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Daniel Half Human: And the Good Nazi

David Chotjewitz
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Plot Summary

Daniel Half Human: And the Good Nazi

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2004

Plot Summary

Published in German in 2000 and translated into English by Doris Orgel in 2004, Daniel Half Human: And the Good Nazi is a young adult historical novel by David Chotjewitz. Set in Hamburg, Germany during the rise of Hitler’s regime in the 1930s, the book tells the story of two good teenage friends, Daniel Kraushaar and Armin Hillman. Hitler’s despotic changes to Germany send the boys down very different paths in life as they grow to manhood ahead of WWII. Chotjewitz uses the backdrop of actual historical events to explore themes of friendship, loyalty, identity, and racism.

The novel’s third-person omniscient point of view moves between characters but focuses primarily on Daniel as a young man at the end of WWII, and Daniel as a teenager starting in 1933. Daniel Half Human: And the Good Nazi opens in Hamburg in 1945. Daniel, a US Army soldier, has been transferred to the British Army as an interpreter. In his hometown again, Daniel travels through his friend Armin’s old neighborhood, which is now nothing but bombed out rubble and memories.

The story jumps back to 1933. Daniel and Armin are both students at the elite Christianeum, a school exclusively for boys from prominent families. Daniel fits in there: his father is an affluent lawyer and a decorated WWI hero. Daniel’s family lives in the rich section of Hamburg. Armin, in contrast, is from a working-class family. His father is unemployed and a heavy drinker. Armin is only at the Christianeum thanks to a scholarship.



Like most boys at their school, both Daniel and Armin idolize Hitler. They want to join the Hitler Youth, or Hitler Jugend. As payback for slurs that some Communist Youths made against Hitler’s private army, Daniel and Armin sneak out one night and paint a swastika on a wall in the “Red” part of town: an area ruled by Social Democrats. They are spotted and beaten up by Reds about their own age, and then caught by the police. In their jail cell, Daniel and Armin cut their wrists and mingle their blood together, cementing their friendship and becoming blood brothers.

Daniel and Armin are excited when Hitler becomes Chancellor in 1933. They ask their parents to sign papers allowing them to join the Hitler Youth. Armin’s father, a Red, refuses to sign, but Armin joins anyway. Daniel’s father, Rheinhard, also refuses. Daniel’s parents explain that they cannot allow Daniel to join the Hitler Youth because Daniel’s mother, Sophie, is a German Jew. This revelation shocks and angers Daniel. Daniel is no longer a “pure” Aryan but instead, “half human” because Jews are considered a naturally inferior race. Daniel calls his mother a “Jewess” and will not talk with her.

Daniel keeps his ancestry a secret while other Jewish boys are kicked out of his school. The school teaches students that Jews are evil and impure. Oppressive changes take place in Germany after Hitler’s appointment to Chancellor. Hitler expands the state police and proceeds to stamp out opposition to his political party and to advance persecution of the Jews.



In 1935, Sophie’s niece Miriam, also a Jew, comes to live with Daniel’s family. At school, Daniel’s secret comes out. During soccer practice, a teammate calls Daniel names and picks a fight. Armin intervenes on Daniel’s behalf, and Daniel confesses that he is half-Jewish. Daniel is allowed to stay in school because of his father’s influence. Armin has fallen for Miriam. The two carry on a secret relationship. Armin’s loyalty is torn between the Nazis and his now forbidden friendship with Daniel and his love for Miriam.

Repression and violence against Jews in Germany continue to increase. Daniel’s father, receiving fewer law cases because he is married to a Jew, ultimately gives up his practice. The family moves out of their opulent home and into an apartment. Sophie asks Rheinhard to get them out of Germany, but Rheinhard believes that the situation is a temporary madness, that people will come to their senses and Germany will return to normal. Daniel no longer wants to join the Hitler Youth. Armin, however, sees the group as a means to increase his social position. Not wanting to be like his dissolute father, Armin rises to become a troop leader in the organization.

Armin’s secret meetings with Miriam are discovered by his superior, District Leader Blohm. Blohm is angry, telling Armin he is lucky not to lose his position in the Hitler Youth. Blohm offers Armin a chance to make up for his mistakes by leading soldiers to attack Daniel’s family on the night of November 9, 1938. Armin warns Daniel and Miriam about the attack, and they escape just in time. This night is historically known as Kristallnacht, or The Night of Broken Glass, when Jewish synagogues were burned, Jewish people killed, and their businesses, cemeteries, hospitals, and homes systematically looted and destroyed.



Now, Rheinhard sees the need to flee Germany. He arranges Cuban visas as a means of getting to the United States. Daniel does not see Armin before his family flees and does not know if Sebastian and Miriam make it out of Germany.

The novel flashes forward again to 1945. In his interpreter position, Daniel overhears an interview with a captured German soldier. If soldiers declare that they were not members of the Nazi Party or SS forces, they are freed. Daniel realizes the soldier is Armin. Armin answered that he was not a Party or SS member. Daniel talks with his old friend, and then changes Armin’s answers on his interview form, denying Armin release and freedom.

Daniel Half Human: And the Good Nazi won a Sydney Taylor Honor Award in 2004 from the Association of Jewish Libraries and earned a 2005 Mildred L. Batchelder Honor Book Award which is given by the American Library Association for excellence in books written in languages other than English.
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