Where can I find that book? It’s nowhere to be seen, nor is the original German text. I searched through Yandex, Archive.org, and Anna.org. A Finnish PDF is the only thing available. The author is a Tunisian nurse who took care of the elderly Hess for the last five years of his life and claims to have witness his murder obv he didn't killed himself.
Abdallah Melaouhi breaks his silence nearly 30 years after the assassination of Rudolf Hess, and for the first time details in his book the five years he spent with the last prisoner of Spandau. He describes not only the ruthless everyday life of the world's most solitary prisoner but also informs about the numerous events, until now unknown, that bring us closer to the human being.
Illegally extracted from prison, the author also offers us 30 pages of handwritten documents by Rudolf Hess, including requests, letters, reports, and discoveries that clearly show that the elderly man was not at all tired of life, but rather, despite all the obstacles, he tirelessly fought for his freedom and hoped to enjoy his last months of life with his family and his grandson.
On August 17, 1987, the assassins hurried to get ahead of Hess's release announced by Gorbachev. But they could not suspect that it would be precisely Hess's Tunisian nurse who would manage to make his way to the scene and catch the assassins red-handed over the corpse.
Meticulously reproduce what happened on August 17, 1987, starting at 6:45. Follow his conviction that his death was not a suicide, but a planned murder.
The surprising thing about this book is that it also included facsimiles of 30 unpublished pages, handwritten by Hess himself, which Melaouhi was able to take out of prison. However, its publication was very difficult and some passages had to be suppressed.
This publication brought him enormous difficulties in the form of reprisals of all kinds. He was unceremoniously relieved of all public functions and activities in Berlin and was excluded from various associations; he was also forced to resign from the office of the President of the German Society of Tunisia, which he himself had founded.
There were also many threats against him, which took place before the publication of the book, when Melaouhi was told that he should burn the work that had already begun to be printed.