From January 1943 until the end of
World War II, as well as during the
Battle of Berlin, Flegel served as a nurse for
Hitler's entourage. She worked alongside one of Hitler's physicians,
Werner Haase, as a nurse at
Humboldt University Hospital and was transferred to the
Reich Chancellery in late April 1945. She worked in an emergency casualty station located in the large Reich Chancellery cellar, above the
Vorbunker and
Führerbunker. In 2003, R.J. Defalque published an article in the
Bulletin of Anesthesia History in which he discussed the surgeries conducted by
Ernst-Günther Schenck, and his last days in Berlin in the
Führerbunker. In this article, Defalque shares Schenck's recollections, including his work with Haase and "nurse Erna" whom Defalque later identified as Erna Flegel. During her time in the bunker complex, she befriended
Magda Goebbels, but spoke more negatively of
Eva Braun, Hitler's companion, which was reiterated in a 2006 book on Braun. Flegel also helped care for the
Goebbels children Hitler's SS aide,
Otto Günsche, presented the
War Merit Cross (
Kriegsverdienstkreuz) 2nd class to Flegel and others for their emergency medical services for wounded German soldiers and civilians. In Schenck's memoirs, he describes meeting Hitler with Flegel and Haase as Hitler wanted to thank them for their emergency medical services. The interview was released by the
Central Intelligence Agency in 1981 after it was found in the National Archives by Miriam Kleiman and then obtained by James Kahn who returned the documents to Helms. The notes accompanying the interview note that the final days of the activity within the
Führerbunker was of interest to westerners and "none depicted the final days more graphically than Erna Flegel", In 2005, Flegel gave an interview to the media who tracked her down to her residence, a
nursing home in Germany. Following the 2005 interview, the press around took interest in the interview with subsequent articles in papers in the United States, Germany, and Australia. In July 2005,
The Washington Post compared
Arnold Weiss's statements at the end of his life to Flegel's statements as both did not want to take their secrets to the grave. There was also commentary on the interview with differing opinions as to whether or not she provided new information about the final days in the
Führerbunker. She died in
Mölln in 2006, aged 94. ==See also==