The Prague Post - Margot Friedlaender, Germany's voice of Holocaust remembrance

EUR -
AED 4.298308
AFN 81.92842
ALL 98.084438
AMD 449.658082
ANG 2.094583
AOA 1073.261444
ARS 1468.279515
AUD 1.797333
AWG 2.106729
AZN 1.991668
BAM 1.950584
BBD 2.361684
BDT 142.702048
BGN 1.952874
BHD 0.441244
BIF 3442.161504
BMD 1.170405
BND 1.495414
BOB 8.082386
BRL 6.37672
BSD 1.169772
BTN 100.183093
BWP 15.616838
BYN 3.827896
BYR 22939.94066
BZD 2.349537
CAD 1.601886
CDF 3377.78954
CHF 0.933357
CLF 0.02875
CLP 1103.282348
CNY 8.396545
CNH 8.408618
COP 4742.04856
CRC 591.323751
CUC 1.170405
CUP 31.015736
CVE 110.718148
CZK 24.646426
DJF 208.0043
DKK 7.461362
DOP 70.350158
DZD 151.75855
EGP 58.145374
ERN 17.556077
ETB 159.672582
FJD 2.63493
FKP 0.862316
GBP 0.862764
GEL 3.171819
GGP 0.862316
GHS 12.166116
GIP 0.862316
GMD 83.688631
GNF 10131.027064
GTQ 8.990189
GYD 244.728101
HKD 9.187663
HNL 30.84028
HRK 7.530413
HTG 153.519463
HUF 400.091736
IDR 19027.510373
ILS 3.917797
IMP 0.862316
INR 100.486011
IQD 1533.230728
IRR 49303.316231
ISK 142.964601
JEP 0.862316
JMD 186.69553
JOD 0.829797
JPY 172.183562
KES 151.572338
KGS 102.35198
KHR 4706.199287
KMF 492.135958
KPW 1053.33889
KRW 1609.04963
KWD 0.357653
KYD 0.974835
KZT 607.784679
LAK 25222.230108
LBP 104868.299941
LKR 351.638671
LRD 234.666446
LSL 20.82134
LTL 3.455902
LVL 0.707966
LYD 6.317227
MAD 10.539461
MDL 19.797818
MGA 5184.89504
MKD 61.456221
MMK 2457.274227
MNT 4200.068068
MOP 9.458292
MRU 46.470981
MUR 52.797044
MVR 18.017904
MWK 2032.412478
MXN 21.795138
MYR 4.979492
MZN 74.859293
NAD 20.821752
NGN 1792.545747
NIO 43.012461
NOK 11.837998
NPR 160.294714
NZD 1.958001
OMR 0.450015
PAB 1.169682
PEN 4.148497
PGK 4.827984
PHP 66.236151
PKR 332.687497
PLN 4.243969
PYG 9322.309495
QAR 4.260981
RON 5.080258
RSD 117.17157
RUB 91.876031
RWF 1678.360965
SAR 4.389513
SBD 9.757579
SCR 16.795029
SDG 702.829472
SEK 11.168743
SGD 1.499763
SHP 0.919755
SLE 26.33756
SLL 24542.814783
SOS 668.884838
SRD 43.683615
STD 24225.023271
SVC 10.234892
SYP 15217.759559
SZL 20.821484
THB 38.256993
TJS 11.235231
TMT 4.108122
TND 3.388456
TOP 2.741205
TRY 46.869412
TTD 7.935846
TWD 34.069936
TZS 3090.09425
UAH 48.858496
UGX 4204.755761
USD 1.170405
UYU 46.96561
UZS 14893.405655
VES 131.422218
VND 30603.168287
VUV 139.633925
WST 3.222549
XAF 654.218686
XAG 0.032033
XAU 0.000356
XCD 3.163078
XDR 0.812997
XOF 651.915763
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.061714
ZAR 20.832029
ZMK 10535.048293
ZMW 28.335227
ZWL 376.869976
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Margot Friedlaender, Germany's voice of Holocaust remembrance
Margot Friedlaender, Germany's voice of Holocaust remembrance / Photo: JOHN MACDOUGALL - AFP/File

Margot Friedlaender, Germany's voice of Holocaust remembrance

German Holocaust survivor Margot Friedlaender, who has died at the age of 103, won plaudits at home and abroad for her tireless efforts to foster reconciliation and understanding.

Text size:

Born and raised in Berlin, Friedlaender's family were among the hundreds of thousands of Jews killed by the Nazis at Auschwitz over the course of World War II.

Friedlander herself was interned at the camp in Theresienstadt in the modern-day Czech Republic, but survived the end of the war and emigrated to the United States.

The death of her husband, Adolf Friedlaender, and a memoir writing course at a community centre in New York propelled her back to her hometown.

Friedlander's prodigal return to Germany, where she dedicated herself to sharing her story with young people, made her one of the most prominent witnesses to the horrors of Adolf Hitler's regime.

For her work promoting historical memory, she was given awards and showered by praise from political leaders from both sides of the Atlantic.

"Perhaps the generation now that hears me in schools will say something to their children. I have no idea how far that will go," Friedlaender told German broadcaster ARD in 2021.

Friedlaender preached for mutual empathy as an antidote to the world's evils.

"Don't look at what separates you. Look at what unites you. Be human. Be reasonable," she said in 2024.

- 'Try to make your life' -

Born Margot Bendheim in 1921 to a family of button makers, young Margot had trained as a fashion illustrator.

The family had lived through Hitler's rise to power and witnessed the Kristallnacht pogroms against Jewish businesses in 1938 but remained in Berlin.

Friedlaender was 21 in 1943 when the Nazi secret police, the Gestapo, came for her 17-year-old brother Ralph.

Arriving home, Friedlaender spotted a stranger by the entrance to their building. The young girl covered her Jewish Star of David, passed the man and knocked on a neighbour's door.

Soon after, she learnt that her brother had been taken and her mother, Auguste Bendheim, had turned herself in to the police to be by her son. She left Friedlaender a note: "Try to make your life."

The invocation would stay with Friedlaender, as would the amber necklace left to her by her mother.

Auguste Bendheim and brother Ralph were deported to Auschwitz and killed. Friedlaender's father, she would learn much later, was also murdered in the gas chambers at the camp.

Friedlaender lived for more than a year in the underground, dying her hair red, submitting to nasal surgery to appear less Jewish.

The people who protected her "risked everything to share a bed or their food with me", she told the Hamburger Abendblatt in 2010.

Eventually, she was stopped and asked for her papers. Friedlaender confessed to her Jewish identity and was deported to Theresienstadt.

- 'Stay careful' -

At the concentration camp, she found Adolf Friedlaender, who she had known through the Jewish community in Berlin. After the Red Army liberated the camp in 1945, he asked her to marry him.

A year later the couple emigrated to the United States and settled in the New York borough of Queens. Adolf worked for Jewish organisations in the city, while Margot worked as a seamstress and a travel agent.

In 1997, Adolf passed away and Friedlaender began taking classes at the 92nd Street Y, where he had worked, including a memoir writing course.

At the centre she met the German producer Thomas Halaczinsky, who on hearing her recollections wanted to return with Friedlaender to Berlin to film a documentary.

Friedlaender returned to Germany in 2003 for the first time since she left, a step her husband had never been willing to contemplate. The resulting documentary was released in 2004 and her autobiography, whose title reused her mother's words, was published in 2008.

In 2010 at the age of 88, Friedlaender decided to move permanently to Berlin and recovered her German citizenship.

"I only got back what belonged to me," she said at the time.

After her improbable return home, Friedlaender became a voice of moral authority in a country still trying to make amends for the atrocities of the Nazis.

Friedlaender was garlanded with awards, including Germany's federal order of merit, and graced the cover of the German edition of fashion magazine Vogue in 2024.

On a visit to Berlin, then US President Joe Biden emotionally told the survivor of the Holocaust he was "actually honoured to be in your presence".

In Germany, she dedicated herself to speaking to young people, touring schools and answering questions on her life.

"I don't want to know what people's parents or grandparents did," Friedlaender told German weekly Die Zeit around her centenary.

"I concentrate on telling them: stay careful, watch that something like that never happens again. Not for me, but for yourselves."

Her last public engagement was just a few days before her death, at Berlin city hall, to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.

"Be human! That is what I ask you to do: be human!," she said.

N.Kratochvil--TPP