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Rommel letters reveal secret second family

Jack Grimston and Michael Woodhead

ERWIN ROMMEL, the German tank commander known as the Desert Fox, had a secret
child by a teenage girlfriend.The girl's mother committed suicide when Rommel
later married another woman and had a second child.

Until now the field marshal has been seen as an upright soldier with a
conventional life, happily married to his wife Lucie with a son, Manfred.

The existence of his second family has emerged in a collection of more than
150 letters and photographs, kept for decades by his illegitimate daughter
Gertrud Pan at her home in Kempten, southern Germany.

The letters emerged after Gertrud's death last year. "There were hints from
some fellow officers and an army nurse, and eventually I put it to the museum
curator in Rommel's home town, who confirmed the family's existence," said
Sallyann Kleibel, producer of The Real Rommel, to be shown on Channel 4 on
August 2.

Rommel met Lucie in 1911 in Danzig. During a temporary posting in Weingarten,
hundreds of miles away, he met the teenage Walburga Stemmer, and they had an
affair.

In 1913 Gertrud, their daughter, was born, to Rommel's delight. He wrote to
Walburga, calling her his "little mouse". He said he would like to set up
home with her and Gertrud: "It's got to be perfect, this little nest of
ours." However, he returned to Lucie and married her in 1916. Walburga never
recovered from her rejection.

Gertrud's son Josef Pan, 62, a fruit and vegetable wholesaler from Kempten,
whose family own the letters, said: "Rommel was Walburga's only love. As long
as Rommel and Lucie never had children she held on to the conviction that he
would return to her. When Manfred was born in 1928 she took an overdose . . .
The explanation given in public was that she had died of pneumonia. Later the
family doctor told my mother she had taken her own life."

Gertrud exchanged hundreds of letters with her father. She knitted him a
scarf, which he wore frequently at the battlefront. Lucie knew about Gertrud,
but to Manfred she was always "cousin Gertrud".

She was a frequent visitor to the family and was at Rommel's hospital bedside
after he returned ill from Africa. There, she answered the telephone when a
furious Hitler ordered him back to Africa, where he was defeated at El
Alamein. She stayed close to the family even after her father's death.


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