Dieter Kotlar
Sobriquet: Der Krieger (The Warrior)
Appearance: Dieter is a powerfully built blond giant with cold, blue eyes. He is quick with a smile for friends or strangers and is twice as fast with a snarl for those who cross him. He normally wears tight black leathers, and depending upon his mood, may even sport swastika armbands.
Behavior: Despite his violent exterior, Dieter has learned a great deal about the art of politics. How could he not, he was there in the beginning of Hitler's rise to power and spent many hours talking directly with one of history's greatest demagogues. He smiles and waves to anyone who looks his way, and he always manages to slide in a few lines of propaganda in the process. Dieter firmly believes that the Final Reich holds the keys to life as it should and could be, and he is quickly angered by those who mock his dream of a greater Germany for Germans. In a war of words he is capable, but should the disagreement escalate to fisticuffs, then this is where Dieter is truly deadly. This isn't a man who just walks, he swaggers.
History: Dieter was born a few years before the start of World War I, initially his parents were happy residents of the Kaiser's great city of Berlin. But when the war broke out, Dieter's father volunteered, thinking like all the young men of his generation that the war would be over in a matter of weeks and he would return a triumphant hero. Dieter's father never returned from the Western Front and as the war became protracted his mother had find ways to feed Dieter and her other children. As the economy tanked and Germany lost the war, she was forced to turn to the oldest profession just keep the children fed and clothed. Dieter grew up in those harsh years, seeing the ugly side of life, and he tried to look after his younger siblings while their mother was out, which was more often than not. The widow Kotlar resented having to be a prostitute just to feed her children and she turned cold and unloving, leaving her children to fend for themselves most of the time. And after a while, neither Dieter, nor his brother and sister really cared what happened to their mother and one day she just never came home.
It would have been bad enough if Dieter's family had needed to suffer through this alone, but all of Germany struggled under the impossible burden of the war reparations imposed upon the nation at the Treaty of Versailles.
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