; he uniquely claimed that Braun's head was leaning against Hitler's leg. In his 2008 autobiography, he wrote that Braun's head was only "inclined towards Hitler" and he could not recall if there was any blood or if the dictator was sitting on the sofa or the armchair. Further, Hitler's head had only "fallen forward slightly", his eyes "open and staring". Misch started to leave to report the events to Schädle, then stopped and returned to the door of Hitler's study. Misch then observed that Hitler's corpse had been laid on the floor and wrapped in a blanket. Several men then picked it up and carried it past him. Misch left and reported the events to Schädle, who instructed him to return to his duty station. After returning to the telephone exchange, Misch later recalled
Unterscharführer Retzbach proclaiming "So they're burning the boss now!" Retzbach asked Misch if he was going upstairs to watch the events, but Misch declined to go. Thereafter, Günsche came down and told Misch that the corpses of Hitler and Braun had been burned in the garden of the Reich Chancellery. Misch was present in the bunker complex when Magda Goebbels poisoned her six children and then committed suicide with her husband Joseph on 1 May 1945. Misch regarded the murder of the Goebbels children as most unsettling; years later he called it the "most dreadful thing" he experienced in the bunker. Prior to his suicide, Joseph Goebbels finally released Misch from further service; he was free to leave. Misch and mechanic
Johannes Hentschel were two of the last people remaining in the bunker. They exchanged letters to their wives in case anything happened to either of them. Misch then went upstairs through the cellars of the Reich Chancellery to where Schädle had his office to report one last time. According to Hentschel, by that time Schädle's shrapnel leg wound had turned
gangrenous. Misch told Schädle that Goebbels had released him. Schädle told Misch what route he should take in order to avoid the Soviet encirclement of the Berlin area. Thereafter, Schädle shot himself. Misch fled the bunker in the early morning of 2 May, only hours before the
Red Army seized it. He met up with some other soldiers and travelled north through the U-Bahn tunnels. Shortly thereafter, they were taken prisoner by Red Army soldiers. Misch was brought to
Lubyanka Prison in
Moscow, where he was tortured by Soviet
NKVD officers in an attempt to extract information regarding Hitler's last days. Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin was extremely interested in learning of Hitler's fate and theories about possible escape. Misch spent eight years in
Soviet forced labour camps. ==Later life and death==