Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - The Truth About Hansel and Gretel
Episode Date: October 22, 2021Was the fairy tale of Hansel and Gretel - the story of a woodcutter’s children abandoned in the woods and left at the mercy of a witch - in fact, early true crime? A hit book - The Truth About Hanse...l and Gretel - said that historical records pointed to the story being based on fact. Are we too quick to dismiss the truth behind tall stories? Or are we always falling for tales that are too good to be true?The first of two special Halloween editions of Cautionary Tales. Next up... The Mummy's Curse. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
A warning before we start, this cautionary tale discusses death by suicide.
If you're suffering emotional distress or you're having suicidal thoughts, support is available.
For example, from the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline in the US.
Fargo is a town in North Dakota.
It's also a classic movie from 1996, the blackest of comedies.
A car salesman attempts to swindle his wealthy father-in-law
by paying a couple of criminals
to kidnap his wife and demand a ransom.
It ends up with five innocent people dead and one of the kidnappers trying to dispose
of his partner's body by feeding it into a woodchipper.
Namously, the movie starts with these words. This is a true story.
At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed.
Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred.
Fargo isn't a true story.
The shoot was well underway when the directors, the Cohen brothers,
casually mentioned this to the cast. One of the movie's stars William H. Macy was taken
back.
You can't say it's a true story if it wasn't, said Macy.
Why not? Came the reply.
In the movie, one of the hapless kidnappers hides nearly a million dollars by burying
it in snow.
It's a comically stupid idea.
The landscape's generic and featureless as far as the eye can see.
How will he ever find his way back to the spot?
He won't.
And not just because he ends up in a woodchipper.
And none of the movies other characters know the cash is there.
Hold on though, if the movie is told exactly as it occurred, does the money exist?
Is it still where the kidnapper left it, undiscovered in real life?
Five years after the film was released, a young woman turned up at the police station
in Bismarck, North Dakota.
She had just flown in from Tokyo.
It was the middle of winter, but she was wearing a short black skirt and thigh high boots.
She was clutching a simple map that showed nothing but a road and a tree.
The police tried to understand what she wanted,
but they spoke no Japanese and her English wasn't great. They could make out one word, though.
Fargo. One policeman recalled, we tried to explain to her that it was a fictional movie and
there really wasn't any treasure. The police weren't sure if the message had got through,
but they took her to the bus station where she could catch a greyhound to Fargo.
Several hours to the east, across a vast and empty landscape.
A couple of days later, they got a call from another police department.
And some woods, not far from Fargo, on a freezing cold morning.
A hunter had found the body of a young Japanese woman.
Takakokanishi's death was reported around the world.
Cult film sparked hunt for a fortune.
You can't say it's a true story if it wasn't.
Can you?
I'm Tim Haferd and you're listening to cautionary tales. You must know the story of Hansel and Gretel, made famous by the brothers Grimm.
A great famine sweeps the land. A poor woodcutter can no longer afford to feed
his family. One night his new wife persuades him that they must take his children into
the forest and abandon them. They set off early the next morning, the sun glinting off the
chimney of the woodcutters cottage.
Deep into the woods, the man builds a fire to keep his children warm.
Wait here, I won't be too far away, you'll be able to hear me chopping trees.
But the sounds young Hansel and Gretel can hear don't come from their father's axe. He's tied a branch to a tree trunk in such a way
that the wind will cause it to keep flacking.
By the time his children realize that he's gone, he thinks,
they'll never find their way home.
He doesn't realize that the children overheard the plan.
Hansel sneaked out in the dead of night to fill his pockets with pebbles,
and as they walked, he dropped them.
By following the trail of pebbles, Hansel and Gretel get back home.
Their wicked stepmother is furious. That night she locks them in.
The next morning, they set off again. Hansel has no pebbles, but he does have a hunk of bread.
And so instead he leaves a trail of breadcrumbs.
This time when the children try to follow their trail back home,
disaster. Birds have eaten all the crumbs.
Hansel and Gretel wander the forest, starving and lost.
Eventually, they chance across a house made from gingerbread and begin to eat it.
There comes a soft voice from inside.
Nibble, nibble, little mouse.
Who is nibbling at my house a
woman as old as the hills creeps out of the door
She invites the children inside with the promise of more food
But she's a wicked witch and she captures them she keeps handsling a cage and forces
Gretel to work preparing preparing food for her brother.
When he's fattened up, I'm going to eat him.
The witch's eyesight is bad, so every day she asks Hansel to stick her finger through
the cage for her to feel how fat he's got.
Hansel tricks her.
He finds a bone on the floor.
In every day, he pokes that to the cage instead.
Eventually the witch loses patience.
She announces she'll cook, cancel, fat or not
and secretly decides to cook Gretel too.
This time Gretel tricks her.
Climb into the oven and see if it's hot enough yet.
I don't understand.
How can I climb inside the oven oven replied Gretel innocently.
Stupid girl, like this! Do I have to show you everything?
Gretel shoves her in, slams the door and bars it with an iron rod. The witch
hows as the flames consume her. Gretel lets Hansel out of the cage and the children again look
for the way back home. A magical duckling helps
them across a great body of water and they arrive home. Their wicked stepmother is dead
and their regretful father is overjoyed to have them back. The three live happily ever
after. Hansel and Gretel is a cautionary tale, much like the tale's I-Tel,
but Hansel and Gretel is for children, a warning about stranger danger, or so it seems.
The tale's I-Tel are for grown-ups, and the tale's I-Tel are true.
Hansel and Gretel isn't true.
Or is it?
The fairy tale of Hansel and Gretel fascinated a young boy growing up in the 1920s, near the
border of Germany and Czechoslovakia.
Georg Osseg's grandparents owned a rare early edition
of Grims' fairytales, published in 1818. It was beautifully illustrated with intricate drawings,
Jongeorg read it and re-read it until every page was seared in his memory.
every page was seared in his memory.
Oseg grew up to be a teacher.
He got a job in a Schaffenberg near Frankfurt.
He spent his weekends hiking in the spessart,
a nearby range of low-wooded mountains.
One spring day in 1962, he was exploring a part of the woods he'd never been to before.
A local farmer had told him it was known as the Hexenwald, the witch's forest. I hadn't been out for half an hour when suddenly I
had a strange feeling. I felt as if I had walked this path before. How could that be?
this path before. How could that be? Oseg thought for a moment. Then it hit him. He realized that he'd recognised the scene from an illustration in his grandfather's book. Oseg
compared the drawing with the view from the footpath. There could be no doubt. The trees
had grown of course, but the oaks, the spruces and the beaches were all in exactly the same configuration.
The line of the hills on the horizon was unmistakable.
That illustration in Hanslund Gretel hadn't just come from an artist's imagination.
It was a faithful depiction of a real place.
What else about the story might be real?
Georg Osseg decided to do something that no one had thought of before.
He read the fairy tale of Hansel and Gretel as if it were a factual report.
That's a line from a 1963 book about Georg Osseg.
It was called the Vahite Uber Hansel and Gretel, the
truth about Hansel and Gretel, and it caused a sensation.
In the book, the author Hans Traxler describes what Oseg did next.
The illustration showed the path along which Hansel and Gretel's father had taken them
into the forest.
In the story, the children look back at the morning sunlight, glinting off the chimney of the woodcutter's cottage.
The sun rises in the east, so if Oseg followed the path east, would it lead him to the woodcutter's cottage?
Oseg walked east, and he found a newly built, alto barn connecting
Frankfurt with Würzburg. But what had been there before? The records must exist. Traxler
describes how Oseg tracked them down to the Rurbrun railway maintenance depot. He leafed
through the dusty files until he found a note of
a court decision from November 4, 1954, a dispute over the compensation due from the Federal
Motorways Administration to a man called Georg Shitehauer, who'd owned the land at
the east end of that forest path. The court awarded Shite Hauer 18,760 Deutschmarks for his property, a half-timbered
house, with a barn and a garden with 18 fruit trees. Ossegg had found the woodcutter's cottage.
the woodcutter's cottage.
Corsionary tales will return in a moment.
Georg Osseg was now a man with a mission.
He'd located the site of the woodcutter's cottage from Hanslund Gretel. He'd found the path along which the children had been led. Next, he looked
for the place where they'd been abandoned.
The story mentions that the woodcutter made a fire to keep the children warm. No forester
would make a fire in the thick of the trees, so that must have
meant a clearing.
Oseg explored to the west until he found one. In the story, the woodcutter ties a branch
to a tree, so the wind will make it thwack and sound like an axe. Oseg spent two days
inspecting every tree near the clearing until he came across an old oak
with a wound in the trunk where a cord had been tied around it. He had the tree felled
and the cord radiocarbon dated. It came from the 1640s. What about the witch's House? Did that exist? And could Oseg find it? According to the
story, Hansel and Gretel crossed the body of water between the Witch's House and their
own, that could only refer to the river Ashaff. Oseg got a map, divided it into squares,
and methodically searched each one.
After two months, he found ruins of a building made from bricks.
The footprint of those ruins looked like it exactly matched another illustration in his Grandparent's book, showing the witch's four brick ovens.
Oseg grabbed his spade and started to dig.
Within the foundations of one of the ovens,
he found the charred remains of a woman's skeleton. He brought in academic specialists
who concluded the woman was 35 years old and should be strangled before she'd been thrown in the oven.
Oseg dug some more. He found a broken hinge. Had the murderers forced their way in? He found
a small iron chest. It contained a hand written recipe for gingerbread.
But who had the murdered woman been?
Oseg turned now to linguistic analysis.
In the Grims telling of the tale, the witch speaks in a dialect which has distinctive
roots in the town of Vernigardoda.
Oseg travels to the town and searches through its records.
He discovers reports of a trial from 1647.
The year ties right in with the radio-carbon dating.
A baker called Katarina Schraderin is accused of witchcraft
by a man whose proposal of marriage she's spurned.
Soon after, another trial,
Katarina has been murdered,
and the man and his sister are accused.
The man is called Hans Mezzler,
his sister Greta.
Hans and Greta.
Oseg pieced together what had happened.
Katarina was famous for her gingerbread.
Hans was a baker too, he had wanted to marry Katarina to get his hands on her recipe.
When she turned him down, he and his sister went to her house in the woods
and murdered her. But they didn't find her recipe because she'd hidden it in the
iron chest. So the story of Hansel and Gretel was based on real events, albeit loosely.
The protagonists weren't abandoned children, they were cold-blooded murderers
motivated by greed, and the woman who burned in the oven wasn't a wicked witch with a magical
gingerbread house, but a talented baker with a sort after gingerbread recipe.
When Hans Tracksler published his book about Georg Osseg, the truth about Hansel and Gretel,
he was stunned by the response.
What stunned him was that everyone took it seriously.
I was sure I'd hidden enough clues that it was all a great big fib!
Traxler was a professional satirist, a writer and illustrator for a satirical magazine.
Gael Gosseg didn't exist, but the book sold hundreds of thousands of copies.
Requests to translate it came in from 18 countries.
Reviewers in Germany's newspapers
gushed about the thoroughness of Osseg's research,
and the gripping way Traxler described it.
The book of the year,
maybe the book of the decade said one.
The newspapers in communist East Germany were just as impressed.
Perhaps because they could blame capitalism for the murder.
A criminal case from the early capitalist era,
a pined Berliner Zitong.
What were the clues Traxler had left that had made the whole thing up?
Some were subtle.
Catarina's gingerbread recipe, for example,
Traxler had copied it, word for word,
from a popular cookbook by Dr. Ertker.
Other clues should have been harder to miss.
In one passage, Oseg recruits an eight-year-old boy, fills his pockets with pebbles, and has
him walk down the path away from the motorway where the woodcutter's house had supposedly
stood.
The pebbles run out before he gets to the clearing. But when
Oseg fills his own pockets with pebbles, he does have enough to cover the distance.
The book includes a diagram, helpfully showing how tall people can see further and hence
leave more space between pebbles. Hansel and Gretel were not children at all,
Traxler describes Osega's concluding. To put it scientifically, they must have been
the size of an adult. Scientific, indeed. Also very scientific was a photograph of
Osega's radio-carbon dating equipment. You don't have to look too closely to see that it
consists of an upside down lasagna tray, a length of coax cable from a television, a child's
microscope, and some jars from the kitchen spice rack. Traxler was bewildered that nobody
picked up on this unsuttle clue. Real apparatus to do carbon dating is the size of a train," he pointed out.
Some of the images in the book show Georg Ossegg in action.
Its trackslar himself in the silliest of disguises, wire-rimmed glasses, and a fake moustache.
Tracksler took a photographer to a Frankfurt construction site
where they jumped into a ditch to shoot the excavation at the witch's house.
Traxler posed, inspecting the side of the ditch with a pastry brush.
The photographer and I lay on the ground laughing.
But when the book was published, the joke was lost. Excited letters flooded in.
Georg Ossegg was invited to give lectures. A Japanese academic expressed earnest interest
in how the new field of fairy tale archaeology could improve cross cultural understanding.
archaeology could improve cross-cultural understanding. Readers flocked to the scenic woods of the Spessart,
trying to decipher Oseg's descriptions
and locate the witches' house for themselves.
Schools hired buses and took entire classes.
One made the ten-hour journey from Denmark. Hans Traxler started to wonder what he'd done.
In our social media age, mistaking satire for serious reporting is a surprisingly common problem. President Trump once retweeted a news story from the satirical website, The Babylon B,
without seeming to be aware that The Babylon B is a satirical website.
Twitter had suffered an outage, and the B jokingly reported that the network had decided
to shut itself down to slow the spread of
negative news about Joe Biden. Trump wasn't chuckling at the joke. He was demanding to
know why Twitter had done this.
How many voters also struggled to spot tricks and jokes? When researchers from Ohio State
presented voters with a selection of stories from the Babylon B,
they found that up to 28% of Republicans thought the stories were real.
Democrats were less likely to be fooled, but the reverse was true when the researchers tried
stories from another satirical website, arguably one with a different political perspective, the Onion.
The researchers were looking for ways to minimise the spread of misinformation over social
networks. In 2019, they ran an experiment. They flagged posts on Facebook in one of three
ways. The first type of flag said that independent fact checkers had said a story wasn't true.
The second type said that other Facebook users had raised doubts about it.
Neither type of flag made the studies subjects any less likely to share the story.
But the third type did. When a story was flagged as being from a satirical website, people were less likely to pass it
on.
It wasn't a huge effect, but it was something.
Clearly labeling satire as satire did seem to prevent some people from sharing fake news.
When the truth about the truth about Hansel and Gretel finally emerged, some of Traxler's
readers were not amused.
An angry couple from North Rhine Westphalia sent me the petrol bill for the trip they'd
made to the spesart.
Then Traxler received a letter from a lawyer in Herborn.
If you want to do business with a parody, then you have to label your
parody as such. I have therefore decided to bring the case to the attention of the public
prosecutor. Or, as William H. Macy would put it, you can't say it's a true story, if it wasn't. Hans Traxler was summoned to the police station.
Corsionary tales will be back soon.
If you want to do business with a parody, then you have to label your parody as such.
So said the irate German lawyer.
Facebook seems to agree.
It has now rolled out the flags on satirical stories.
They join other algorithmic warnings from disputed claims on Twitter to suspected spam
on emails and texts, which constantly are sailed by people trying
to fool us because they want to influence our vote or part us from our money.
Any reminders to consider the source of information have to be a good thing.
And yet, I can't help feeling that the lawyer from Herborn was being too dogmatic in
demanding that parodies must always be labelled.
Fishing emails and troll-farm tweets can be hard to spot even for the algorithms.
We can't rely on them being flagged. We have to think for ourselves.
A clever hoax can act a bit like a vaccine, a benign way to prime our critical
thinking immune system, to make us more alert against the threats that matter, and a hoax
can't work if it has to announce itself up front.
What does it take for a hoax to earn our indulgence? I think there are three things.
First, the hoax has to be good. That means it must be
plausible if you're not paying attention, but obvious if you are. That's harder than it sounds.
Attempts at satire are often either too clunkily apparent on the first read or too well-disguised
on the second. Hans Traxler seems to have got the balance exactly right. He was
amazed by how many letters he received from readers who'd spotted one piece of nonsense
in his account of Georg Osseg's research, but who hadn't then questioned everything else.
Those letters said things like, dear Mr Traxler, I believe Gaeorgoseg must have been mistaken when he says he found the
woodcutters caught in the tree 25 metres above the ground because the tree had grown so much.
You see, trees sprout from the top, they don't push up from the bottom, so the cord would
have been quite close to the ground. Apart from that, minor blemish, I found Mr. Oseg's
work to be excellent.
Or, the manuscript from Vanigaroda can't have come from 1647 because it refers to a famous
event that happened in 1811.
Otherwise though, great job!
These are readers who really should have felt their spidey sense is tingling.
And when they discovered they'd been had,
they must have been embarrassed at their gullibility, and that's a useful feeling, because they'll
resolve to think more critically in future.
The second requirement of a satisfying hoax is, like a vaccine, it should do no harm.
I'm not sure that's true about some satirical stories from sites
such as the Babylon B. According to the Ohio State study, for example, 23% of Republicans
believed the B's story that US representative Ilan Omar said, being Jewish is an inherently
hostile act. You can reach your own conclusions as to whether this is or
is not a hilarious satire of the left wing of US politics, but the point is she never said it.
And when people believe she did, real damage is done to political discourse.
But with Hanslund Gretel, what were the worst things that happened? A couple
from North Rhine Westphalia spent some money on petrol, a teacher from Denmark looked
like an idiot for organising an international study visit, and a humorous lawyer from
her born made the Frankfurt police call in Hans Traxler for questioning, although I'm
happy to report that Traxler was cleared
of any crime.
The third and final ingredient of a good hoax is that it has a point. It draws our attention
to something about which we're more credulous than we should be. When the Cohen brothers
added that scream crawl to Fargo saying, this is a true story,
they were poking fun at a trend that began in the 1970s.
Directors of gory, low-budget, drive-in flicks discovered their gross more if they added
words like, based on real events, to the poster, however loose the connection might be.
Hans Tracksler was inspired to write about Hansel
and Gretel by reading a best-selling book called Gertr, Graba and Galerta, Gods, Graves
and Scholars. It told of archaeologists like Heinrich Schleeman, who excavated the site
of ancient Troy in modern-day Turkey, and made case that Homer's epic poem, The Iliad,
was based on historical events. There was a craze for pop archaeology books in Germany,
like Undi-Bibel-Hock Direct, and the Bible is right, researchers prove the historical truth.
Tracksler wondered if readers might not always be consuming books of this genre with a sufficiently
critical eye.
He got his answer.
Both Traxler and the Coins are prompting us to ask a deeper question.
When we like to hear there's truth in fiction, what is it we really care about?
Because there is a truth behind Hansel and Gretel.
But it's nothing to do with
Traxeless, scourulous nonsense about a murderous gingerbread baker.
In 1315, incessant rain ruined crops across Europe.
The Great Famine lasted for years.
It's hard to be sure of exactly what happened,
but some harrowing accounts survived.
In Bristol, England, one writer tells of such mortality
that the living could scare suffice to bury the dead
and some eat their own children.
In the Baltics it was said that mothers fed upon their sons.
Perhaps it's no surprise that the folklore of many countries has tales like Hansel and
Gretel about famine, child abandonment and cannibalism. I said that
Hansel and Gretel is a cautionary tale for children about stranger danger, but
perhaps these stories were also cautionary tales for parents about unimaginable hunger and choices too awful to contemplate.
But what about Takako Konishi?
Doesn't her death show the risks of dressing fiction as fact?
Remember, in 2001, Takako had turned up in North Dakota
in appropriately dressed in the cold midwinter, clutching
a map, and asking for directions to Fargo.
The world's media reported that she seemed to have believed the movie's claims to truth,
and hoped she could find the hidden million dollars.
Cult Film sparked hunt for a fortune, said the UK's Daily Telegraph.
It was an astonishing story, and the filmmaker Paul Berzler wanted to find out more.
Soon after reading the news, he persuaded British television's Channel 4 to send him to
North Dakota, with a cameraman and a Japanese actress.
Berzler planned to retrace Takako's final days, to find the people who'd encountered
her and recreate some scenes.
They checked into the quality in in downtown Fargo where Takako had stayed before she died.
Bursler spoke to the night clerk.
It's funny, he said.
I was surprised when I heard how she died looking for the ransom in the movie.
She never mentioned anything to me about Fargo or any other kind of movie.
She asked about seeing the stars, which I thought was a little strange because it was November
and it isn't that warm outside in the middle of the night.
What about the policeman in Bismarck, who told journalists how they tried to explain
to Takako that Fargo was a fictional movie and there wasn't really any treasure?
I'd never seen the film Fargo, one of them explained, but another officer in the station
had seen it and he told me there was money buried in this movie and then we started to think
that she had this false impression.
Takako had never said anything about money to the police either.
True, it wasn't unreasonable speculation.
There's no obvious reason why a Japanese woman would turn up in North Dakota
with a crudely drawn map, asking about Fargo.
But it all turned out to have been a case of 2 plus 2 making 5.
Ursula was now even more intrigued.
What was the real story?
He flew to Tokyo and tracked down Takakoko's former landlady.
She told him Takakoko had been a normal, happy girl, until one day everything changed.
She started drinking heavily.
It must have been man trouble, the land lady thought.
Bursler discovered that on her last night in the hotel, Takako had spent 40 minutes on
the phone to Singapore.
He found out the number Takako had called and dialed
it himself. But the other end of the line was an American businessman. Yes, the man
told Bersler, he had known Takako when he lived in Tokyo. She'd wanted to go with him when
he moved to Singapore. He'd said no. She was heartbroken. He was from Fargo.
Several weeks after Takako died, the police found out that she had sent her parents a suicide
note. She hadn't come to North Dakota to seek her fortune, she'd come to end her life. The media thought Tachaco had been too credulous about Fargo.
Instead, they had been too credulous about Tachaco.
The reports framed her tragic death as a cautionary tale about gullibility, a warning to think
critically, even when a story presents itself as true. That's exactly what it was,
but not in the way they'd imagined.
MUSIC
Essentials sources for this episode were Hans Traxler's book,
The Truth About Hansel and Gretel,
an article about the hoax by Jordan Todorov in Atlas Obscura
and Paul Bursler's documentary, This Is A True Story
For a full list of our sources, see the show notes at TimHalford.com
Corsion retails is written and presented by me, Tim Halford, with help from Andrew Wright
The show was produced by Ryan Dilly with support from Pete
Norton. The music, sound design and mixing are the work of Pascal Wise. The scripts were edited
by Julia Barton. Special thanks to Mia Label, Carly Miliori, Heather Fane, Maya Canig, Corsion retails is a pushkin industry's production. you