Holocaust survivor who became US Army major general has died | NZ Herald

Sidney Shachnow

Sidney Shachnow, who survived the Holocaust as a child and fought in Vietnam as a U.S. Army Green Beret before becoming a major general, has died. He was 83.

Shachnow’s wife, Arlene, said by phone Wednesday that he passed away on Sept. 27 at a hospital in Pinehurst, North Carolina. They lived in the nearby town of Southern Pines.

Shachnow was involved in some of the biggest events of the 20th Century, from enduring the horrors of Nazi-controlled Europe to leading American forces in Germany during the fall of the Berlin Wall.

He served in the U.S. Army Special Forces for more than 30 years, a career that was informed by a childhood spent avoiding death. It came full circle when he lived in a house in Berlin that was once owned by Adolf Hitler’s finance minister.

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Dutch resistance fighter Freddie Oversteegen dies at 92 | NZ Herald

Freddie Oversteegen

She was 14 when she joined the Dutch resistance, though with her long, dark hair in braids she looked at least two years younger.

When she rode her bicycle down the streets of Haarlem in North Holland, firearms hidden in a basket, Nazi officials rarely stopped to question her. When she walked through the woods, serving as a lookout or seductively leading her SS target to a secluded place, there was little indication that she carried a handgun and was preparing an execution.

The Dutch resistance was widely believed to be a man’s effort in a man’s war. If women were involved, the thinking went, they were likely doing little more than handing out anti-German pamphlets or newspapers.

Yet Freddie Oversteegen and her sister Truus, two years her senior, were rare exceptions – a pair of teenage women who took up arms against Nazi occupiers and Dutch “traitors” on the outskirts of Amsterdam. With Hannie Schaft, a onetime law student with fiery red hair, they sabotaged bridges and rail lines with dynamite, shot Nazis while riding their bikes, and donned disguises to smuggle Jewish children across the country and sometimes out of concentration camps.

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The rise of British anti-Semitism | Otago Daily Times

UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is embroiled in a conflict which threatens to not only see him challenged for his position, but also split the party when it should be riding high in the polls.

On Saturday, Mr Corbyn apologised for the hurt inflicted on Jewish people by the Labour anti-Semitism row as he vowed to speed up scores of disciplinary cases.

In a video message released on social media, he said working with the Jewish population to rebuild trust was a ”vital priority”. Labour has been slow in processing disciplinary cases of, mostly online anti-Semitic abuse by party members. The party wants to accelerate this process – Labour must never be the home for such people.

His public statement on the divisive issue came after weeks of difficult headlines and virtual silence from Labour’s front bench. Labour MP for Barking Margaret Hodge confronted Mr Corbyn in Parliament and told him to his face what she and many others are feeling.

Under his leadership, the Labour Party is perceived by most Jews, thousands of party members and millions of members of the public, as anti-Semitic and racist.

Ms Hodge, who describes herself as a secular, immigrant Jew, said anti-Semitism appeared to have become the legitimate price the leadership was willing to pay for pursuing the longstanding cause of Palestinians in the Middle East.

Complaints to the Labour Party about anti-Semitism from party members have been dealt with in a desultory manner. In the middle of last month, Labour’s national executive committee agreed its own definition of anti-Semitism. Instead of adopting the international definition agreed in 2016 in the wake of the rise of anti-Semitism across Europe, the party chose to omit key examples used in that definition.

The British Labour Party is not alone in battling anti-Semitism. The childhood home of the late Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor, renowned author and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace, was vandalised with anti-Semitic graffiti. The house in the Romanian town of Sighetu Marmatiei serves as a museum. Anonymous vandals scrawled on the house the words: ”Pedophile. Jewish Nazi who is in hell with Hitler”.

In New Zealand, Unite Union official Mike Treen was detained in Israel after he took part in an aid convoy to Gaza. Mr Treen was allegedly attacked, alongside other international campaigners, on the ship Al Awda. Green MP Marama Davidson also suffered the same treatment on an earlier trip.

There is a rise in anti-Israel sentiment globally, fuelled in part by hard left-wing activists who are taking the side of Palestine. Israel says it is defending its borders, surrounded as it is by Arab nations.

Gruesome images of children being hit by Israeli rockets can be found easily in mainstream media reports, often without the balance of why Israel decided to launch the attack. Israel’s voice needs to be heard.

The scrape Mr Corbyn now finds himself in will not go away easily as Jewish groups accuse him of lecturing them on the issue and being ideologically hostile to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of anti-Semitism.

It remains unclear whether the Labour leader is ready to adopt the code. The Jewish community has repeatedly said the party must act, rather than just talk, about the problem.

In an article for The Guardian published on Saturday, Mr Corbyn said he felt confident outstanding issues over the definition of anti-Semitism could be resolved.

The British Labour Party is an example to politicians around the world of the dangers of ignoring the growing global problem of anti-Semitism affecting both the political left and right.

With the Holocaust remaining in living memory, world leaders must show more empathy to the horrors the Jewish people have faced and continue to face.

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Israeli leader says he understands criticism of Poland deal | NZ Herald

Benjamin Netanyahu

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday he understands the criticism of his compromise agreement with Poland over its disputed Holocaust speech law, as he tried to tamp down an uproar at home in which critics have accused him of whitewashing history for political considerations.

Netanyahu and his Polish counterpart issued a joint statement last week praising Polish resistance to the Nazi occupation and distancing Poland from the Holocaust. The move came after Poland agreed to scrap prison terms for those who criticize its wartime conduct.

The agreement was aimed at ending months of tension between the two generally friendly governments that was accompanied by a wave of anti-Semitic rhetoric in Poland.

Instead, the compromise sparked outrage in Israel over Netanyahu’s seeming capitulation to the Polish narrative that they were only victims of the Nazis. Historians say anti-Semitism was deeply rooted in Poland and that many Poles collaborated with the Nazis in the genocide.

In a rare rebuke of the Israeli government, the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial slammed the statement, saying it contained “highly problematic wording” and “grave errors and deceptions.”

It warned that the law’s revision did nothing to change its essence, saying it could still impede historical research. Even some of Netanyahu’s coalition partners called the declaration disgraceful and demanded it be scrapped.

At his weekly Cabinet meeting, Netanyahu defended the compromise statement while acknowledging it did not address all elements of the dispute.

“The statement published after the changing of the law was accompanied by a senior historian. However, after its publication different comments were heard,” he said. “I listened closely to the comments of the historians, including about some things that were not included in the statement. I respect that, and it will be expressed.”

The declaration, which denounced “anti-Polonism” alongside anti-Semitism, was seen as a diplomatic coup for Poland, which has long sought international recognition of the massive suffering its people experienced under German occupation and for the heroism of its wartime resistance fighters.

For decades, Polish society avoided discussing the killing of Jews by civilians or denied that anti-Semitism motivated the slayings, blaming all atrocities on the Germans. Raised on this narrative, many Poles react viscerally when confronted with the growing body of scholarship about Polish involvement in the killing of Jews.

In Israel, home to the world’s largest survivor population, many remember anti-Semitism in Poland from before, during and after World War II.

“Netanyahu must stop trading in history as if it were his personal property,” read Sunday’s main editorial in the Haaretz daily, titled “History Is Not for Sale.”

“Instead of getting mired in controversial issues and clumsy attempts to decide matters at the heart of vital historical research, it would be better to publish a document that leaves the work with historians on both sides,” it added.

Poland is among a growing number of nationalist governments in eastern Europe that have become more supportive of Israel in recent years. Netanyahu has expressed pride in such deepening ties and has sought to enhance them.

Many in Israel, particularly on the left, fear the newfound diplomatic backing has come at a cost.

Tamar Zandberg, leader of the left-wing Meretz party, said she is convening a parliament vote this week to disavow the agreement.

“Netanyahu sold his soul to the devil in a document that the greatest anti-Semites and Holocaust deniers in Europe would gladly sign off on,” she said. “It is unbelievable that the prime minister of Israel is simply willing to sell out the history of our people for this nonsense.”

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Jewish NGO condemns ‘wholesale misappropriation’ of Holocaust amid outcry over US border policy | JNS

The Simon Wiesenthal Centre, a Jewish human rights NGO that teaches the lessons of the Nazi Holocaust, has denounced the “wholesale misappropriation” of the Holocaust amid on the ongoing outcry over the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy of separating children from migrant parents at the U.S.-Mexico border…writes Sean Savage/JNS.

“To be sure, like millions of Americans on both sides of the political divide, we want our leaders to solve the humanitarian crisis at hand. No matter what the divisions are over immigration policies, it is unacceptable to separate little children from their parents. That isn’t what America stands for. Those are not our values,” Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper, dean and founder, and associate dean and director of global social action of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, respectively, said in a statement.

“We urge immediate steps to ameliorate this situation, and for the administration and Congress to finally take the necessary steps to end this problem long-range,” they continued. “But we denounce the alarming wholesale misappropriation of the the Nazi Holocaust by critics of current policies.”

Last weekend, Michael Hayden, a retired four-star general and former director of the CIA and NSA, tweeted an image of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp with the caption of “other governments have separated mothers and children.”

Hayden later backtracked and issued an apology for the tweet, telling CNN that “if I overachieved [sic] by comparing it to Birkenau, I apologize to anyone who may have felt offended.”

MSNBC morning host and former Republican politician Joe Scarborough similarly invoked the Holocaust, comparing border-patrol agents to “Nazis,” which drew a strong White House condemnation.

“It is appalling that Joe Scarborough would compare sworn federal law-enforcement officers, who put their lives on the line every day to keep American people safe,  to Nazis,” White House deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said in a statement. “This is the type of inflammatory and unacceptable rhetoric that puts a target on the backs of our great law enforcement.”

Cooper told JNS that the statements by Scarborough and Hayden, as well as comparisons to Nazi Germany on social media, are “very damaging to collective memory.”

“I think it winds up dulling people to suffering,” he said. “If you can’t tell the difference between what was done to 1.5 million Jewish children during the Holocaust, and what is going on today with the horrible situation on the border, then you have no reason to be in a position of leadership.”

Cooper added that he feels this type of imagery will only push people on both sides further apart on the issue.

“Deployment cynically of this type of imagery delays and deflects from getting us closer to consensus on how to fix this [in the] short term and long term,” he said. “We have to learn lessons from the past, but one of the fundamental lessons is that not everything is an Auschwitz—and that’s the whole point.”

Last week, more than two-dozen Jewish religious and communal organizations issued a joint letter condemning the Trump administration’s policies along the U.S.-Mexico border.

The letter, which included groups such as the American Jewish Committee, the Anti-Defamation League, the Orthodox Union, United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism and the Union  for Reform Judaism, said that the Trump administration’s policy of separating children from their migrant parents “undermines the values of our nation, and jeopardises the safety and well-being of thousands of people.”

“Our own people’s history as ‘strangers’ reminds us of the many struggles faced by immigrants today and compels our commitment to an immigration system in this country that is compassionate and just,” the joint letter read.

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Recovered in Paris flea market, 1924 Austrian silent film is a Holocaust preview | Times of Israel

Banished Jews carry their Torah Scrolls with them – A scene from 1924 silent film, “City Without Jews”

Based on famous novel and digitally restored, ‘City Without Jews’ includes stunningly prescient scenes depicting passage of anti-Jewish laws and deportations from Vienna

A Jewish man is beaten up on the street. Jewish husbands are separated from their non-Jewish wives and children, and deported on trains. A Jewish community, led by rabbis carrying a Torah scrolls, marches down a dark road as it is banished from town.

These snapshots appear to be Holocaust history — but they are not. These are scenes from a silent Austrian film made a decade prior to the enactment of the anti-Jewish Nuremberg laws, and some 15 years before the outbreak of World War II.

The 1924 film “City Without Jews” is based on a popular 1922 novel by Austrian writer and journalist Hugo Bettauer. It astutely predicted what was to come. But only partially.

The film was conceived as a satirical response to the anti-Semitism gaining popular and political strength in Austria during the early inter-war period. Its plot depicted the scapegoating of the Jews for the country’s problems and their subsequent expulsion.

But unlike in the real Holocaust, these Jews are eventually reinstated when the Austrians realized their country was suffering from the absence of the creative and successful Jewish community.

 

 

The Jews who helped cure Nazis | The Jewish Chronicle

Walter Merkel and his twin brother

The remarkable tale of three Jewish army officers who used kindness and care to rehabilitate their former SS enemies

The letter was addressed to “Captain W Merkel, Featherstone Park Camp, Northumberland” and dated October 14, 1946.

Featherstone Park was a prisoner of war (PoW) camp. The letter’s author, Kurt Schilling, was a former Nazi officer who had just been released from the camp and returned to Germany.

“I cannot but thank you for all the kindness and humane understanding you showed, not only to myself, but also to the other PoWs in ‘C’ compound,” he wrote to Captain Walter Merkel.

“I myself am grateful to you and those officers like you who made my unpleasant duty much easier by their excellent understanding of the mentality of prisoners of war.

“Most of those British officers under the command of Colonel Vickers have done more for understanding between our two nations, by the way of treatment in the camp, than statesmanship can ever hope to achieve.”

Featherstone was one of a number of PoW camps operated in Britain to rehabilitate German soldiers, including many devoted Nazis.

What made it different from any other camp was that its key officers — Colonel Vickers, Cpt Merkel and a Captain Herbert Sulzbach — were all Jewish.

Robert Bieber, a visiting research fellow at the department of war studies at Kings College, London, came across the story via his wife’s work at Richmond Synagogue.

He explained: “My wife runs a day centre at the shul for elderly people, and one of the ladies who’s a member came to me and said: ‘I’ve got some very interesting papers. My first husband was in the army, and I thought you’d like to see them’.”

Drawings and Christmas cards were among the gifts the former senior Nazis made and presented to their Jewish PoW camp guards.
Drawings and Christmas cards were among the gifts the former senior Nazis made and presented to their Jewish PoW camp guards.

The papers contained thank-you letters to Cpt Merkel, as well as other items that the German PoWs had made to show their gratitude towards him, including a specially designed Christmas card, and a book full of expertly drawn cartoons depicting life at Featherstone and Cpt Merkel’s role at the camp.

The portfolio of letters and drawings was acquired by the Imperial War Museum earlier this month, with the collection described as “unique and visually arresting”.

“Herbert Sulzbach wrote a book. His role was reconciliation,” Mr Bieber said.

Cpt Sulzbach, a British officer in World War Two, had been a German Officer in World War One, winning the Iron Cross first and second class for bravery.

He would go on to be awarded with both an OBE and the Croix de Guerre, possibly giving him a unique collection of medals. He also received letters from grateful prisoners, including members of the SS.

One wrote of Cpt Sulzbach’s rehabilitation efforts: “We were all the more astonished that you did not exclude us members of the SS, who should inevitably have been your enemies to the death.”

Another, an SS Standartenfuhrer, wrote to the captain saying simply: “You have cured me of certain preconceptions.”

Mr Bieber said: “Cpt Merkel’s role has been far less recognised. But it’s recognised here in terms of the artefacts. The Imperial War Museum want to make these particular items a centre-piece of their new World War Two exhibition.”

Featherstone Park prisoner of war camp in Northumberland in 1947. It was used for the de-Nazification of former SS officers
Featherstone Park prisoner of war camp in Northumberland in 1947. It was used for the de-Nazification of former SS officers

Mr Bieber described the relationship between Cpt Merkel and the Nazi officers as a “remarkable rapport”.

“They never suppressed the fact that they were Jewish. Cpt Merkel, in conjunction with Cpt Sulzbach and Col Vickers — all three of them were Jewish — built a remarkable system.”

Despite his surname, Cpt Merkel was born to a British family, in Newcastle.

“He was one of six, an identical twin,” his daughter Karen said. “When the depression came, the whole family moved from Tyneside to London.

“My father left school when he was 14. He and his twin joined the Jewish Lads Brigade in London and also the Territorial Army. They were keen to serve. He joined the Durham Light Infantry, but was ill and in hospital having an operation when they went off to Burma and never came back, so it was extraordinary that he survived, like a flip of the coin.

“He was then posted back up to Northumberland to serve at the prisoner of war camp for senior Nazis.”

Cpt Merkel met and married his wife while an officer at the camp.

“It was extraordinary that he found himself one of three senior officers, all of whom were Jewish,” his daughter said.

“I don’t know what the odds are of that, but it does seem quite extraordinary that they were there, looking after senior Nazi officers.

“They got on. Obviously it was their job to encourage the officers to think differently. They were there to encourage new ways of approaching life and thinking.

“We have some really stunning items in the family which the prisoners made for my father. We have a clock, candlestick holders, the most beautiful big bookcase, an ashtray, jewellery boxes, and the most amazing box for my mother when they got engaged.

“There was a huge affection.”

The three British officers at Featherstone were not the only ones who worked in camps designed to aid in the de-Nazification of German soldiers.

Capt Herbert Sulzbach (centre) was filmed with Englebert Hoppe and Kurt Schwedersky in 1982 when a memorial plaque was erected at the gates of Featherstone Park. Capt Sulzbach served in the German army in 1914
Capt Herbert Sulzbach (centre) was filmed with Englebert Hoppe and Kurt Schwedersky in 1982 when a memorial plaque was erected at the gates of Featherstone Park. Capt Sulzbach served in the German army in 1914

An article written by Dr Anthony Grenville for the journal of the Association of Jewish Refugees, in memory of Cpt Sulzbach, noted an incident recounted by a former German prisoner at Camp 180, near Cambridge.

An SS officer at the camp shouted “Jew lout” at Charles Stambrook, a British Jewish officer, as the prisoners were being counted.

“Let us reflect for a moment what an SS officer would have done, if a prisoner of war had shouted ‘SS lout’ at him,” the prisoner said.

“This is what the British officer did. He turned round cooly and said calmly to the man who had shouted: ‘The Jew part is correct, the lout part isn’t’. And carried on.”

Mr Bieber said he “couldn’t imagine what came over the British authorities, to put three British Jewish officers in charge of a Nazi prisoner of war camp.

“I had a sense of almost disbelief to read about it in the first place, but then a sense of ‘isn’t this what Jewish people stand for? Reaching out the hands of friendship?’. This is exactly what Jewish people do. So I felt a huge sense of pride and belief, justifying my confidence in what we Jews are.”

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Holocaust survivor reveals how he was beaten and starved at Nazi camps | NZ Herald

As a young child in Nazi-occupied Poland in 1939, Szmulek Rozental (Steve Ross) was terrified when he heard the rumbling sound of trucks bringing in 20 soldiers in yellow uniforms sitting with rifles between their knees.

They stopped, spread blankets on the ground, and with the help of local policemen, demanded all valuables be surrendered and placed on the blankets.

The soldiers set the beards and collars of the Hassidic men on fire engulfing their faces in flames, threw one woman in a chair out of a window and used a lock cutter to cut off a man’s nose, according to the Daily Mail.

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Holocaust row: Abbas accused of anti-Semitism | BBC

Remarks by Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas about the Holocaust have been condemned as anti-Semitic by Israeli politicians and rights activists.

Mr Abbas told a meeting in the West Bank the Nazi mass murder of European Jews was the result of their financial activities, not anti-Semitism.

He described their “social function” as “usury and banking and such”.

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Former Polish PM: ‘Of Course Poles Took Part in Holocaust’ | Algemeiner

Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz, former PM of Poland

A former prime minister entered Poland’s fraught debate over a new law that prohibits discussion of Polish collusion with the Nazi Holocaust, bluntly telling a leading newspaper that “of course” there were cases of Poles collaborating in the extermination of the Jews.

Emphasizing that “today’s generation is not responsible for what happened,” Cimoszewicz — a social democrat politician who was Poland’s prime minister during the mid-1990s and also served as the country’s foreign minister — urged Poles to talk “openly and honestly ” about the experience of Nazi occupation.

Among the historical examples he cited were the “tens of thousands” of “szmalcowniks” — Poles who informed on Jews or extorted their property. At least 60,000 Jews had been denounced by Poles to the Nazi Gestapo, Cimoszewicz said.

The former prime minister also noted that more than 6,000 Poles had been honored as “Righteous Among the Nations” by Israel’s Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem. “We are all obliged to remember these heroic people, but we must not allow their heroism to cover the crimes and wickedness of a much larger group of Poles,” he continued.

“Antisemitism was and remains endemic in our country,” Cimoszewicz said.

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