Willi Graf was born in
Kuchenheim near
Euskirchen. In 1922, his family moved to
Saarbrücken, where his father ran a wine wholesaler and managed the Johannishof, the second largest banquet hall in the city. Graf attended school at the
Ludwigs gymnasium. It was not long before he joined, at the age of eleven, the
Bund Neudeutschland, a
Catholic youth movement for young men in schools of higher learning, which was banned after Hitler and the Nazis
came to power in 1933. In 1934, Graf joined the
Grauer Orden ("Grey Order"), another Catholic movement which became known for its anti-Nazi rhetoric. It, too, was banned and for this reason, it formed many splinter youth groups. Graf showed conviction in his beliefs from a young age. Although compulsory at the time, he refused to associate with the
Hitler Youth, even when he was threatened with becoming ineligible to go to University unless he joined the Hitler Youth. While his parents never placed much emphasis on literature and written works (the only books the family owned were religious books), Graf was a voracious reader. Serious and intelligently minded, he enjoyed reading Christian works, with one of his favorite Christian authors being
Romano Guardini, one of the leading figures of the liturgical revival of the Catholic Church in Germany. He conducted an in-depth study of Christian authors in his teenage years, with a special focus on works by Romano Guardini. He also enjoyed reading poetry, foreign works, and works banned by the Nazis. Throughout his life, books were a lifeline for him: When he was serving on the
Eastern Front, he would write to his friends to see if they could send him more books. In the last year of his life alone he read forty books. ==Arrest==