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Maser's wild speculation seriously.<br />

<strong>Adolf</strong>'s father, the Customs <strong>of</strong>ficer Alois <strong>Hitler</strong>, orig<strong>in</strong>ated<br />

from the Austrian forests, close to the Czechoslovakian<br />

border, where even a fox and a hare live <strong>in</strong> peace together.<br />

He studied to be a shoemaker, but did not pursue this trade<br />

for long. However, at age <strong>of</strong> eighteen, he jo<strong>in</strong>ed a<br />

promis<strong>in</strong>g f<strong>in</strong>ancial enterprise <strong>in</strong> Vienna which ran quite<br />

well. He was an <strong>in</strong>telligent lad whose frequent promotions<br />

changed his position. K<strong>in</strong>dheartedly he boarded thirteen<br />

year old niece, Klara Poelzl, who also came from his village.<br />

Later, when his second wife was dy<strong>in</strong>g, he got Klara<br />

pregnant and after that she became his third wife. She<br />

gave him six children, but only two survived: <strong>Adolf</strong> and the<br />

younger sister Paula. When her brother became successful,<br />

she managed one <strong>of</strong> his households. Occasional bus<strong>in</strong>ess<br />

trips <strong>of</strong> the Imperial Royal Customs Officer Alois <strong>Hitler</strong> to<br />

Vienna resulted mostly <strong>in</strong> illegitimate children <strong>of</strong> his - <strong>in</strong><br />

those days a very liberal city.<br />

In 1936, <strong>in</strong> Switzerland, <strong>Hitler</strong>'s biographer Konrad Heiden<br />

revealed about this Austrian part <strong>of</strong> the forest that one <strong>of</strong><br />

Fuehrer's ancestors on his mother's side was Johann<br />

Salomon, and that it "has been proven that many Jewish<br />

<strong>Hitler</strong>s lived there," and that the "Rosalie Mueller, maiden<br />

name Huettler, is written on a tombstone <strong>in</strong> a Jewish<br />

cemetery <strong>in</strong> Polna." After annexation <strong>of</strong> Austria <strong>in</strong>to<br />

Germany, one <strong>of</strong> the first moves <strong>Hitler</strong> made was to make<br />

all the villages and cemeteries with the names <strong>of</strong> his<br />

ancestors disappear, and <strong>in</strong> their place were established<br />

military tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g grounds.<br />

<strong>Hitler</strong>'s mother, who <strong>of</strong>ten called her husband "Uncle<br />

Alois" was quiet and modest. She went along with<br />

everyth<strong>in</strong>g, even with the move to L<strong>in</strong>zstrasse <strong>in</strong> Braunau<br />

soon after the baby was born. She knew the rout<strong>in</strong>e: before<br />

the wall paper <strong>in</strong> one apartment dried out, her Alois was<br />

ready to move to another. The new apartments were mostly<br />

darker and moister, but for him the ma<strong>in</strong> reason for change<br />

was to move on and on. This time they moved to the border<br />

town <strong>of</strong> Passau, where the Austrian Customs Office had its<br />

branch on the Imperial-German soil. They did not anticipate<br />

to stay there for long and therefore moved their boy <strong>Adolf</strong>,<br />

not yet <strong>of</strong> a school age speak<strong>in</strong>g Bavarian slang (Inset: High<br />

German dialect close to "yidish daytsh", i.e., Yiddish), to the<br />

city <strong>of</strong> L<strong>in</strong>z which he loved all his life very much.<br />

When Alois retired, he bought a house on a farmland <strong>in</strong><br />

Hafel at the River Traun, and at this quiet spot with a creek,<br />

between L<strong>in</strong>z and Salzburg, he raised bees and was a good<br />

neighbor. When all the furniture had been put <strong>in</strong> place, he<br />

sold the property and moved to the nearby town <strong>of</strong><br />

Lambach. First <strong>in</strong>to the house No. 58. Later he rented a<br />

space <strong>in</strong> a smith mill which belonged to the miller Zoebl.<br />

Soon his son became <strong>of</strong> school age and was taken <strong>in</strong> by<br />

the closest one-grade village school <strong>in</strong> Fischlham. He was<br />

very good <strong>in</strong> draw<strong>in</strong>g. Besides he sang loudly and<br />

expressively. In this way the Lambach Sem<strong>in</strong>ary acquired a<br />

new choir student.<br />

13

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