Book description
Herman Rothman arrived in Britain from Germany as a Jewish refugee
in 1939, on the eve of the Second World War. He volunteered for HM
Forces, serving in the Intelligence Corps, and in 1945 was posted to
Westertimke and Fallingbostel prisoner of war camps to interrogate
high-ranking Nazi war criminals. When papers were discovered sewn into
the shoulders of a jacket belonging to Heinz Lorenz, who had been
Joseph Goebbels' press secretary, he and a team of four others were
charged with translating them under conditions of the deepest secrecy.
The documents turned out to be the originals of Hitler's personal and
political wills, and Goebbels' addendum. Later, in Rotenburg hospital,
Rothman interrogated Hermann Karnau, who had been a police guard in
Hitler's bunker, to establish informaiton about the Fuhrer's death.
'Hitler's Will' is the amazing true story of Herman Rothman's
remarkable life, including how he managed to escape from Nazi Germany
before the War began, and his role in bringing to light Hitler's
personal and political testaments.