A stunning true story I had never heard about before, and you probably didn't either. Because these three kids were immensely more courageous than the White Rose group, but are far less known.
That's what they were: kids, just kids. Helmuth Hübener was 17, Karl-Heinz Schnibbe was 16, and Rudi Wobbe was 15 when they were condemned to death and imprisonment in 1942. But what kids they were! Their crime? The same "crime" as the older, more experienced, and more mature Scholls: writing and distributing handbills and leaflets calling out the lies of the Nazi government and asking their countrymen to oppose it.
All because Hübener, a 16-year-old boy with a deep-rooted faith and a brilliant mind, saw what many adults double and triple his age couldn't: that Hitler was evil and needed to be resisted at any cost. As a member of the Mormon faith in Hamburg, he had witnessed injustice in the streets, at school, at work as an apprentice, and even at his church (some of the leadership were ardent Nazis), and decided something had to be done. Being just a boy, he came up with a plan to distribute information he was getting from secretly listening to the BBC about the truth the Nazis were hiding from the people, so the people would know the truth, and for that plan he enrolled the help of two of his besties: Rudi and Karl-Heinz, his lifelong friends, both also Mormons, whom a fourth joined later. Rudi Wobbe, the author of this memoir, was the closest to Helmuth and the most involved of all.
Unfortunately, the kids were caught, arrested, tortured, and promptly marched by the Gestapo into the Volkgerichtshof for trial. The People's Court in Berlin, the same that condemned Hans and Sophie Scholl et al., sentenced Hübener to death for high treason, Wobbe to 10 years imprisonment, Schnibbe to 5 years, and the fourth boy to 4 years. Helmuth Hübener was beheaded at Plötzensee Prison, even though both the freaking Hitlerjugend and the very same Gestapo wrote to the Führer for clemency for him on account of his young age. All in vain, Hitler said no to commuting the verdict, and brave Helmuth became the youngest person executed for treason in Germany.
You see now why I consider these 3 boys more admirable than the White Rose? They were so much younger, and didn't have the experience, the resources, the group support, the possibility of networking with other resistance cells, or even the anti-Nazi parents, like the Scholls and their friends did. It only took a kid with a strong sense of right and wrong, a radio, and a typewriter borrowed from church to write pamphlets on. Why are they not as known and celebrated, I can't fathom, but probably it's been a matter of exposure. They haven't got as much publicity.
What I admire the most about the The Lord Lister Detective Agency (they started as a boys's pretend-play sleuth agency, it's a detail I find endearing), besides their youth and bravery, is that they weren't politically motivated and they never changed their stance. They weren't opposed to Nazism because they were of a different political persuasion, and they didn't first go along with the flow first and then changed their mind. Not that there's anything wrong with realising you were wrong and indoctrinated to believe immoral ideologies and changing accordingly, but these kids realised what was wrong in their world pretty early, at around twelve years of age, and they did so because of the teachings of their faith. Sadly, they were disowned by the leader of their church when sentenced, Hübener was excommunicated basically, and yet they stood firm and paid the price.
It's an uncommon and astouding story you should read. They deserve to be more known, far, far more known.