The #Righteous during World War Two
Egyptan Dr. Mohammed Helmy saved a Jewish family in Berlin from death in the Holocaust 1/n Mohamed Helmy was an Egyptian doctor who lived in Berlin and hid several Jews during the Holocaust. He was honoured by Israel's Yad Vashem
2/n Holocaust memorial as "Righteous Among the Nations" – the highest honor given to a non-Jew for risking great personal dangers to rescue Jews from the Nazis' gas chambers.
Helmy was born in 1901 in Khartoum, in what was then Egypt and is now Sudan, to an Egyptian father and a
3/n German mother. He came to Berlin in 1922 to study medicine and worked as a urologist until 1938, when Germany banned him from the public health system because he was not considered Aryan, said Martina Voigt, the German historian, who conducted research on Helmy.
4/n When the Nazis began deporting Jews, he hid 21-year-old Anna Boros, a family friend, at a cabin on the outskirts of the city, and provided her relatives with medical care. After Boros' relatives admitted to Nazi interrogators that he was hiding her, he arranged for her
5/n to hide at an acquaintance's house before authorities could inspect the cabin. The four family members survived the war and immigrated to the U.S. Letters expressing their gratitude to their rescuer were uncovered in the Berlin archives, and were submitted to Yad Vashem
6/n After the war, Helmy picked up his work as a physician again and married Emmi. The couple had been unable to marry during the Nazi era because of the race laws in place. Helmy stayed in West Berlin where he worked as a doctor until his death in 1982.
7/7 Mohamed Helmy and his wife Emmi Helmy (right) in Berlin during a visit of Anna Boros (second from left) and her daughter Carla in 1969.
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Dr. Ludwik Fleck:
How vaccine-makers fooled the Nazis from inside a concentration camp lab 1/n
"We made a typhus vaccine that did not work. For controls we sent a sample that did work. The illiterates didn’t realize what was going on."
2/n Confined first at Auschwitz then Buchenwald, Jewish microbiologist Ludwik Fleck conspired with a ragtag team of scientists and rebels to send dud typhus vaccines to the German soldiers on the eastern front.
The good vaccine was administered to vulnerable people in the camp.
3/n In the Lwow ghetto, with a vast supply of infected people, Fleck had begun to search for the typhus antigen in human sources – specifically, in the urine of the sick. He found it, deriving first a diagnostic method, and then a vaccine. By August 1942, he would be ready to
Hinda Cohen - a powerful message in tiny shoes 1/n
Tzipporah (née Barka) and Dov Cohen lived in Kovno. Their first child died at birth before the war.
With the German invasion of Lithuania, the couple tried unsuccessfully to escape to Soviet territory, and eventually found
2/n themselves back home in Kovno. On 18 January 1942, about 6 months after their relocation to the Kovno ghetto, Tzipporah and Dov had a baby girl. They named her Hinda, after Tzipporah’s mother. In late November 1943,
Hinda's parents: Tzipporah and Dov
3/n the couple was assigned to forced labor in the Aleksotas camp for airport workers, outside the ghetto. During the day, men and women would go out to work, while the children remained in the camp with a handful of elderly. Women and children were separated from men,
Wilhelm Hosenfeld, savior of "The Pianist", Wladyslaw Szpilman
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Although Hosenfeld had already joined the NSDAP in 1935, he soon lost his illusions about the regime and was appalled by the crimes against Poles and Jews that he witnessed. Throughout his military service, he kept
a diary in which he expressed his feelings. The texts survived as he regularly sent the notebooks home. In his notes, Hosenfeld emphasized his growing outrage at the oppression of the Poles by the regime, the persecution of the Polish clergy, the mistreatment of the Jews and,
at the beginning of the "Final Solution", his horror of the annihilation of the Jewish people. In 1943, after witnessing the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, he wrote in his diary: "These animals. With this appalling mass murder of the Jews we lost the war, we brought
Transport XXI from Dossin Barracks, Belgium to Auschwitz-Birkenau on 31 July, 1942 1/n On July 31, 1943 Giza, born Gitel Wachspress in Tarnow, together with her lover David Weissblum, a furrier, was put on transport XXI to Auschwitz.
The life of this courageous couple became a
2/n symbol of resistance and courage during dark times. After their flight to Belgium in July 1939, they later had to flee to France during the German invasion. When they returned to Antwerp in 1940, they discovered that their house had been looted.
3/n Giza found strength in volunteering at a shelter for the Jewish poor. When her neighbor Eva Fastag begged her for help in smuggling and distributing illegal newspapers, Giza and David got involved in secret activities.
T4 Program, Nazi German effort—framed as a euthanasia program—to kill incurably ill, physically or mentally disabled, emotionally distraught, and elderly
2/n people. Adolf Hitler initiated the program in 1939, and, while it was officially discontinued in 1941, killings continued covertly until the military defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945.
Within a few months the T4 Program—named for the Chancellery offices that directed it from the
3/n Berlin address Tiergartenstrasse 4—involved virtually the entire German psychiatric community. While the program’s personnel killed people at first by starvation and lethal injection, they later chose asphyxiation by poison gas as the preferred killing technique. Physicians
German camp brothels in World War II 1/n In World War II, Nazi Germany established brothels in the concentration camps (Lagerbordelle) to create an incentive for prisoners to collaborate, although these institutions were used mostly by Kapos,
2/n functionaries and the criminal elements, because regular inmates, penniless and emaciated, were usually too debilitated and wary of exposure to SS schemes. In the end, the camp brothels did not not produce any noticeable increase in the prisoners' work productivity
3/n levels, but instead, created a market for coupons among the camp VIPs. The women forced into these brothels came mainly from the Ravensbrück concentration camp, except for Auschwitz, which employed its own prisoners. In combination with the German military brothels in