Who is Lukas Armbrecht?

12/07/2016 15:52

Lukas Armbrecht is a Prussian, having been born related to a noble line. Like Franz, he ends up in Auschwitz as a guard due to war injuries. Unlike Franz, his injury was not through military action but rather through an accident in the administration section. We hear that Lukas is actually a coward at heart. He is also an opportunist, taking advantage of wartime conditions to satisfy his sexual desire. Through this opportunism, Lukas ends up in a position where he witnesses the work of Adolf Eichmann and Dieter Wisliceny, two people who administer the transports. In contrast to Franz, Lukas fails to see anything wrong with the camp. He chillingly regrets not having finished the job and holds this view throughout.

He relates his story later in life when he is haunted by the past. He refuses to deny the Holocaust and agrees to relate his events to the BBC program run by Gerald Angel. However, we are not clear why he does so. Is he just trying to clear his name or is he truly repentant? Lukas is important in that he gives the perspective of a guard and shows how it was ordinary people manning the camps. After the war, he becomes a respectable Human Resources manager, sensitive to people crying in his presence. He is like any other manager and attends meetings that resemble the corporate meetings of today. The camps are normally portrayed as horror spots with lunatics for managers. In reality, the camps were managed by ordinary individuals and it should be a warning for anybody to trust the resilience of our institutions. People just doing their jobs is an excuse, but unfortunately it came very close to the truth.

In Fallen Beech and Blood Orange Blossom, we later see Lukas in a more sinister role as leader of a Paganistic cult. As Grand Master of the Teutonic order, he has access to untold wealth and plays his part in the German economic miracle

Who was Adolf Eichmann?

Lukas eventually works as adjutant to Otto Adolf Eichmann. This man was responsible for organizing the transports. He was known as a particularly cynical man who was prepared to barter human lives and understood exactly how to subdue the Jewish communities over Europe. At the end of the war he secured passage to Argentina but was kidnapped by Mossad to stand trial in Israel. He was executed in 1962. Click here for more.

How would you describe his relationship with Franz?

Lukas is Franz's best friend in the camp. He contrasts with Franz in that he feels nothing for the inmates.

What is Lukas's religious significance?

Lukas has a mysterious role which becomes clear in Truth in Ash and Fallen Beech. He is the Pagan character Tyr, and also one of the four Apostles. Otherwise, we see in him the distrust and inbred hatred of the Jewish peoples that characterized the Hitler ideology.

What inspired the character Lukas Armbrecht?

Lukas has some similarities to Oskar Gröning who was interviewed for the BBC program by Lawrence Rees. This man refused to deny the Holocaust and felt remorse at the end. He was put on trial at the age of 94. At the same time he did not see himself as responsible for the acts and portrayed the camp as place where friendships were built. Oskar worked in the Currency Department and probably more closely resembled the character Otto Grün in 'Whispering Birches'. It should be added that in the story neither Otto or Lukas represent the real opinions or acts of Oskar Gröning.

Lukas plays a more prominent role in Fallen Beech and Blood Orange Blossom. The inspirtaion for the character is a combination of the characters of Oskar Gröning, Karl Wolff and Kurt Becher, though it should be pointed out that no opinions expressed are actual opinions of any of the mentioned characters.

                         

Oskar Gröning       Adolf Eichmann      Dieter Wisliceny   Karl Wolff            Kurt Becher 

 
 
 
 
 

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