The Hitler Diaries Scandal
Da Stern-magasinet præsenterede verdens mest søgte historiske dokument – som viste sig at være forfalskning

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Quick Facts
Quick Facts
The Greatest Media Scandal in History
On April 25, 1983, the Germany-based magazine Stern announced worldwide a sensational discovery: they had purchased Adolf Hitler's private diaries. According to the magazine, they had secured exclusive rights to documents that historical research had long sought without success. The presentation was staged as a global event. Prominent historians were called in to authenticate the manuscripts, and media outlets around the world reported on the sensation.
But within weeks, the entire story collapsed. The 62 "diary volumes" that Stern had purchased for approximately 4.25 million Deutsche Mark turned out to be a masterclass in forgery—created by a single man with remarkable technical skill but without actual historical knowledge.
Konrad Kujau—Master Forger
Conrad Kujau was a German artist and forgery specialist who since the 1970s had built a lucrative business empire forging signatures and documents from famous people. His work was technically superior—he had developed etching methods, could replicate aging processes and document paper with unusual skill. He had previously created forged works attributed to Otto Bismarck and other historical figures, which had earned him significant sums.
But the Hitler diaries were his masterpiece—and his downfall. Kujau was an unscrupulous businessman, but not a historian. His "Hitler" wrote about completely trivial everyday things: what he had eaten for lunch, irritations over seating arrangements, complaints about his health. It lacked perspective, analytical depth, and historical authenticity.
Gerd Heidemann and Stern's Greed


