There is no doubt that Ley saw the Third Reich as being the saviour of European culture, particularly holding back Communism.
Sitting in a prison cell, no doubt he was worried about the Russian presence on the upcoming tribunal, and suspecting that the Russians had no sympathies for Germans and no appreciation for culture at all.
Perhaps in writing this, he was sharing his hope that the American, British and French presence on the tribunal could offset Soviet pressure, which he no doubt deemed disgusting and filthy, and that some semblance of 'culture' could be preserved once all was said and done. No doubt he thought of the western victors as 'civilized', and the Russians as 'uncivilized'.
Reports are, that when Ley was told (probably AFTER he wrote on this card) that *he* was to be charged with war crimes, he was simply overwhelmed and shocked because he thought of himself tied more to culture than to any dirty things that happened in the exercise of the war. And it was this which led him to commit suicide rather than face something he thought was so unfair.
Sitting in a prison cell, no doubt he was worried about the Russian presence on the upcoming tribunal, and suspecting that the Russians had no sympathies for Germans and no appreciation for culture at all.
Perhaps in writing this, he was sharing his hope that the American, British and French presence on the tribunal could offset Soviet pressure, which he no doubt deemed disgusting and filthy, and that some semblance of 'culture' could be preserved once all was said and done. No doubt he thought of the western victors as 'civilized', and the Russians as 'uncivilized'.
Reports are, that when Ley was told (probably AFTER he wrote on this card) that *he* was to be charged with war crimes, he was simply overwhelmed and shocked because he thought of himself tied more to culture than to any dirty things that happened in the exercise of the war. And it was this which led him to commit suicide rather than face something he thought was so unfair.
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