In late April 1945, the Soviet
Red Army entered Berlin, and the Goebbels family moved into the
Vorbunker, connected to the lower
Führerbunker under the
Reich Chancellery garden. Magda wrote a farewell letter to her son Harald, who was in a
POW camp in
North Africa: Goebbels added a postscript to Hitler's
last will and testament of 29 April 1945 stating that he would disobey the order to leave Berlin, "[f]or reasons of humanity and personal loyalty". Further, he stated that Magda and their children supported his refusal to leave Berlin and his resolution to die in the bunker. He later qualified this by stating that the children would support the decision [to commit suicide] if they were old enough to speak for themselves. Magda was among the last to see both Hitler and
Eva Braun before they
committed suicide on the afternoon of 30 April 1945. On the following day, 1 May, Magda and Joseph arranged for SS dentist
Helmut Kunz to inject their six children with
morphine so that when they were unconscious, an ampule of
cyanide could be then crushed in each of their mouths. Kunz later stated he gave the children morphine injections, but it was Magda and SS-
Obersturmbannführer Ludwig Stumpfegger (Hitler's personal doctor) who administered the cyanide. Author
James P. O'Donnell concluded that although Stumpfegger was probably involved in drugging the children, Magda killed them herself. Magda appears to have contemplated and talked about killing her children a month in advance. According to her friend and sister-in-law (from her first marriage) Ello Quandt, she told her that they were all going to take poison. Magda appears to have refused several offers, such as one by
Albert Speer, to have the children smuggled out of Berlin and insisted that the family must stay at her husband's side. In the
Führerbunker she confided to Hitler's secretary
Traudl Junge that "I would rather have my children die, than live in disgrace, jeered at. My children stand no chance in Germany after the war". The last survivor of Hitler's bunker,
Rochus Misch, gave this account of the events to the
BBC: Magda helped the girls change into long white nightgowns. She then softly combed their hair. Misch tried to concentrate on his work, but he knew what was going to happen. Magda then went back up to the
Vorbunker with the children. Shortly thereafter,
Werner Naumann came down to the
Führerbunker and told Misch that he had seen Hitler's personal physician, Dr Stumpfegger, give the children something "sweetened" to drink. About two hours later, Magda came back down to the
Führerbunker, alone. She looked very pale, her eyes very red and her face was "frozen". She sat down at a table and began playing
patience. Goebbels then came over to her, but did not say a word at that time. After their children were dead, Magda and Joseph Goebbels walked up to the garden of the Chancellery, where they committed
suicide. There are several different accounts of this event. One account was that they each bit on a cyanide ampule near where Hitler had been buried, and were given a
coup de grâce immediately afterwards. Goebbels' SS adjutant
Günther Schwägermann testified in 1948 that they walked ahead of him up the stairs and out into the Chancellery garden. He waited in the stairwell and heard the shots sound. Schwägermann then walked up the remaining stairs and, once outside, saw their lifeless bodies. Following Goebbels' prior order, Schwägermann had an SS soldier fire several shots into Goebbels' body, which did not move. The bodies were then doused with
petrol, but the remains were only partially burned and not buried. The charred corpses were found on the afternoon of 2 May 1945 by Soviet troops. Magda's face was unrecognizable compared to that of her husband. According to
the purported Soviet autopsy of her body, her jawbones and dental remains were found "detached in the oral cavity". The children were found in the
Vorbunker dressed in their nightclothes, with ribbons tied in the girls' hair. The remains of the Goebbels' family, General
Hans Krebs, and
Hitler's dogs were repeatedly buried and exhumed. The last burial was at the
SMERSH facility in
Magdeburg on 21 February 1946. In 1970,
KGB director
Yuri Andropov authorised an operation to destroy the remains. On 4 April 1970, a Soviet KGB team used detailed burial charts to exhume five wooden boxes at the Magdeburg facility. The remains from the boxes were burned, crushed, and scattered into the Biederitz river, a tributary of the nearby
Elbe. ==References==