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Simon Wiesenthal
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Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor who was credited with tracking down more than 1,100 Nazi war criminals, was laid to rest today at noon in Herzeliya. |
Simon Wiesenthal's Biography
(from Simon Wiesenthal Center)
Simon Wiesenthal was born on
December 31, 1908 in Buczacz, in what is now the Lvov Oblast section
of the Ukraine. When Wiesenthal's father was killed in World War
I, Mrs. Wiesenthal took her family and fled to Vienna for a brief
period, returning to Buczacz when she remarried. The young Wiesenthal
graduated from the Gymnasium in 1928 and applied for admission
to the Polytechnic Institute in Lvov. Turned away because of quota
restrictions on Jewish students, he went instead to the Technical
University of Prague, from which he received his degree in architectural
engineering in 1932.
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Simon Wiesenthal and his wife Cyla, 1936
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In 1936, Simon married Cyla
Mueller and worked in an architectural office in Lvov. Their life
together was happy until 1939 when Germany and Russia signed their
"non-aggression" pact and agreed to partition Poland
between them; the Russian army soon occupied Lvov, and shortly
afterward began the Red purge of Jewish merchants, factory owners
and other professionals. In the purge of "bourgeois"
elements that followed the Soviet occupation of Lvov Oblast at
the beginning of World War II, Wiesenthal's stepfather was arrested
by the NKVD (People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs - Soviet
Secret Police) and eventually died in prison, his stepbrother
was shot, and Wiesenthal himself, forced to close his business,
became a mechanic in a bedspring factory. Later he saved himself,
his wife, and his mother from deportation to Siberia by bribing
an NKVD commissar. When the Germans displaced the Russians in
1941, a former employee of his, then serving the collaborationist
Ukrainian Auxiliary police, helped him to escape execution by
the Nazis. But he did not escape incarceration. Following initial
detention in the Janwska concentration camp just outside Lvov,
he and his wife were assigned to the forced labor camp serving
the Ostbahn Works, the repair shop for Lvov's Eastern Railroad.
Early in 1942, the Nazi hierarchy
formally decided on the "Final Solution" to the "Jewish
problem" -- Annihilation. Throughout occupied Europe a terrifying
genocide machine was put into operation. In August 1942, Wiesenthal's
mother was sent to the Belzec death camp. By September, most of
his and his wife's relatives were dead; a total of eighty-nine
members of both families perished.
Because his wife's blonde hair
gave her a chance of passing as an "Aryan," Wiesenthal
made a deal with the Polish underground. In return for detailed
charts of railroad junction points made by him for use by saboteurs,
his wife was provided with false papers identifying her as "Irene
Kowalska," a Pole , and spirited out of the camp in the autumn
of 1942. She lived in Warsaw for two years and then worked in
the Rhineland as a forced laborer, without her true identity ever
being discovered.
With the help of the deputy
director, Wiesenthal himself escaped the Ostbahn camp in October
1943, just before the Germans began liquidating all the inmates.
In June 1944, he was recaptured and sent back to Janwska where
he would almost certainly have been killed had the German eastern
front not collapsed under the advancing Red Army. Knowing they
would be sent into combat if they had no prisoners to justify
their rear-echelon assignment, the SS guards at Janwska decided
to keep the few remaining inmates alive. With 34 prisoners out
of an original 149,000, the 200 guards joined the general retreat
westward, picking up the entire population of the village of Chelmiec
along the way to adjust the prisoner-guard ratio.
Very few of the prisoners survived
the westward trek through Plaszow, Gross-Rosen and Buchenwald,
which ended at Mauthausen in upper Austria. Weighing less than
100 pounds and lying helplessly in a barracks where the stench
was so strong that even hardboiled SS guards would not enter,
Wiesenthal was barely alive when Mauthausen was liberated by an
American armored unit on May 5, 1945.
As soon as his health was sufficiently
restored, Wiesenthal began gathering and preparing evidence on
Nazi atrocities for the War Crimes Section of the United States
Army. After the war, he also worked for the Army's Office of Strategic
Services and Counter-Intelligence Corps and headed the Jewish
Central Committee of the United States Zone of Austria, a relief
and welfare organization. Late in 1945, he and his wife, each
of whom had believed the other to be dead, were reunited, and
in 1946, their daughter Pauline was born.
The evidence supplied by Wiesenthal
was utilized in the American zone war crime trials. When his association
with the United States Army ended in 1947, Wiesenthal and thirty
volunteers opened the Jewish Historical Documentation Center in
Linz, Austria, for the purpose of assembling evidence for future
trials. But, as the Cold War between the United States and the
Soviet Union intensified, both sides lost interest in prosecuting
Germans, and Wiesenthal's volunteers, succumbing to frustration,
drifted away to more ordinary pursuits. In 1954, the office in
Linz was closed and its files were given to the Yad Vashem Archives
in Israel, except for one - the dossier on Adolf Eichmann, the
inconspicuous technocrat who, as chief of the Gestapo's Jewish
Department, had supervised the implementation of the "Final
Solution."
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Adolf Eichmann brought to trial
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While continuing his salaried
relief and welfare work, including the running of an occupational
training school for Hungarian and other Iron Curtain refugees,
Wiesenthal never relaxed in his pursuit of the elusive Eichmann
who had disappeared at the time of Germany's defeat in World War
II. In 1953, Wiesenthal received information that Eichmann was
in Argentina from people who had spoken to him there. He passed
this information on to Israel through the Israeli embassy in Vienna
and in 1954 also informed Nahum Goldmann, but the FBI had received
information that Eichmann was in Damascus, Syria. It was not until
1959 that Israel was informed by Germany that Eichmann was in
Buenos Aires living under the alias of Ricardo Klement. He was
captured there by Israeli agents and brought to Israel for trial.
Eichmann was found guilty of mass murder and executed on May 31,
1961.
Encouraged by the capture of
Eichmann, Wiesenthal reopened the Jewish Documentation Center,
this time in Vienna, and concentrated exclusively on the hunting
of war criminals. One of his high priority cases was Karl Silberbauer,
the Gestapo officer who arrested Anne Frank, the fourteen year-old
German-Jewish girl who was murdered by the Nazis after hiding
in an Amsterdam attic for two years. Dutch neo-Nazi propagandists
were fairly successful in their attempts to discredit the authenticity
of Anne Frank's famous diary until Wiesenthal located Silberbauer,
then a police inspector in Austria, in 1963. "Yes,"
Silberbauer confessed, when confronted, "I arrested Anne
Frank."
In October 1966, sixteen SS
officers, nine of them found by Wiesenthal, went on trial in Stuttgart,
West Germany, for participation in the extermination of Jews in
Lvov. High on Wiesenthal's most-wanted list was Franz Stangl,
the commandant of the Treblinka and Sobibor concentration camps
in Poland. After three years of patient undercover work by Wiesenthal,
Stangl was located in Brazil and remanded to West Germany for
imprisonment in 1967. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and
died in prison.
Wiesenthal's book of memoirs,
The Murderers Among Us, was published in 1967. During a visit
to the United States to promote the book, Wiesenthal announced
that he had found Mrs. Hermine Ryan, nee Braunsteiner, a housewife
living in Queens, New York. According to the dossier, Mrs. Ryan
had supervised the killings of several hundred children at Majdanek.
She was extradited to Germany for trial as a war criminal in 1973
and received life imprisonment.
The Jewish Documentation Center
in Vienna is a nondescript, sparsely furnished three-room office
with a staff of four, including Wiesenthal. Contrary to belief,
Wiesenthal does not usually track down the Nazi fugitives himself.
His chief task is gathering and analyzing information. In that
work he is aided by a vast, informal, international network of
friends, colleagues, and sympathizers, including German World
War II veterans, appalled by the horrors they witnessed. He has
even received tips from former Nazis with grudges against other
former Nazis. A special branch of his Vienna office documents
the activities of right-wing groups, neo-Nazis and similar organizations.
Painstakingly, Wiesenthal culls
every pertinent document and record he can get and listens to
the many personal accounts told him by individual survivors. With
an architect's structural acumen, a Talmudist's thoroughness,
and a brilliant talent for investigative thinking, he pieces together
the most obscure, incomplete, and apparently irrelevant and unconnected
data to build cases solid enough to stand up in a court of law.
The dossiers are then presented to the appropriate authorities.
When, as often happens, they fail to take action, whether from
indifference, pro-Nazi sentiment, or some other consideration,
Wiesenthal goes to the press and other media, for experience has
taught him that publicity and an outraged public opinion are powerful
weapons.
The work yet to be done is enormous.
Germany's war criminal files contain more than 90,000 names, most
of them of people who have never been tried. Thousands of former
Nazis, not named in any files, are also known to be at large,
often in positions of prominence, throughout Germany. Aside from
the cases themselves, there is the tremendous task of persuading
authorities and the public that the Nazi Holocaust was massive
and pervasive. In the final paragraph of his memoirs, he quotes
what an SS corporal told him in 1944: "You would tell the
truth [about the death camps] to the people in America. That's
right. And you know what would happen, Wiesenthal? They wouldn't
believe you. They'd say you were mad. Might even put you into
an asylum. How can anyone believe this terrible business - unless
he has lived through it?"
Among Mr. Wiesenthal's many
honors include decorations from the Austrian and French resistance
movements, the Dutch Freedom Medal, the Luxembourg Freedom Medal,
the United Nations League for the Help of Refugees Award, the
U.S. Congressional Gold Medal presented to him by President Jimmy
Carter in 1980, and the French Legion of Honor which he received
in 1986. Wiesenthal was a consultant for the motion picture thriller,
The Odessa File(Paramount, 1974). The Boys from Brazil (Twentieth
Century Fox, 1978), a major motion picture based on Ira Levin's
book of the same name, starring Sir Laurence Olivier as Herr Lieberman,
a character styled after Wiesenthal.
In 1981, the Wiesenthal Center
produced the Academy AwardTM-winning documentary, Genocide, narrated
by Elizabeth Taylor and the late Orson Welles, and introduced
by Simon Wiesenthal.
Wiesenthal lives in a modest
apartment in Vienna and spends his evenings answering letters,
studying books and files, and working on his stamp collection.
He lived there with his wife Cyla untill her death November 10,
2003.
As is to be expected, Simon
Wiesenthal has received numerous anonymous threats and insulting
letters. In June 1982, a bomb exploded at the front door of his
house causing a great deal of damage. Fortunately, no one was
hurt. Since then, his house and office have been guarded by an
armed policeman. One German and several Austrian neo-Nazis were
arrested for the bombing. The German, who was found to be the
main perpetrator, was sentenced to five years in prison.
Wiesenthal is often asked to
explain his motives for becoming a Nazi hunter. According to Clyde
Farnsworth in the New York Times Magazine (February 2, 1964),
Wiesenthal once spent the Sabbath at the home of a former Mauthausen
inmate, now a well-to-do jewelry manufacturer. After dinner his
host said, "Simon, if you had gone back to building houses,
you'd be a millionaire. Why didn't you?" "You're a religious
man," replied Wiesenthal. "You believe in God and life
after death. I also believe. When we come to the other world and
meet the millions of Jews who died in the camps and they ask us,
'What have you done?', there will be many answers. You will say,
'I became a jeweler', Another will say, I have smuggled coffee
and American cigarettes', Another will say, 'I built houses',
But I will say, 'I didn't forget you'."
ISRACAST,
Jerusalem
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