Thursday, November 22, 2012

TRILOBITES AND TRAGEDY IN THE THIRD REICH




Trilobites are one of the few groups of fossil invertebrates that are easily recognized by the public.  For some 270,000,000 years (from the early Cambrian until the cataclysmic global extinction event at the end of the Permian) they crawled, swam, and burrowed in the oceans of planet Earth. As arthropods they had a hard exoskeleton that was shed many times throughout their life, giving them a remarkably rich fossil record. 


Neoasaphus (right) with eyes on the tops of stalks and Walliserops a spiny trilobite from Morocco

Global in distribution, trilobites filled many niches in ancient marine ecosystems.  Burrowers might be blind or have eyes perched on stalks to look around while most of the body remained hidden in soft sediments on the ocean floor. Some trilobites were smooth and almost featureless while other were covered with large spines.

Opipeuterella, a giant-eyed planktonic species

Some small ones had immense compound eyes that completely wrapped around their heads, cyclopean-like.  These were pelagic species floating in surface waters, where good vision helped both in finding food and avoiding predators.

The smallest trilobites were just  one millimeter long (3/64 of an inch) while the behemoth Isotelus rex reached a whopping 70 cm (28 inches).

Trilobite colossi. A) Isotelus brachycephalus. B) Acadoparadoxides briareas. C) Terataspis grandis. D) Uralichus hispaniscus. E) Isotelus rex.

 
Because of their abundance, diversity, and distribution, trilobites have long attracted scientific attention.  Over 20,000 species have been described to date and many new species are still discovered every year. The earliest report of a trilobite in a scientific journal is that of  Edward Lhwyd, who in 1698 published an etching of  a specimen, of  what is now known as Ogygiocarella, misidentified as “…. the skeleton of some flat Fish….” 

Lhwyd's 1698 flatfish.

Tens of thousands of scientific papers on trilobites have been published since that beginning and paleontologists have long studied evolution using trilobite fossils.

 A PALEONTOLOGIST OF GREAT PROMISE

Dr. Rudolf Kaufmann
 Rudolf Kaufmann was born in 1909 in East Prussia. He attended university and was well trained as a geologist and paleontologist.  He is best known for his work on the evolution of the primitive trilobite Olenus, a common fossil in the Cambrian alum shales in Sweden.  He collected many specimens at closely spaced intervals through a great thickness of shale. He developed a special device to measure morphological features on these specimens and was able to elucidate which features were relatively stable and which varied and changed over time. He showed that species were evolving through small but consistent trends in variation over time until another species invaded from outside the area, replaced those species, and then repeated the pattern.  Kauffman named this evolutionary phenomenon Artabwandlung but today it is known scientifically as allopatric speciation and punctuated equilibrium.   

A page from Kaufmann's Ph.D. Dissertation.
Kaufmann’s innovative studies, involving careful measurement, large collections, and careful field observations produced results that are still, with some modification, valid today. Kaufmann was a far seeing scientist  well ahead of his time.  Unfortunately, he published his trilobite studies in the proceedings of the Greifswald Geological and Paleontological Institute.  Because of the journal’s small circulation it remained little known in the wider scientific community.  But clearly he had a bright and successful scientific career ahead of him. 

ONCE A JEW ALWAYS A JEW

Anti-semitism was a fundamental and guiding principle of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party.  The Nazis were not unique in their anti-semitism,  anti-jewish feelings were strong and widespread in Germany (and elsewhere) in the late 19th and early 20th century.  The difference is that after seizing power in 1933 the Nazi party was able and willing to develop social and political policy based on make these feelings and put that policy into practice. 


Many laws restricting the rights of Jews followed the Nazi ascension.  The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour of Sept 15 1935 stipulated, among other things, that

“I.1: Marriages between Jews and citizens of German or kindred blood are forbidden.  Marriages concluded in defiance of this law are void …. [even if] they were concluded abroad.”

 “II. Sexual relations outside marriage between Jews and nationals of German or kindred blood are forbidden.

The latter is even more ominous that it sounds, because for a Jew a kiss, or even a hug, with a “German or kindred blood” could be construed as a sexual activity sufficient for prosecution.



Who was a Jew was legally clarified in the First Supplementary Decree of the Reich Citizenship Law of 14 November 1935

“IV.1. A Jew cannot be a citizen of the Reich.”

“V.2. A Jew is anyone who is descended from at least three grandparents who are racially full Jews.”

Such strictures were widely accepted, and even welcomed, by the citizenry.  Even churches leaped on the bandwagon of Jew-hating. In 1938 Bishop Weidemann of Bremen dedicated two new churches, each bearing the following inscription inside “Church of Thanks, out of gratitude to God for the wonderful salvation of our Volk from the abyss of Jewish-materialistic Bolshevism through the deed of the Fuhrer, built in the year of our Lord 1938, in the sixth year of the National Socialist revolution.”

Since the term “Jew” was a racial concept to the Nazis, and not a cultural or religious one, the view was that once a Jew, always a Jew.  Thus, baptism and conversion from Judaism to Christianity was rejected outright. A sign hung up in the town of Lippe stated it clearly “Baptism may be quite useful, but it cannot straighten a nose.”

All this would spell catastrophe for Kaufmann. 


SCIENTIFIC STRUGGLES IN NAZI GERMANY

In 1933 Kauffman completed and published his Ph.D. Dissertation “Study of the Statistics of Variation Through Modification and Transformation of Species in the Upper Cambrian Trilobite Genus Olenus Dalm.” This was only a few months before the start of the Nazi regime and he settled into a position at Greifswald University. However, Kauffman was “only” a second generation Christian. Born to Christian parents, he had been baptized an evangelical Christian. But he was of Jewish descent so his family’s conversion and baptism now counted for nothing. He would never find a position in Nazi Germany and Jewish scientists without substantial experience were not wanted abroad via emigration. 

He was dismissed from Greifswald in 1933 and left for Copenhagen. While denied a scientific career there, he was able to support himself through his hobbies as a photographer and a certified sports and athletics instructor. As conditions in Copenhagen deteriorated he migrated to Italy where in the summer of 1935 he met Ingeborg Magnusson, a 28 year old Swedish citizen vacationing in Italy.  They fell madly in love, a romance that lasted six years.  However, because of the onerous restrictions placed on Jews in Germany and German controlled territory, Rudolf and Ingeborg would only spend 13 days of those years together.

Ingeborg Magnusson
 
In 1935 Kaufmann returned to Germany to teach biology, geography, physics, art, and gymnastics at the Preacher Hirsch Boarding School, a Jewish school where, ironically, being an evangelical Christian didn’t matter.  Over time Rudolf grew closer to Judaism, not as a religion, but as a realization that it was the only group that would accept him, even though he did not renounce his Christianity. But life was different now and his past friends and scientific colleagues avoided him. The Preacher School was in the city of Coburg --- the first German city to elect a Nazi as mayor and that as early as 1929.  He continued to seek employment as a geologist, but to no avail. However, he and Ingeborg continued to write lovingly to one another and from time to time they were able to meet outside of Germany to spend a few fleeting days together.


DISASTER

In May of 1936 Kaufmann attended a local dance for relaxation and there met a young widow from Neues.  They struck up a friendship that led, in a weak moment, to a sexual liaison.  Later Rudolph realized that he has contracted a venereal disease.  While seeking medical treatment from a local doctor specializing in venereal diseases Kauffman revealed who infected him --- a fatal mistake.  The doctor knew that Kaufmann was legally a Jew and that the woman was of German blood. Both Rudolf and the woman were arrested. 

On August 1 1936 the local Cosburg newspaper Bayerische Ostmark – Coburg Natinalzeitung carried the story:

ARRESTED FOR OFFENSES AGAINST THE RACE LAWS. TYPICAL CASE OF JEWISH EFFRONTERY IN COBURG

27-year-old Jewish athletics teacher Rudolf Kaufmann, of Coburg, has been arrested for contravention of Paragraphs 2 and 5 of the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor.”

The woman, viewed as a victim of Jewish deception because Kauffman didn’t identify himself as a Jew and “didn’t look Jewish”, was released. Kauffman was put on trial and in December was sentenced to three years in prison and five years revocation of his civil rights. Kauffman, in a letter to Ingeborg, confessed to his one true love what has happened and concluded his letter with “Forget me because I have brought shame on you and everyone.” Remarkably, Inge forgave Rudolf and continued writing to him, even hoping to find some way to have him come to Sweden.


TRILOBITES IN PRISON

While Rudolf was held in the Coburg jail pending the appeal of his case,  he turned again to his beloved trilobite fossils, writing to Inge:

Yes, it’s really true, I’m immersed in trilobites again, and am fascinated by them.  I am writing a new essay in which I put my statistical findings about trilobites to theoretical use.  It’s primarily in answer to the work of a German  geologist in Berlin, confirming it….I have been writing full speed ahead for a week now….I scarcely finished a drawing or a chapter before the day is over…”

Upon losing his appeal, Kauffman was transferred to Amberg Prison, where he worked as part of a crew building the Reich autobahn. Remarkably, in the prison he had access to scientific journals and was permitted to learn English although not to write, so his trilobite essays came to a halt before completion.

 
 ESCAPE TO THE EAST

War broke out in Europe on Sept 1, 1939 when German military forces swarmed across the Polish border. Because of those hostilities, all Jewish prisoners lacking emigration permits were supposed to kept in prison or sent to camps upon release. Fortunately, because of paperwork confusion, Rudolf was simply released from Amber Prison on 12 October 1939 and was eventually able to emigrate to Lithuania.  Always the paleontologist, he worked, unpaid, preparing fossil fish at the Geological Institute of the University of Lithuania, hoping that it might lead to a paying position. But no work permits were being granted to immigrants in Lithuania. Nevertheless, he found time to write a paper on trilobites for a geology conference.

In 1940 the Red Army invaded Lithuania, bringing the country under the control of Russia. Remarkably, within a month of the creation of the Lithuanian Socialist Soviet Republic, Rudolf secured a paying position as a geologist. But the struggles of the last several years took a great physical and emotional toll and Kauffman eventually lost his optimism about everything turning out okay in the end. It had been four years since he last saw Inge and depressed and worn down, he finally accepted that they would never be together. In October 1940 Rudolf wrote to Inge and revealed that he has met another woman.  In November he swrote of marrying her.  Inge’s reaction is unknown, but Rudolph continued writing to her throughout the winter as he oversaw up to 80 men on geological surveys. His last letter to Inge is dated April 23, 1941.

 
TIME RUNS OUT

On June 22 1941 the German army invaded Russia and its satellite states, including Lithuania. Mobile SS execution squads follow quickly behind the army, beginning systematic genocide in the country. 


A German army roadblock near Dusseldorf.
Kaufmann was protected by the Lithuanians and continued his geological work for them. However, sometime before July of 1941, as part of his field studies, he borrowed a bicycle from a friend and took country roads to a rock quarry.  One the way he was stopped by two German soldiers at a road block.  Ironically, the fiancée of one of the soldiers had worked as a domestic in the Kauffman’s parent’s house many years ago.  Recognizing him, the soldier called him out as that “Jew Kaufmann from Konigsberg”, then shot and killed him.
 
 PAPER KISSES

In the Spring of 1984 a burglar broke into the Skeppargatan building, a Stockholm apartment building undergoing renovation.  Among the items stolen from storage in the basement were cartons of old letters and envelops.  At some later point these letters, bearing stamps from the 1930s and 1940s, moved into the world of stamp collectors. In 1991 Reinhard Kaiser saw a package of stamps, envelops, and other items selling as a unit in a German sales catalog for an auction in Frankfurt.  Viewing the items, he noticed that some thirty of the envelops contained letters written between 1935-1939 and mailed from various cities to a woman in Stockholm.  As Mr. Kaiser would write later “I took the carton I had bought home, eager to find out what it contained, but unprepared for a story that would not loosen its hold on me for years.”  He had, unknowingly, purchased some of Kauffman’s letters to Ingeborg.


He spent years investigating the letters, tracking down and interviewing still living relatives and friends of both Inge and Rudolf, finding additional letters by Kaufmann, and uncovering the details of the tragic story of two lovers during one of the worst periods in human history.  He published the story in 1996 as a book Konigskinder.  It was translated by Anthea Bell and published in English in 2006 as Paper Kisses: A True Love Story. Though just a mere 112 pages, the book is filled with the details of Rudolf and Inge’s romance and extensive extracts from the letters.  Inge’s letters to Kaufmann have not been found.  If Kaufmann kept them, which is likely, they were probably lost after his murder, so we can only follow one side of the tale. But the book is still well worth the read.  Knowing how the story ends only makes the letters more poignant as love blooms, history intrudes, and tragedy unfolds. 

I am not saying that Kaufmann’s story is any worse than that of others because he was a paleontologist. Curt Teichert, Rudolf’s brother-in-law and a world renowned geologist and paleontologist himself who emigrated from Germany to Australia to escape the Nazi madness, put it eloquently in his obituary of Kaufmann:

He shared the fate of millions and his senseless death stands as a monument to human wickedness and ignorance alike.”

Ingeborg Magnusson never married. She died in 1972. It was her collection of letters from Kauffman, then in the hands of her sister Greta Magnusson, that were stolen from the Skeppargatan basement in 1984.




SOURCES
 Bergen, D.L.  1996.  Twisted Cross: The German Christian Movement in the Third Reich. The University of North Carolina Press.  360 pages.

Fortey, R.  2000. Trilobite! Eyewitness to Evolution. Alfred Knopf, N.Y.  320 pages.

Harrington, H.J., Henningsmoen, G., Howell, B.F., Jaanuson, V., Lochman-Bach, C., Moore, R.C., Poulsen, C., Rasetti, F., Richter, E., Richter, R., Schmidt, H., Sdzuy, K., Struve, W,m Tripp, R., Weller, J.M., and Whittington, H.B. 1959.  Trilobita: Systematic Decsriptions. in Moore, R.C. (ed.) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part O Arthropoda I: 560 pages

Kaiser, R. 2006. Paper Kisses: A True Love Story. Other Press, New York:  112 pages (English translation by Anthea Bell)

Noakes, J. and Pridham, G. 1990.  Nazism 1919-1945 A History in Documents and Eyewitness Accounts.  Volume I: The Nazi Party, State, and Society 1919-1939.  Schoken Books, N.Y.  (The Nuremberg Laws are covered on pages 530-541)

Teichert, C. 1946.  Obituary: Rudolf Kaufmann.  American Journal of Science v. 244: 808-810

QUOTATIONS


Forget me because ...... Kaiser 2006: p. 44
Yes, it’s really true, ...... Kaiser 2006: p. 52
I took the carton  ........ Kaiser 2006: p. 2
He shared the fate......... Teichert 1946: p. 810
Law for the Protection .....  Noakes and Pridham 1990: p. 535
Supplementary Law .......... Noakes and Pridham 1990: p. 539
Church of Thanks............Bergen 1996: 164
 Baptism may be quite useful  Bergen 1996: p. 86

PHOTOS 
Harrington et al. 1959:  Olenus trilobite in Header.
Kaiser 2006  Photos of Rudolf Kaufmann,  , Ingeborg Magnussen, page from Kaufmann's Dissertation, cover  of Paper Kisses

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