The #Righteous during World War Two
Rome: The Doctors At Fatebenefratelli Hospital Who Invented “Syndrome K”
In October 1943, a terrifying new disease suddenly appeared in Nazi-occupied Rome. Italian doctors claimed that the so-called “Syndrome K” was highly
contagious and dangerous. But, in fact, it was all a ruse.
A trio of doctors — Vittorio Sacerdoti, Giovanni Borromeo, and Adriano Ossicini — invented the disease to save Jews in Italy. When Jews came to Fatebenefratelli Hospital seeking a safe haven from the Nazis, the doctors
diagnosed them with “Syndrome K” and sent them to an isolated ward.
“Syndrome K was put on patient papers to indicate that the sick person wasn’t sick at all, but Jewish,” Ossicini later explained.
Suspicious Nazis, who were terrified of getting sick, kept their distance whenever
they passed by the ward. “The Nazis thought it was cancer or tuberculosis, and they fled like rabbits,” Sacerdoti later explained.
He and the others decided to use “K” in their fake disease as an ironic nod to either Albert Kesselring, the German commander overseeing Rome’s
occupation, or SS Chief Herbert Kappler, the city’s Nazi police chief.
While the hospital was raided in May 1944, only five people were captured hiding on a balcony — and they ultimately survived because Rome was soon liberated. And by the time the dust settled, the doctors had
helped save anywhere from 25 to 100 people. But no one knew of their heroism for years.
The full story didn’t come out until about 60 years later when the surviving doctors admitted what they’d done. Though Borromeo had already died in 1961, he was later singled out by Yad Vashem
for his work with Syndrome K — and his role in transferring Jewish patients from the ghettos to Fatebenefratelli Hospital so that they could have better treatment.
Yad Vashem posthumously honored Borromeo in 2004.
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"Kristallnacht" and the beginnings of Camp Westerbork in The Netherlands 1/n After Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938, a large influx of refugees had started. In the Netherlands people were not waiting for those refugees. Border posts often sent them back to their country of origin.
2/n And in 1938, 600 additional border guards were appointed to stop illegal Jewish refugees at the border.
The government barely provided care to the refugees who had entered the country. The support the emigrated Jews received came mainly through private initiatives. Until the
3/n beginning of the war, a total of some 10,000 German refugees were eventually admitted.
The government decided to build a central camp for these refugees.
Eventually, near Westerbork in Drenthe, a site was found where the Central Refugee Camp could be built. Money for the
April 6, 1944, at the 'Maison d'Izieu', southeast France, 44 Jewish children aged 4 to 17 and 7 caretakers were rounded up, then deported and murdered by the Nazis.
In November 1942, Nazi Germany took control of the area under the Vichy Regime. In April 1943, a children's home that provided refuge for dozens of children was established in the village of Izieu, formerly Vichy territory. The home, part of the OSE's network of hiding places,
was run by Sabine Zlatin, Jewish nurse and OSE activist. Some of the children who lived there were French, while others had come from Belgium, Austria, Algieria, Germany and Poland. Several had arrived there from other children's homes in France.
Thread 1/n
On April 4, 1945, the US 4th Armored Division and 89th Infantry Division of the Third US Army came face to face with the horrors of Nazi brutality. The men discovered Ohrdruf, a Nazi labor camp and a subcamp of the Buchenwald system.
2/n Ohrdruf was the first Nazi camp to be liberated by US forces. On April 12, a week after the camp’s liberation, Generals Dwight D. Eisenhower, George S. Patton, and Omar Bradley toured the site, led by a prisoner familiar with the camp. Numerous corpses were found scattered
3/n around the camp grounds, lying where they were killed prior to the camp’s evacuation. A burned out pyre was discovered with the charred remains of prisoners, proof of the SS’s hurried evacuation and attempt to cover their crimes. Evidence of torture was present, and prisoners
Others didn't want to know. They said, “Enough already! We also went hungry, we also suffered this, that and other things”. And so they didn't ask. It took years before they realized they should ask and that it was necessary to know
Guiliana Tedeschi was born in Milan in 1914 and educated in the middle-class milieu of Turin. She completed an honors degree in linguistics as a student and worked as a teacher. Married with two small children, she was arrested on 5 April 1944 and deported together with her ⬇️
architect husband and mother-in-law to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Her two girls, one a baby, survived in hiding cared for by her Roman Catholic housekeeper. The Jewish population of Italy had remained relatively safe until late in the war and relatively few (8,369 out of 44,500) ⬇️
"Just a normal day in the camp" 1/n 4 a.m.: Awakening
You are awakened by the kapo barking at you. Hurry up! You must raise, find your shoes (but maybe somebody stole them which often means death because you'll not be able to work) and start as soon as possible the "bettenbau".
2/n From the shapeless straw mattress you'll have to make a perfect bed in a military manner, with blankets made up exactly over the straw mattress. Of course, this is nearly impossible to do and the kapo knows it. The "bettenbau" is just a good opportunity for him to beat the
3/n prisoners.
The bed is made now, and it is time for washing. You run out of the barrack and try to reach the sanitary facility. There are only a couple of sanitary facilities for hundreds of prisoners. You have just a couple of minutes for washing. It is nearly time for the
1/n Daily Telegraph's holocaust article in 1942 that went unheralded
The story was published on 25 June 1942, and headlined “Germans murder 700,000 Jews in Poland”.
2/n "The story was remarkably detailed and accurate"
All the facts were supplied by Szmul Zygielbojm, a member of the Polish government in exile who made it his mission to inform the world about the holocaust.
After arriving in London in 1942, Zygielbojm used a clandestine
3/n network of contacts in occupied Poland to gather eyewitness accounts of the fate of Jews. The particular information in the Daily Telegraph’s story was smuggled to London on microfilm hidden inside a key”.
The newspaper reported that mobile gas chambers were being used for