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==