Hitler's Pawnreviewed by Brian "The Naked Gun" Felts
Margaret Lambert was a Jewish athlete who excelled in track and field, especially the high jump, who
was a German Olympic hopeful in 1931. In 1933, Adolf Hitler came to power and the persecution of the
Jews began. Lambert was kicked out of her sports organization and was not allowed to compete at all.
By 1935, her father had shipped her to England with the hope of her becoming a member of the England
Track and Field team, and to also get her away from the Nazi's.
Hitler and the other Nazi's in the high command were trying to secure the Olympics that had been
given to the Weimer Republic in 1931. Under some international scrutiny, the Nazi propaganda machine
was forced to show that Jews would be apart of the German team. The Nazi's forced Lambert's father
to go to England and bring her back to Germany with the aspiration of becoming a competitor for the
German Olympic team. When she came back and without telling her, the Nazi's gave her name to the
American press and others, to show that Lambert, a Jew, and other Jewish athletes would be competing
on the German team. Because of this and other similar events, the American's decided to go to Berlin
and compete in the Olympics. After the American's left for Germany, Lambert and most of the other
Jewish Athlete's were told that they were not chosen to participate in the games. One woman was
chosen because she was only half Jewish but was a Christian.
The documentary is good in that it shows yet another example of what happened to the Jews under
Nazi Germany before the war. Lambert was clearly the best high jumper in Germany, and her personal
best jump was the same as the gold medalist's jump at the Berlin Olympics. Lambert was fortunate
that these things happened to her in the mid-30's because she left Germany shortly after the Olympics
and came to America. After a few years in America she read the newspaper articles about her being on
the team and realized what had been done. Her father was sent to a concentration camp a few years
later and after 4 months was told to leave Germany or be killed, so he left and came to America.
Obviously this documentary had a happy ending in that she was in America at the time of the war
so she did not have to go through the horrors of the death camps. Because of this, the movie does
not have the same feeling of despair and sadness that many other documentaries have about this subject.
I am sure that Margaret Lambert is quite happy that she did not have to endure what many other people
did. It was unfortunate that she was used this way, but if she wasn't, she and some of her family
may have been added to the millions who were killed.
As far as documentaries go, this may be a great movie to show to some children who may be able to start
to understand what hate and anger can do to people, yet are unable to comprehend what happened at the
death camps. This movie will teach another valuable lesson without scarring them to death. That can
come later when they are older and they can see what happened at the camps. For adults, this documentary
is educational but does not give you that feeling of dread that many other movies do.
Brian - the Naked Gun |