Göring. A Biography

(Michael S) #1


He testified further that Göring suffered frequent heart
attacks.
“I am not a heart specialist,” he warned the colonel. “I have
no heart instruments to make a proper examination.”
The daily routine began
at : .. with a prison
trusty handing breakfast and a
spoon through the Judas hole
in Göring’s cell door. A barber
came and shaved him while a
truncheon-wielding sentry
ensured that no words were
exchanged. “Sentinels moving
back and forth on the cat-
walks,” Andrus reassured Jus-
tice Robert H. Jackson, the
chief American prosecutor,
“view the prisoners every half minute.” By five-thirty it was
dark. At : .. he was given supper. His eyeglasses, pen, and
wristwatch were taken away, and the cell light turned off at :
..; a spotlight then beamed through the hole in the door onto
his face all night.
There was one episode on August  that suggests that
Göring’s health was indeed less robust than people believed. At
: .. that day American officers performed the (wholly
meaningless) ritual of discharging him from the German armed
forces in an upstairs interrogation room, and he suffered yet an-
other heart attack after being marched up the three flights of
stairs. He was short of breath and exhausted when returned to
his cell at : .., and complained of heart pains. The crisis
lasted all night. His heart action became irregular, his pulse in-
creased. An American army doctor administered a cardiac drug


In his Nuremberg prison cell,
November , , Göring pens a
postcard to his wife. For months
he wondered why there were no
replies.  
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