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For Austria, A Tough Choice On What To Do With Hitler's Birthplace

Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in an upstairs apartment of this house in the Austrian town of Braunau am Inn, near the border with Germany.
Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson
/
NPR
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in an upstairs apartment of this house in the Austrian town of Braunau am Inn, near the border with Germany.

The question of what to do with Adolf Hitler's birth house has plagued his home country of Austria for decades.

If it were up to the government in Vienna, authorities would simply tear it down. That's what Germany did more than a quarter-century ago to the Berlin bunker where Hitler committed suicide in 1945. The site is now covered by a parking lot, with a plain plaque providing the only hint of what used to be there.

But many Austrians disagree with taking that approach to Hitler's birth house, including some residents of the Fuehrer's hometown, Braunau am Inn, near Salzburg.

"It's a hot topic," says Barbara Ebener, editorial director at the local weekly newspaper, BezirksRundschau. "If this house is torn down, people don't want it left empty. And if it isn't left empty, the question is — will what goes up there instead be acceptable?"

This jagged stone in front of Adolf Hitler's birth house in Branau am Inn comes from the former Mauthausen concentration camp, a 90-minute drive away. The inscription reads: "For peace, freedom and democracy. Never again fascism. Millions dead are a warning."
Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson / NPR
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NPR
This jagged stone in front of Adolf Hitler's birth house in Branau am Inn comes from the former Mauthausen concentration camp, a 90-minute drive away. The inscription reads: "For peace, freedom and democracy. Never again fascism. Millions dead are a warning."

Few people in this picturesque town, in walking distance from the German border, are willing to talk to NPR about the building Ebener says many would rather forget.

An exception is 87-year-old native Luise Keuschnig. She bristles over the Interior Ministry's plans to seize the three-story building from its elderly owner, Gerlinde Pommer. "Personal property is personal property," Keuschnig says. "The house is part of the town's landscape."

NPR couldn't reach Pommer for comment. By many accounts here, she inherited the property from her mother, from whom the house had been seized once before — by the Nazis during Hitler's rule. They turned the cream-colored home on the edge of the old town into a cherished monument.

That's the opposite of what the current Austrian government is looking to do with the nearly three-century-old building. Interior Ministry spokesman Karl-Heinz Grundboeck said the government's goal is to make sure the house doesn't become a shrine for neo-Nazis.

Adolf Hitler enters the city limits of Vienna, Austria, on Mar. 14, 1938.
/ AP
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AP
Adolf Hitler enters the city limits of Vienna, Austria, on Mar. 14, 1938.

"There is a certain mystification of this building under the Nazi ideology," he says. "Therefore it was very important for the Interior Ministry to guarantee that nothing would happen there in this building that could support Nazi ideology in any way."

For the past 44 years, the ministry rented the structure from Pommer and eventually turned it into a daycare center for people with special needs. But the government and owner repeatedly clashed over required renovations. The center shut down and moved elsewhere five years ago, Grundboeck says, though the government continued to pay rent on the building.

"We elaborated a number of concepts and discussed with the private owner on how again we could make use" of it, he says. "And the discussion became more and more complicated."

He says the impasse eventually led to the ministry's decision to seize the property. At first, officials simply planned to tear it down, which met with resistance from some historians and many Austrians, including townsfolk. Grundboeck says the current plan, after the government takes over ownership, is to appoint a committee to decide how to rebuild it so that it will look completely different than it does now.

Under current Austrian law, the ministry can't apply eminent domain — seizing private property for public use, with compensation — because it doesn't cover seizing historic property because the history is objectionable. So the ministry appealed to Austria's parliament, and last week, a committee approved a draft bill forcing Pommer to sell Hitler's birth house to the government. How much she would get for the sale of the house is unclear.

The final approval could come from the parliament as early as January, says Braunau Deputy Mayor Christian Schilcher. He says Pommer, whom he talks to on occasion, isn't happy about what the Austrian government is doing.

Schilcher isn't happy, either — he fears this will set a precedent leading to more private property being taken by the government against people's will.

"We are opening Pandora's box," he says. "This could launch something that we won't be able to put the brakes on."

Schilcher, a member of the populist Freedom Party of Austria, also disputes the Interior Ministry's claim that the birth house could become a magnet for neo-Nazis. When people come to look at the house, he says, they're usually tourists.

Branau am Inn Deputy Mayor Christian Schilcher says he worries the Austrian government's plan to seize Hitler's birth house from its elderly owner will "open Pandora's box" to more seizures of private property outside existing eminent domain laws.
Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson / NPR
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NPR
Branau am Inn Deputy Mayor Christian Schilcher says he worries the Austrian government's plan to seize Hitler's birth house from its elderly owner will "open Pandora's box" to more seizures of private property outside existing eminent domain laws.

Ilja Sichrovsky, an Austrian who founded the Muslim Jewish Conference, an educational nonprofit in Vienna, is disappointed in the government's plans, but for different reasons.

"This is a huge chance for an educational institution, a huge chance for a physical landmark which can be combined with a whole concept of understanding about what happened here, about the social and political dynamics that started in Braunau and took off from there," he says. "There might be neo-Nazis coming there and worshiping the place, so think about it — what are you going to do with it, what are your strategies to face that?"

Instead, he says, "The only solution is, 'Oh my God, we don't know what to do with it, let's tear it down, let's do nothing with it.' "

One thing the Interior Ministry's Grundboeck says the Austrian government has no intention of removing is a jagged stone memorial to the victims of Adolf Hitler in front of the house.

It came from the former Mauthausen concentration camp, about 80 miles away, and is inscribed with a warning: "For peace, freedom and democracy. Never again fascism. Millions dead are a warning."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson
Special correspondent Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson is based in Berlin. Her reports can be heard on NPR's award-winning programs, including Morning Edition and All Things Considered, and read at NPR.org. From 2012 until 2018 Nelson was NPR's bureau chief in Berlin. She won the ICFJ 2017 Excellence in International Reporting Award for her work in Central and Eastern Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and Afghanistan.