Let’s say we’re talking about one person here, and one person only. For me, only one person that I can say really stood up to Adolf Hitler was this man:

Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck

Before I continue with the exact reason why Vorbeck is the person I chose rather than say, Stalin or Churchill, let me provide you with a more general explanation.

Sure, Hitler may have been truly stopped by the Allies, Britain and America from the West and Stalin from the East, but the only people that can be truly commended for their bravery in standing up to Hitler are those that lived within the grasp of the Reich and its very own secret police.

So now that we understand why I’ve chosen a German in general, onto why I chose this German.

Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck was an esteemed general, who was nicknamed “the Lion of Africa” for his incredible ability to fight against large forces with so little, though he was by no means a great man for he brought about the famines that caused thousands of native deaths simply to supply his own men. In the eyes of the German public, he was a hero, the only man to successfully invade the British Empire during WW1, and in the eyes of the British and French, a respectable general who was merely a fine tactician, and was by no mean hated for his actions in Africa.

Now that his background is all sorted out, onto the real answer.

In 1935, Adolf Hitler personally invited von Lettow-Vorbeck to Berlin (as to which specific location, I have no clue) and offered him an ambassadorship to the Court of St James’s, to which he supposedly replied that Hitler could go fuck himself.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The lady circled in red was Lucy Higgs Nichols.

Govardhan Asrani (1 January 1941 – 20 October 2025), known professionally as Asrani, was an Indian actor and director.

Lena Baker was a Black woman who worked as a maid.

What was the first scandal in the history of cinema?

True Story Of Josephine Myrtle Corbin, The Lady Born With Four Legs & Two Private Parts (Photos)

The world of vintage

Why didn't Hitler fly out of Berlin and escape to another country before the Russians arrived?

What happened to the SS soldiers after World War II?

Did the German army use the same uniforms for the whole of World War II?

What was it like for German soldiers returning home after World War 2?