More about Bryan Mark Rigg and his research experiences:
What
sparked Bryan's interest in this subject?
Raised as a Protestant in the Texas Bible Belt, Bryan Mark
Rigg was surprised to learn of his own Jewish ancestry while
researching his family tree in Germany. This revelation, as well
as a chance encounter with a Jewish veteran of the Wehrmacht
at a Berlin screening of Europa Europa, roused
him to embark on a decade of research while a student first at
Yale University and later at Cambridge University. Hitler's
Jewish Soldiers: The Untold Story of Nazi Racial Laws and Men
of Jewish Descent in the German Military is the result of
his efforts.
How did he conduct his research?
Crisscrossing Germany by bicycle, and carrying his own supplies--including
backpack, video-camera, tripod, laptop, books, and documents--Bryan
located and interviewed more than four hundred Mischlinge (partial
Jews as labeled under Hitler's racial laws) and their relatives
and friends. His quest also took him to Sweden, Canada, Israel,
and Turkey. In addition, he scrupulously labored to provide documentary
evidence to support the findings from each oral history.
His interviewees have included former chancellor of Germany
Helmut Schmidt, Adenauer's Secretary of State Hans von Herwarth,
Bundesgeschäftsführer of the Social Democratic Party
of Germany Egon Bahr, Field Marshal Erich von Manstein's adjutant
Alexander Stahlberg, and Colonel Claus Schenk Graf van Stauffenberg's
adjutant Horst von Oppenfeld.
How did his subjects react to his interest in them?
Although earning trust was often challenging and some men
refused to speak with Bryan, he also encountered many who were
grateful for the opportunity at last to discuss this part of
their lives in war. In some cases the men's families knew little
or nothing of their hidden religious heritage. In a 1996 London
Telegraph article concerning his research efforts, Bryan
described these men who are at the heart of his work: "They
don't know where they stand. There is no place for them to tell
their story. No one thought it was an issue, and neither side
wants to claim them."
What is the Bryan Mark Rigg Collection?
An unprecedented and invaluable result of Bryan's efforts
to record the stories of these men has been his success in gathering
over 30,000 pages of records, more than 500 hours of videotaped
interviews, and 3,000 photographs that document the military
experiences of the mischlinge and Jews that he met. In 1997,
the Federal German Military Archives purchased what is now called
the Bryan Mark Rigg Collection, and these materials are now housed
in the Bundesarchiv in Freiburg.
What are some of his other experiences and interests?
In addition to his extensive research travel, Bryan has also
engaged in humanitarian work in Romania, Bulgaria, the Bahamas,
South Africa, and France. His efforts included developing a church
network, caring for and educating children and adults, building
a church and a baptistery, and even working as a mime. He has
served in a Volunteer Unit in the Israeli Army, and as an officer
in the U.S. Marine Corps. He presently lives in Texas with his
wife and daughter and is Professor of History at American
Military University.
If you wish to contact Bryan Mark Rigg, he can be reached
at Bryan.Rigg@aya.yale.edu.
Return to Hitler's Jewish Soldiers
book description page.
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