Abstract
On the evening of November 8, 1939, a bomb exploded in Munich’s
Bürgerbräukeller [Citizens’ Beer
Hall] during a celebration marking the 16th anniversary of Hitler's Beer
Hall Putsch. Several people were killed or injured. Hitler himself was
not hurt. He had left the event a few minutes earlier than planned.
Georg Elsner, the perpetrator of the attack, equipped the bomb with a
timer and placed it behind the speaker’s lectern in a pillar that he
spent weeks hollowing out. Elsner had been linked to a few Communist
organizations in the 1920s, but was acting alone in this instance. By
assassinating Hitler, he hoped not only to kill one man but to destroy
the entire Nazi regime, a dictatorship he had strongly opposed for years
on political and moral grounds. Elsner was arrested that very same
evening and put into "protective custody." He was shot to
death in Dachau on April 9, 1945. By then, Hitler had survived a series
of assassination attempts, mainly by lone individuals. Nazi propaganda
exploited these attempts by presenting them as evidence of Hitler's
enjoyment of divine protection.