by Chris Hale (Author)
In 1938, on the eve of war, a Nazi expedition set out through British India on a mission sponsored by Himmler himself. Their aim was to find the roots of the Aryan people, high in the sacred mountains of Tibet. It was led by two complex individuals - one, Ernst Schafer, a swashbuckling naturalist who was using the Nazis to pursue his own ends, the other, Bruno Beger, so committed to the cause he ended up conducting experiments on prisoners in Auschwitz. The expedition quickly found itself battling hostility from the British, being manipulated by the Tibetans and struggling with the primitive conditions of Lhasa. Every step was recorded in diaries, letters and reports back to Delhi and London by the suspicious British, and to Berlin by the Germans. It was also documented in masses of extraordinary photographs, many of which are reproduced here for the first time in decades. This first encounter between the British and the Nazis so close to World War II sheds interesting new light on the history of the Third Reich. At the same time, it aims to demonstrate the Nazis' ideological obsession with racial theory and the occult, and Himmler's bizarre view of the world from his sinister, fantasy castle at Wewelsburg. Although mentioned in other books, the full story of Schafer's ill-fated expedition has never been told. Chris Hale uses the wealth of source material, and interviewing war criminal Bruno Beger for the first time in recent years. Himmler's Crusade is fascinating and horrific. It provides an unusual insight into the workings of Nazism, and so into the most important period in 20th-century history.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 432
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Bantam Press
Published: 04 Aug 2003
ISBN 10: 0593049527
ISBN 13: 9780593049525