The #Righteous during World War Two
Paul Grüninger: The Swiss Border Commander Who Falsified Documents To Save Jews 1/n Paul Grüninger used his position to quietly help thousands of desperate refugees enter Switzerland.
2/n By the late 1930s, conditions in Germany and Austria had become increasingly terrifying for Jewish people. Many tried to enter Switzerland, where border commanders had been ordered to turn them away.
But one border commander, Paul Grüninger, decided to help.
3/n Grüninger seemed an unlikely person to break rules. A former soldier and longtime policeman, he had literally made a career out of following the law. But when Swiss authorities ordered him to deny Jewish people entry into Switzerland, Grüninger quietly defied his superiors.
4/n From 1938 to 1939, Grüninger falsified 3,600 Jewish refugees’ passports, allowing them to evade detection and enter the country. “I’d rather break rules than send these poor, miserable people back to Germany,” he said.
In addition to helping Jewish people enter Switzerland,
5/n Grüninger also did what he could to help terrified refugees. On one occasion, he bought shoes for a little boy. On another, he paid for a young girl’s visit to the dentist.
But Swiss officials became suspicious. They had given orders:
Refugees in Diepoldsau camp, August 1938
6/n "Those who are Jews or probable Jews are to be turned back.” Yet a shockingly high number of Jewish refugees seemed to be pouring into the country.
Before long, Grüninger’s superiors realized that he had defied the directives.
As a result, he was fired from his post,
7/n found guilty of breaking the law, saddled with a criminal record, and stripped of his pension.
Despite his punishment, Grüninger never regretted what he did.
"I am not ashamed of the court’s verdict,” he said in 1954. “I am proud to have saved the lives of hundreds of
8/8 oppressed people...
My personal well-being, measured against the cruel fates of these thousands, was so insignificant and unimportant that I never even took it into consideration.”
Grüniger was recognized as #Righteous in 1971.
In Switzerland, he was rehabilitated in 1995.
9/ A sports facility and a square now bear his name. That's it. Ffs even my father-in-law had a street named after him.
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Erich Lichtblau Leskly 1/n
Born in 1911, a graphic artist and designer from Ostrava in the Czech Republic who signed his works as “Eli”. During World War II Lesky and his wife Else were deported by the Germans at the Theresienstadt camp north of Prague.
You shall be counted
2/n Erich was assigned to various jobs including doing propaganda artwork for the Nazis, thus allowing him access to art materials. The art he created secretly, his sketches and cartoons, gave him a purpose and helped him to endure four horrendous years in Terezin.
3/n He was old enough to be patient and not take chances, but still young enough to have a sense of the absurd and sardonic, which can be seen in his art. Other painters who were making art related to camp experience were found out and all sent “East” which meant to concentration
Sanz Briz, the "Spanish Schindler", saved the lives of 5,200 Jews
1/n ANGEL SANZ-BRIZ Budapest, Hungary… Summer 1944 – As the persecution of Hungary’s Jews became increasingly worse, Angel Sanz-Briz, who had been appointed to a post at the Spanish Legation in Hungary in
2/n the summer of 1944, stepped in to help Jews. On behalf of the Spanish government, Angel offered to give Jews of Spanish origin Spanish passports. Hungarian authorities gave Angel permission to issue Spanish passports to 200 Jews, but he discreetly changed that figure to 200
3/n families. As the situation worsened, Angel increased this number several times in order to help more Jews. In addition to providing these documents, Angel set up special apartment buildings with Spanish flags, marking these buildings as part of the Spanish Legation and
October 3rd, 1940: "Le Statut des Juifs", anti-Jewish legislation is passed by Vichy 1/n Anti-Jewish laws passed by the collaborating French Vichy government in two stages in October 1940 and June 1941. These laws were created
2/n purely on the initiative of the French government and not by the Nazis themselves.
On October 3, 1940 the government passed its first widespread anti-Jewish legislation. This included an even stricter definition of who was a Jew than the Nazis allowed: under Vichy, someone
3/n was Jewish if he or she had three Jewish grandparents, or two Jewish grandparents if his or her spouse was also Jewish. The first Jewish Law also called for the drastic cutback of Jewish involvement in French society. Jews were to be excluded from the army officer corps and
Adelaïde Haas Hautval (1906-1988)
A Protestant doctor helping the Jews
Marthe Adelaide Haas was born on the 1st January 1906 in Hohwald (Bas-Rhin), the last of Pastor Haas’s seven children. She studied medicine in Strasbourg. In
Alsace she started a home for disadvantaged children and then went to Switzerland to work as a neuro-psychiatrist until 1939. When she heard that her mother was ill, she applied for a pass which was refused. She ignored this, and was arrested at the border, and taken
to Bourges Railway station to have her identity checked. On the platform she stood up for (in German) a Jewish family being badly treated by the Germans. She was imprisoned in Bourges, was a witness to the first mass arrests, and, as a “friend of the Jews” was sentenced to share
Svend Andreasen 1/n Municipal employee Svend Andreasen lived in Gilleleje on the Danish coast with his wife Ketty. Hundreds of Jews hid in this fishing village at the end of September 1943, waiting for an opportunity to cross to Sweden by boat to evade deportation.
2/n Svend Andreasen provided food and clothing for the escaping Jews.
Andreasen suggested to Paula Warschaffsky Mortensen, who had fled Copenhagen, that her three-year-old daughter Tove could stay with him and his wife.
Tove with her foster parents Svend and Ketty Andreasen
3/n Her mother agreed, and embarked on the dangerous journey to Sweden alone. Tove missed her mother a great deal, but the Andreasens took loving care of her.
His name was Georges Blind, but the world knows him as "The Smiling Shot" (Le fusillé souriant) 1/n It took until the 1980s to give a name to this man, hitherto unknown, smiling at his firing squad in an exceptional photograph published for the first time in May 1945.
2/n This historic photograph has been subject of extensive research, in particular by Christophe Grudler, who for 12 years gathered all the pieces necessary to retrace the history of one of the most famous photos in the world.
The author of this historic photo is still unknown
3/n today. All we know is that it was taken between October 15 & 23, 1944 in Belfort. Contrary to common belief, Georges Blind, a fireman, did not die by the guns of the Germans. The execution was staged in an attempt to make him betray his comrades, which he never did.