Paula later moved to
Vienna. In the early 1920s, she was hired as a housekeeper at a dormitory for Jewish university students. In 1921, while she worked at the dormitory, she was visited by her brother who she said appeared as if he had "fallen from heaven". For the most part, she had no other contact with her brother during his struggling years as a painter in Vienna and later in
Munich, his military service during
World War I and his early political activities. She was delighted to meet him again in Vienna during the early 1930s. Paula used the surname "Hiedler", the original spelling of "Hitler". By her own account, after losing a job with the Austrian State Insurance Company on 2 August 1930 when her employers found out who she was, Paula received financial support of 250 schillings a month from her brother, and lived under the assumed surname of "Wolff" at Adolf Hitler's request. "Wolf" was a childhood nickname of his which he had also used during the 1920s for security purposes. Hitler appears to have had a low opinion of Paula's intelligence, referring to both her and their half-sister
Angela as
"dumme Gans" ("stupid goose"). Paula later claimed to have seen her brother about once a year during the 1930s and early 1940s. She worked as a secretary in a military
field hospital for much of World War II. On 14 April 1945, during the closing days of the war and at the age of 49, she was driven by two
SS men to
Berchtesgaden, Germany, – the location of Hitler's summer home, the
Berghof – apparently on the orders of
Martin Bormann. She and her half-sister, Angela, were each given 100,000 marks on Hitler's orders. There is some evidence that Paula shared her brother's strong
German nationalist beliefs, but she was not politically active and never joined the
Nazi Party. ==Post-war life==