MarketRudolf von Scheliha
Company Profile

Rudolf von Scheliha

Rudolf "Dolf" von Scheliha was a German aristocrat, cavalry officer and diplomat who became a resistance fighter and anti-Nazi who was incorrectly linked to the Red Orchestra espionage group.

Life
Rudolf von Scheliha was born in Zessel, Oels, Silesia (now Cieśle, Oleśnica, Poland), as the son of the Prussian aristocrat and officer Rudolph von Scheliha (1865–1946). His mother was the Marie Luise von Scheliha née Miquel (1876–1942) who was a daughter of Lord Mayor of Frankfurt and Prussian Finance Minister Johann von Miquel. His younger sister, Renata von Scheliha (1901–1967), was a classical philologist. In 1927, Rudolf married the noblewomen Marie Louise von Scheliha (1904–2003) née von Medinger, the daughter of a large landowner and industrialist. The couple had two daughters: Sylvia, born on 14 November 1930, and Elisabeth, born in 1934. Sylvia became an engineer, and Elisabeth received a doctorate in chemistry, with the latter surviving to 2016 and dying in Adliswil. ==Military==
Military
He served as an army officer in World War I and volunteered after his graduation in 1915. Scheliha volunteered at the same regiment, the Cavalry Rifle Regiment, Guard Cavalry Rifle Division, in which his father and uncle had served; its officers were drawn from the nobility. On 8 August 1918, he was shelled in a ditch with two brothers, who were blown up, and one brother died months later from his injuries. Scheliha was buried; when he was rescued, his hair had turned grey, and he was suffering from shell shock, a type of post-traumatic stress disorder. His parents were shocked at the change but he never spoke of his experiences. The experience left a pacifist. He was honoured for his efforts by both Iron Crosses and the Silver Wound Badge. ==Education==
Education
After the war, he studied law in Breslau. In May 1919, he moved to the University of Heidelberg, where he joined the Corps Saxo-Borussia that year and came in contact with republican and anti-totalitarian groups. He was elected to the AStA, the General Student Committee (Students Union), where he vehemently opposed the students' anti-Semitic riots. ==Career==
Career
After his examination in 1921, he became first clerk at the Court of Appeal in 1922. In February 1922, von Scheliha joined the regional office of the Foreign Office in Hamburg. book. The document, whose writers are not fully known, is considered one of the most detailed contemporary accounts of the early Holocaust as well as "Operation Tannenberg" and the Intelligenzaktion in Poland between 1939 and 1942. It describes the persecution of the church, the school and the university system; the dark role of the Institute of German Ostarbeiter as the driver of cultural rescheduling; the relocation and the sacking of libraries; the devastation of monuments; the looting of archives, museums and the private collections of the Polish nobility; the subversion of Polish theatre, music and press; and the forcible destruction of other cultural institutions by the Nazi Party. The document was completed in January 1942 and then recorded onto microfilm and smuggled to Britain at a high personal risk to those involved. Kienlechner's evidence for von Scheliha's involvement rests with the quality and precision of the information contained in the document. Kienlechner believes the precise dating of historical facts, the correct names of the Nazis involved and their victims, the details of the theft and destruction of cultural assets and the correct interpretation of Nazi occupation policy in Poland, along with photographs and Nazi newspaper cuttings points to von Scheliha and Johann von Wühlisch as one source for the 200,000 word document. In autumn 1941, Von Scheliha invited his Polish friend, Count Konstantin Bninski, to Berlin under the pretext of writing propaganda texts for the Foreign Office against the Polish resistance. The German diplomat and historian considered it probable in his 1990 biography that von Scheliha passed material to Bninski in Warsaw that contained a comprehensive documentation of crimes during the German occupation. Kienlechner believes that Bninski then brought that material to Berlin to write The Nazi Culture in Poland for the Polish government-in-exile, who in turn published the document as a novel from 1944 to 1945. Swiss warnings In February 1942, von Scheliha ended his attempts to name and send out exiled Poles as helpers for German propaganda to stop endangering them and himself. At the same time, he closed the small Polish research department in the foreign office for fear of its members' lives. He began to despair and realised his powerlessness. That spring, he travelled to Switzerland, where his sister lived and provided Swiss diplomats with information on Aktion T4, including sermons by Bishop Clemens August Graf von Galen on the murders of the mentally ill. He also sent reports on the Final Solution, including the construction and the operation of more extermination camps, and on Hitler's order to exterminate European Jews. Von Scheliha made further trips to Switzerland in September and October 1942. On his final trip he warned Carl Jacob Burckhardt of the International Committee of the Red Cross about the Final Solution. Burckhardt in turn informed the American consul in Geneva which was the first news of the Nazi extermination camps reaching the allies. No contact Shortly after the German invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the Soviet embassy in Berlin ceased operation and its legation expelled. At that point Soviet intelligence lost the connection with Stöbe. At the end of August 1941, Soviet intelligence sent GRU agent Anatoly Gurevich to Berlin to reestablish contact with Stöbe, but couldn't locate her. In May 1942, Bernhard Bästlein assisted Erna Eifler and Wilhelm Fellendorf who were Soviet agents who had parachuted into Germany in May 1942 with wireless telegraphy sets and been instructed to find Ilse Stöbe to re-establish communications. Eifler failed to contact Stöbe, who was then in Dresden. Eifler was arrested on 15 October and Fellendorf a short while later. Another Soviet agent, Heinrich Koenen, was dropped on 23 October in a third attempt to find Stöbe. Koenen was on a mission to pass all material that had been collected by Stöbe from von Scheliha, but he was arrested in Berlin on 26 October 1942. Shortly after von Scheliha had returned from Switzerland, Stöbe was arrested on 12 September, followed by von Scheliha on 29 October in the office of the Foreign Office's personnel director. ==Arrest and death==
Arrest and death
He was charged by the Second Senate of the Reichskriegsgericht (Reich Military Court) and falsely charged to have been a member of the Red Orchestra and sentenced to death on 14 December 1942 for "treason for money" (Landesverrat gegen Geld). At the trial conducted by Manfred Roeder, von Scheliha was described as a bon vivant whose need for money brought him into the sphere of Soviet intelligence resulting in him eventually becoming an informant, that led him to take considerable sums of money to betray German secrets. That statement is based on a 1954 affidavit written by Judge who was one of the presiding judges at von Scheliha's secret trial. He also stated that political considerations played no part in the trial. The supposed evidence for von Scheliha's arrest was a payment slip found in the pocket of Heinrich Koenen. However, there was no evidence for connecting von Scheliha to the Red Orchestra, which was the supposed reason the death penalty. The indictment, Gestapo files, the court testimonies, the judgement and the reasons for the judgement have not been found, so it impossible to determine if the verdict was correct. Ulrich Sahm believes that von Scheliha was arrested and tried, so as to remove a politically dangerous anti-nazi, who by 1942 was seen as an enemy of the Nazi state. In a written statement of 12 July 1952, judge and diplomat stated that von Scheliha was tortured by the Gestapo to obtain a confession and believed that he wasn't allowed a defence lawyer during trial. Another person who attended the trial was the Foreign Office legal representative . After the war, he informed the director of personnel at Foreign Office, Hans Schroeder (who wasn't allowed to attend), that he considered the sentence as effectively "judicial murder". At best, von Scheliha should have been subject to an internal disciplinary hearing at the Foreign Office as the only thing they could prove was a dalliance with Ilse Stöbe. Simply, there was no evidence for the death penalty sentence. On 22 December 1942, he was executed by hanging in Plötzensee Prison. His wife, Marie Louise, was arrested on 22 December 1942 and taken to the women's prison in Charlottenburg. There, she was repeatedly interrogated and threatened but released on 6 November 1943. In the last days of the war, she fled with her daughters to Niederstetten via Prague. In Haltenbergstetten Castle, the former castle of the principality of Hohenlohe-Jagstberg, the family lived in a cellar mainly on mushrooms, berries and fruit. ==Reappraisal==
Reappraisal
at Wilhelmstraße 92 in Mitte, Berlin, the former headquarters of the Federal Foreign Office In West German historiography, in particular by the German historians Hans Rothfels, Peter Hoffman and the Dutch historian , von Scheliha was not seen as a resistance fighter but as a spy for the Soviet services. In the process, the acts of interrogation and the Gestapo records continued to be uncritically classified as "sources" that were adopted by journalists and historians, to which former Nazi prosecutors such as Manfred Roeder and , the former president of the Second Senate of the Reichskriegsgericht, contributed after 1945. ==Reparations==
Reparations
In 1952, Von Scheliha's widow Marie Louise von Scheliha applied for compensation but was refused as her husband was not classified as a resistance fighter, but as a traitor. The Foreign Office adopted this attitude and for more than 50 years it refused to recognise Von Scheliha due to the findings of the 1942 Gestapo investigation. This was illustrated on 20 July 1961, when the Foreign Office in Bonn commemorated eleven of its employees, who were executed as resistance fighters, with a plaque, including Albrecht Graf von Bernstorff, Ulrich von Hassell, Adam von Trott zu Solz and Friedrich-Werner Graf von der Schulenburg. Von Scheliha was not mentioned because he continued to pass on information to the Soviet Union, which was considered a betrayal. In 1956, Marie Louise von Scheliha petitioned the West German president Theodor Heuss who granted her a "revocable maintenance contribution amounting to the legal widow's daily needs". The size of the contribution left her impoverished at the same time as widows of Nazis prosecutors had received full pension rights. In 1993, Von Scheliha made a request to the Württemberg State Office for a full pension benefits and was again refused as Rudolf von Scheliha has been subject to a "proper trial". ==Trial==
Trial
From the mid-80's onwards, the retired diplomat Ulrich Sahm campaigned to rehabilitate von Scheliha. It wasn't until 1990, that he was rehabilitated in the eyes of historians with the publication of Sahm's meticulously researched book, "Rudolf von Scheliha 1897–1942. Ein deutscher Diplomat gegen Hitler" (Rudolf von Scheliha 1897-1942: A German diplomat against Hitler). Sahm reframes von Scheliha as a "daring and honourable resistance fighter". The release of the book was the likely basis for the 8th Chamber of (reference number 8K 5055/94), to rule on 25 October 1995 that Scheliha had been sentenced to death not for espionage but in a sham trial for his opposition to Nazism, which overturned the 1942 verdict and legally rehabilitated von Scheliha. The court ruled that von Scheliha has acted out of ideological motives, not for monetary reasons, i.e. "Scheliha had been persecuted because of his political opposition". According to witness statements and Sahm's historical research it was proved that von Scheliha did not even know that the information he had passed on to Ilse Stöbe and Rudolf Herrnstadt had been passed on to the Soviet Union. This proved that it was inconceivable that he committed "paid treason". ==Awards and honours==
Awards and honours
On 21 December 1995 at the Foreign Office, in a ceremony with State Secretary , attached an additional board with the inscription "Rudolf von Scheliha 1897–1942". On 18 July 2000 in a ceremony at the new Foreign Office in Berlin, both boards were brought together and the names listed in the sequence of death dates. Von Scheliha's name leads the list. On 9 July 2014 Ilse Stöbe received the same honour at the Foreign Office. ==Odonymy==
Odonymy
In Neuallermöhe, a street was named in memory of von Scheliha on 5 May 1997. There is a street in Gotha named Schelihastraße, but is named after the Oberhofmeister Ludwig Albert von Scheliha, who owned a large garden plot on the street on which the Protestant church stands today. ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com