As the airwaves are flooded with government propaganda about the homicide of Renee Nicole Good at the hands of an ICE agent in Minneapolis, we are reminded that sometimes propaganda backfired on even the master purveyors of deceit.
Hessy Levinsons Taft, who as an infant appeared on the cover of a Nazi magazine in Germany promoting her as the ideal Aryan baby, a distinction complicated by the fact that she was Jewish and had been exploited as part of a dangerous hoax, died on Jan. 1 at her home in San Francisco. She was 91.
Her death
was confirmed by her family, reported The New York Times.
Terrifying
at first, the story eventually became a source of pride for Mrs. Taft and her
parents for the way it neatly illustrated the absurd pseudoscience underlying
Adolf Hitler’s racial ideology.
“I feel a
sense of revenge,” she said much later. “Good revenge.”
The
episode began in 1934, when Hessy was 6 months old and her parents, Latvian
opera singers living in Berlin, hired the well-known photographer Hans Ballin
to take her portrait.
After
framing the photo, her parents displayed it on their piano. One day, the woman
who cleaned their home noticed it and told Hessy’s mother that she had seen her
daughter on the cover of a magazine.
“My mother
thought surely she must be mistaken, that there are many babies that look
alike, and just told her, ‘Well, that couldn’t be the case,’” Mrs. Taft said in
an interview with the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum in 1990.
The woman
insisted that it was the same baby. “Just give me some money,” she said, “and
I’ll get you the magazine.”
Soon she
returned with a copy of Sonne ins Haus, or Sun in the Home, one of several
pro-Nazi magazines that were allowed to circulate in the country after Hitler
had shut down thousands of other publications. And there, on the cover, was the
portrait from the piano.
Hessy’s
mother flipped through the pages.
“On the
inside of the magazine were pictures of the army with men wearing swastikas,”
Mrs. Taft told the Holocaust museum. “My parents were horrified.”
Her mother
went to Mr. Ballin’s studio and showed him the magazine. “What is this?” she
said. “How did this happen?”
He told
her that the Nazis had invited him to submit photos for a contest to find a
baby representing the epitome of the Aryan race, and Hessy was among those he
included in his submission. Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi minister of public
enlightenment and propaganda, chose the winner.
To read more CLICK HERE


