
Otto Rahn Heinrich
Himmler The SS officer's
ring
HIMMLER AND OTTO RAHN'S
CATHARS
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nce a faithful Roman
Catholic, Heinrich Himmler rejected religion at about the time that a
parliamentary decree robbed him of his aristocratic title. Stripped of both his faith and social status
simultaneously, Himmler, like the fictional Dieter Bachman of The Blood Lance, threw himself
passionately into the Nazi cause. At the
same time he became interested in all aspects of the occult.
Himmler does not seem to have
been an especially brilliant man but he was educated, sophisticated, and
notoriously energetic. As the leader of
the SS, he oversaw the activities of the Gestapo; he ran the concentration
camps; he provided Hitler ultimately with twelve divisions of elite armoured
troops, and he built a massive civilian organisation devoted to German
culture. It oversimplifies matters to
suggest the SS was Hitler's Praetorian Guard, with Himmler in the role of
Tiberius' Prefect, Aelius Sejanus.
Likewise, it misses much of the complexity of the SS to say they are
like the Knights Templar of the Crusade era.
The similarities between the two organisations are probably not
accidental, but it was the civilian side of the SS that made the Order of the
Skull Himmler's own creation. It was
into the civilian branch of the SS that Himmler recruited Otto Rahn.
According to Rahn's account
of the matter, given to a friend during the 1936 Olympics, Himmler had read
Rahn's book and, as an anonymous patron, invited him to
Himmler's enthusiasm for the
book and it was significant—he promoted it amongst his staff as a 'must
read'—is perhaps to be seen in the coincidence of the Cathar ideal of
knighthood and Himmler's own developing vision for his SS. The ideal Cathar knight, as Rahn described
him, was expected to be accomplished in all aspects of human endeavour—not just
military prowess. In the mid-1930s
Himmler was developing an elite fighting force for Hitler, but those who wore
the ring of an SS officer were also expected to be gentlemen of intellectual
and artistic accomplishment as well. In
the early years, the SS had its pick of the military recruits, but Himmler
personally went out and recruited from the disenfranchised aristocracy and
moneyed classes. He also sought out
intellectuals from various disciplines who were sympathetic to the new
order. To serve in the SS was to embrace
a number of ideals. Some of these ideals
were eventually corrupted, and some were wrong-headed at the beginning.
In addition to the idealised
knighthood that Rahn described in the book, I expect Himmler was ultimately
drawn to Rahn's book because it presented a corrupt Papacy and a greedy French
monarchy. Against such villainy the
Cathars kept faith—choosing death by fire rather deny their faith.
The irony of all this is that what Otto Rahn admired the most in the Cathars was their liberality, especially their ability coexist and even intermingle with the Jews; this in stark contrast to medieval society in general. Himmler seems not to have noticed this aspect of the book, or perhaps he wrote it off as a minor flaw in an otherwise inspiring book.