Edelweiss Pirates: The Anti-Hitler Youth

by Accidental Talmudist

Barthel Schink was a German teenager who led a resistance movement of Hitler Youth dropouts who fought Nazi tyranny.

Born to a postal worker and a homemaker in Cologne in 1927, Barthel was one of five children. Like millions of other young Germans he was conscripted into the Hitler Youth, the only legally permitted youth group in the country (the Boy Scouts were banned in 1935.)  Membership was mandatory for Aryan boys, even if their parents objected. Parents were informed that children who didn’t join would be taken from their homes and placed in orphanages. There was a similar youth organization for girls, but the focus was on turning young boys into eager warriors for their Fuhrer.

By 1940, the paramilitary group had eight million members, all of whom were being brainwashed in weekly meetings and rallies to support Nazi ideology.

The brainwashing did not work on Barthel. He was uncomfortable with the forced conformity and militaristic ideology of the Hitler Youth movement. He started getting together for hikes and bike rides with other disaffected Hitler Youth who, like Barthel, had a moral compass and critical thinking skills.They called themselves the Edelweiss Pirates, named for the Edelweiss badges they wore on their jackets. A sturdy flower that grew in the Alps, the Edelweiss became a symbol of resistance. Something of a street gang, these working-class teenagers had long hair and wore colorful clothing that set them apart from the somber, bland attire of the Hitler Youth. They listened to and sang “unapproved” music by Jewish composers, a crime punishable by arrest. The Pirates appreciated the freedom that came with breaking the Hitler Youth’s restrictive rules, but Barthel wanted to do more than have a good time. He wanted to fight the Nazi regime.

Under Barthel’s leadership, the Pirates started playing “pranks” like pouring sugar water into the gas tanks of Nazi vehicles. They spray-painted walls and buildings in the dead of night with slogans such as “Down with Hitler” and “No More Nazi Brutality.” Their motto was “Eternal War on the Hitler Youth.”

The grass-roots movement spread throughout Germany, with Edelweiss Pirate cells in major cities like Dusseldorf, Hamburg, Frankfurt and Leipzig. They were able to identify each other because of the Edelweiss pin and their noncomformist style of dress. The largest group was Barthel’s crew in Cologne. Some of the boys dropped out of school to avoid conscription in the Hitler Youth, and they got jobs in factories or mills.

The Pirates’ anti-Nazi activities escalated from attacking Hitler Youth patrols to stealing from Nazi supply lines, looting Nazi warehouses, and dropping anti-Nazi leaflets in city centers. They committed brazen acts of sabotage such as derailing train cars and disrupting Nazi supply chains. They wanted to join the Allied forces to fight Nazis on the battlefield. When Pirates were captured their heads were shaved to humiliate them, then they were beaten and sent to reform schools, psych wards, or labor camps. Despite the danger, some Edelweiss Pirates groups shielded German deserters and escaped labor camp prisoners.

In July 1944, Barthel and several other Pirates were arrested for planning to blow up a Gestapo headquarters in Cologne. They were imprisoned and tortured for four months. On November 10, 1944, a gallows was set up on a public thoroughfare in Cologne. Barthel Schink and four other teen Edelweiss Pirates, along with seven adult members of the anti-Nazi resistance, were hanged in front of hundreds of Nazis. Barthel was 16 years old.

Israeli Holocaust Memorial Yad Vashem honored the Edelweiss Pirates as Righteous Among the Nations in 1998, but their story has not been widely known. Female Pirate Gertrud Koch, who survived the war, explained to a reporter, “We were from the working classes. That is the main reason why we have only now been recognized. After the war there were no judges in Germany so the old Nazi judges were used and they upheld the criminalization of what we did and who we were.” Gertrud spent decades urging the German government to recognize the Pirates’ heroism, and finally in 2005 they were “politically rehabilitated.” Their criminal status was invalidated and they were officially honored as resistance fighters and heroes. The street where the public execution took places has been named Schink Strasse and there is a plaque recognizing Berthel and the other martyred Edelweiss Pirates.

Why We Remember the Holocaust

This video provides an overview of the Holocaust, Days of Remembrance, and why we as a nation remember this history.

Estelle Laughlin, Holocaust Survivor:
Memory is what shapes us. Memory is what teaches us. We must understand that’s where our redemption is.

[Text on screen] Between 1933 and 1945, the German government, led by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, carried out the systematic persecution of and murder of Europe’s Jews. This genocide is now known as the Holocaust. The Nazi regime also persecuted and killed millions of other people it considered politically, racially, or socially unfit. The Allies’ victory ended World War II, but Nazi Germany and its collaborators had left millions dead and countless lives shattered.

Sara Bloomfield, Director, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
I think the important thing to understand about this cataclysmic event is that it happened in the heart of Europe. Germany was respected around the world for its leading scientists, its physicians, its theologians. It was a very civilized, advanced country. It was a young democracy, but it was a democracy. And yet it descended not only into social collapse but world war and eventually mass murder.

Margit Meissner, Holocaust Survivor:
A strong man came to power in Germany whose ideas were that Germany has to create a national community, which would include only the Aryan race, which he considered superior, and all the people who did not belong to the Aryan race could be eliminated. With planning and propaganda, he was able to convince most of the German people to go along with him, insensitive to what happened to the Jews who had basically been their former neighbors. And he managed to build concentration camps and killing centers and finally gas chambers to annihilate six million Jews and at the same time also millions of others, murdered in a systematic, government-sponsored way.

Raye Farr, Film Curator, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
And it’s made up of so many people who participated in different ways, who made it possible.

Rev. Dr. Chris Leighton, Institute for Christian and Jewish Studies:
People who follow orders without question, bystanders who watch and do nothing, ordinary men and women simply going with the flow.

Raye Farr, Film Curator, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
The events and the results of the Holocaust were so devastating. It was an extreme that we can barely imagine.

Rev. Dr. Chris Leighton, Institute for Christian and Jewish Studies:
It’s so mind-boggling that the temptations to forget and to repress, to just put it out of mind, are very real.

Raye Farr, Film Curator, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
But we remember. We remember because it is an unthinkable scar on humanity. We need to understand what human beings are capable of.

Barack Obama, President of the United States:
We gather today to mourn the loss of so many lives and celebrate those who saved them, honor those who survived, and contemplate the obligations of the living.

Kadian Pow, Museum Educator, Smithsonian Institution:
Days of Remembrance is our nation’s annual commemoration of the Holocaust—this time that was both a blight on the history of humanity but also a shining moment for the people who were brave enough to put an end to it.

Sara Bloomfield, Director, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
We are remembering, first and foremost, all the victims, and that is not only the Jewish victims, but there were many non-Jewish victims. Of course, the Jews were the primary target.

Estelle Laughlin, Holocaust Survivor:
The millions of innocent people, including my family and friends, who were killed because they were of the wrong religion, because they had no means of protecting themselves.

Sara Bloomfield, Director, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
It’s also important to remember the rescuers. These were people who risked not only their own lives, sometimes the lives of their family, to save a fellow human being. And we also remember our American soldiers who were fighting to win World War II and in the course of that, liberated these concentration camps.

Col. Michael Underkofler, U.S. Air Force Reserve:
Those that arrived at the camps in 1945 and were just horrified at what they saw.

Carly Gjolaj, Museum Educator, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
And that was a huge task for the American soldiers: to help bring humanity back to these people who had been dehumanized for years, to give them medical care.

Lt. Col. Terrance Sanders, U.S. Army:
Looking back allows us to understand how important it is for us to serve in a country where we have the strength and the might and the will to defend those that are defenseless.

Rabbi M. Bruce Lustig, Washington Hebrew Congregation:
So Days of Remembrance is an opportunity for us to remember the suffering that was and the efforts that were made to put an end to such suffering, and it’s a call to conscience today in our world to make sure that we aren’t the silent ones standing by, contributing to the suffering of others.

Margit Meissner, Holocaust Survivor:
In 1945, at the end of the war, I would have thought that there would never be another Holocaust, that the world was so shocked by what had happened that the world would not permit that. And yet you see what happened in Bosnia, what happened in Rwanda, what happened in Darfur. So there’s still millions of people being persecuted because of their ethnicity.

Sara Bloomfield, Director, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
It’s really a moral challenge to us to do more in our own lives when we confront injustice or hatred or genocide.

Bridget Conley-Zilkic, Genocide Prevention Educator, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:
Those who suffered and died in the Holocaust, we can honor them today by not being silent. Remembering ties the past and the present together with a powerful, simple thread: “This is not right.”

Margit Meissner, Holocaust Survivor:
The important thing is that one should not become indifferent to the suffering of others, that one should not stand by and just raise one’s hands and say, “There’s nothing I can do, I’m just a little one person,” because I think what everyone of us does matters.

Estelle Laughlin, Holocaust Survivor:
That’s not enough to curse the darkness of the past. Above all, we have to illuminate the future. And I think that on the Day of Remembrance the most important thing is to remember the humanity that is in all of us to leave the world better for our children and for posterity.