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Old 09-20-2005, 11:30 PM
squirrely girl squirrely girl is offline
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Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal dies at 96

I just thought this was sad and a great loss of history...
- marissa

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Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal dies at 96
Helped capture more than 1,000 war criminals including Adolf Eichmann

LOS ANGELES - Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor who helped track down Nazi war criminals following World War II, then spent the later decades of his life fighting anti-Semitism and prejudice against all people, died Tuesday. He was 96.

Wiesenthal died in his sleep at his home in Vienna, said Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.

“I think he’ll be remembered as the conscience of the Holocaust. In a way he became the permanent representative of the victims of the Holocaust, determined to bring the perpetrators of the greatest crime to justice,” Hier told The Associated Press.

Wiesenthal, who was an architect before World War II, changed his life’s mission after the war, dedicating himself to trying to track down Nazi war criminals and to being a voice for the 6 million Jews who died during the onslaught. He himself lost 89 relatives in the Holocaust.

Wiesenthal spent more than 50 years hunting Nazi war criminals, speaking out against neo-Nazism and racism, and remembering the Jewish experience as a lesson for humanity. Through his work, he said, some 1,100 Nazi war criminals were brought to justice.

“When history looks back I want people to know the Nazis weren’t able to kill millions of people and get away with it,” he once said.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry said Tuesday that Wiesenthal “brought justice to those who had escaped justice.”

“He acted on behalf of 6 million people who could no longer defend themselves,” ministry spokesman Mark Regev said. “The state of Israel, the Jewish people and all those who oppose racism recognized Simon Wiesenthal’s unique contribution to making our planet a better place.”

Concentration camp survivor
Calls of remorse poured into Wiesenthal’s office in Vienna, where one of his longtime assistants, Trudi Mergili, struggled to deal with her grief.

“It was expected,” she said. “But it is still so hard.”

Wiesenthal was first sent to a concentration camp in 1941, outside Lviv, Ukraine, according to the Wiesenthal Center Web site. In October 1943, he escaped from the Ostbahn camp just before the Germans began killing all the inmates. He was recaptured in June 1944 and sent back to Janwska, but escaped death as his SS guards retreated westward with their prisoners from the Soviet Red Army.

Wiesenthal’s quest began after the Americans liberated the Mauthausen death camp in Austria where Wiesenthal was a prisoner in May 1945. It was his fifth death camp among the dozen Nazi camps in which he was imprisoned, and he weighed just 99 pounds when he was freed. He said he quickly realized “there is no freedom without justice,” and decided to dedicate “a few years” to that mission.

“It became decades,” he added.

Even after turning 90, Wiesenthal continued to remind and to warn. While appalled at atrocities committed by Serbs against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo in the 1990s, he said no one should confuse the tragedy there with the Holocaust.

“We are living in a time of the trivialization of the word ’Holocaust,”’ he told AP in 1999. “What happened to the Jews cannot be compared with all the other crimes. Every Jew had a death sentence without a date.”

Eichmann capture
Wiesenthal’s life spanned a violent century.

He was born on Dec. 31, 1908, to Jewish merchants at Buczacs, a small town near the present-day Ukrainian city of Lviv in what was then the Austro-Hungarian empire. He studied in Prague and Warsaw and in 1932 received a degree in civil engineering.
He apprenticed as a building engineer in Russia before returning to Lviv to open an architectural office. Then the Russians and the Germans occupied Lviv and the terror began.

After the war ended, working first with the Americans and later from a cramped Vienna apartment packed floor to ceiling with documents, Wiesenthal tirelessly pursued fugitive Nazi war criminals.

He was perhaps best known for his role in tracking down Adolf Eichmann, the one-time SS leader who organized the extermination of the Jews. Eichmann was found in Argentina, abducted by Israeli agents in 1960, tried and hanged for crimes committed against the Jews.

Wiesenthal often was accused of exaggerating his role in Eichmann’s capture. He did not claim sole responsibility, but said he knew by 1954 where Eichmann was.

Eichmann’s capture “was a teamwork of many who did not know each other,” Wiesenthal told the AP in 1972. “I do not know if and to what extent reports I sent to Israel were used.”

Among others Wiesenthal tracked down was Austrian policeman Karl Silberbauer, who he believed arrested the Dutch teenager Anne Frank and sent her to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where she died.

Wiesenthal decided to pursue Silberbauer in 1958 after a youth told him he did not believe in Frank’s existence and murder, but would if Wiesenthal could find the man who arrested her. His five-year search resulted in Silberbauer’s 1963 capture.

Wiesenthal did not bring to justice one prime target — Dr. Josef Mengele, the infamous “Angel of Death” of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Mengele died in South America after eluding capture for decades.

Ignored and insulted
Wiesenthal’s long quest for justice also stirred controversy.

In Austria, which took decades to acknowledge its own role in Nazi crimes, Wiesenthal was ignored and often insulted before finally being honored for his work when he was in his 80s.

In 1975, then-Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, himself a Jew, suggested Wiesenthal was part of a “certain mafia” seeking to besmirch Austria. Kreisky even claimed Wiesenthal collaborated with Nazis to survive.

Ironically, it was the furor over Kurt Waldheim, who became president in 1986 despite lying about his past as an officer in Hitler’s army, that gave Wiesenthal stature in Austria.

Wiesenthal’s failure to condemn Waldheim as a war criminal drew international ire and conflict with American Jewish groups. But it made Austrians realize that the Nazi hunter did not condemn everybody who took part in the Nazi war effort.

Wiesenthal did repeatedly demand Waldheim’s resignation, seeing him as a symbol of those who suppressed Austria’s role as part of Hitler’s German war and death machine. But he turned up no proof of widespread allegations that Waldheim was an accessory to war crimes.

'The world owes him'
Wiesenthal’s work also exposed him to danger.

His house and office have been guarded by an armed police officer since June 1982, when a bomb exploded at his front door, causing severe damage but resulting in no injuries, according to the Wiesenthal Center Web site. One German and several Austrian neo-Nazis were arrested.

He pursued his crusade of remembrance into old age with the vigor of youth, with patience and determination. But as he entered his 90s, he worried that his mission would die with him.

“I think in a way the world owes him and his memory a tremendous amount of gratitude,” Hier said.

Wiesenthal had more distinguished foreign awards than any other living Austrian citizen. In 1995, the city of Vienna made him an honorary citizen. He also wrote several books, including his memoirs, “The Murderers Among Us,” in 1967, and worked regularly at the small downtown office of his Jewish Documentation Center even after turning 90.

“The most important thing I have done is to fight against forgetting and to keep remembrance alive,” he said in the 1999 interview with The Associated Press. “It is very important to let people know that our enemies are not forgotten.”

Wiesenthal’s wife, Cyla, whom he married in 1936, died in November 2003.

A memorial service is tentatively planned to be held in Vienna’s central cemetery on Wednesday. Funeral services will be in Israel, said Avra Shapiro, the Wiesenthal Center’s public relations director.



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  #2  
Old 09-21-2005, 01:25 AM
UKDaisy UKDaisy is offline
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Wow, that was a good article. The world was lucky to see such a strong survivor.


Thank you for posting it!
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Old 09-21-2005, 11:04 AM
wrigley wrigley is offline
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One of the news reports mentioned that he had an captured one of the officers that had arrested Anne Frank. I didn't know this.
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Old 09-21-2005, 11:18 AM
LightBulb LightBulb is offline
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What an amazingly strong guy. Thanks for posting.
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Old 09-21-2005, 11:25 AM
DeltAlum DeltAlum is offline
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What is remarkable to me is that, with the exception of Eichmann, much of this work was done quietly -- in the background.

While many have heard of him and his work, he is hardly a household name in the United States.

Of course the Eichmann trial was huge news, but considering the larger body of work accomplished by Weisenthal, he was absolutely amazing.
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Old 09-21-2005, 04:33 PM
squirrely girl squirrely girl is offline
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even though nobody lives forever, it really reminds me that this history of the holocaust is slowly dying. those that can actually speak will eventually be gone...

- marissa
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Old 09-22-2005, 01:24 AM
UKDaisy UKDaisy is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by squirrely girl
even though nobody lives forever, it really reminds me that this history of the holocaust is slowly dying. those that can actually speak will eventually be gone...

- marissa
I know . It seems like that generation is finally slipping away. Which saddens me beyond belief.
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Old 09-22-2005, 04:41 PM
copacabana copacabana is offline
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Wow. I'm really bummed that this guy died. I had to read parts of his book "The Sunflower" for an english class I took last year. It's really good-- it makes you really think about forgiveness and when it should be given.

I find it inspiring that he just made it his entire life's mission to hunt down these people and bring them to justice. May he rest in peace and his words not be forgotten...
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Old 09-22-2005, 04:48 PM
Rudey Rudey is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by UKDaisy
I know . It seems like that generation is finally slipping away. Which saddens me beyond belief.
It's why Steven Spielberg created the Shoah foundation and has 49,000 video testimonials.

http://www.vhf.org/

-Rudey
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Old 09-23-2005, 11:30 PM
TriDeltaGal TriDeltaGal is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Rudey
It's why Steven Spielberg created the Shoah foundation and has 49,000 video testimonials.

http://www.vhf.org/

-Rudey

Rudey, you beat me to it!

I use to be a docent for the Museum of Tolerance in college , which is affliated with the Simon Wiesenthal Center here in L.A. Concerning my experience with these organizations, I was very sad to hear of his passing.

But, yes Spielberg established to Shoah Foundation and it is an AMAZING project! At the museum, (or at least when I volunteered there) they had thousands of these testimonials on file that you could watch.
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Old 09-24-2005, 11:48 AM
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honeychile honeychile is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by wrigley
One of the news reports mentioned that he had an captured one of the officers that had arrested Anne Frank. I didn't know this.
There's a fascinating book about Otto Frank's role in the hiding of his family, The Hidden Life of Otto Frank that's worth the read by anyone who is interested in Anne Frank.

And I think the Shoah Foundation is terribly important!! As a geriatric counselor, I've seen too many survivors pass away in the past few years. It was always so interesting to let them tell me their stories and show me their tatooed numbers. We must never forget!!
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Old 09-24-2005, 12:17 PM
Jill1228 Jill1228 is offline
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Mr. Wiesenthal was an incredible man.

I would love to check out the Shoah Foundation. I have been to the Holocaust museum in DC many times when I lived there

May he never be forgotten
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Old 09-24-2005, 04:24 PM
Tom Earp Tom Earp is offline
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Jill, You Said it all, "Mr. Wiesenthal was an incredible man".

He had the drive and desire to try to make retribution in a legal way and for The world to see.

While many Modern Day People did not agree and derided Him, He never let it lay.


That was a period in Our Life Time that was shamefull to say the least.

Oh, How many Lives it cost not only The Jews, but people of the whole world!

Gettining into the War With Japan is another story unto it self!
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  #14  
Old 09-27-2005, 03:15 PM
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Originally posted by squirrely girl
even though nobody lives forever, it really reminds me that this history of the holocaust is slowly dying. those that can actually speak will eventually be gone...

- marissa


Whats even more sad is that within time it will all be forgotten until something of the likes happens again. And history DOES repeat itself.
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