Alfred Hirsch
Alfred Hirsch - known as Fredy
(February 11, 1916 in Aachen, Germany – March 8, 1944 at the Auschwitz Death
Camp in German-Occupied Poland) was a German-Jewish athlete, sports teacher and
Zionist Youth Movement leader, notable for helping thousands of Jewish children
during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in Prague, the Theresienstadt
Ghetto and the Auschwitz Death Camp.
When the Nazis came to power in
1932 and barred Jews from contact with non-Jews Fredy helped found the
Jüdischer Pfadfinderbund Deutschland (Jewish Scouting Association of Germany,
JPD) in Aachen, in Dusseldorf and in Dresden.
He gave German-Jewish boys and
girls a safe outlet to enjoy the outdoors and forget the violence from the
non-Jewish German Society.
After the Nuremberg Race Laws
were created in 1935 he fled to Czechoslovakia and continued his work with
Zionism and helping Jewish children – despite not speaking Czech.
In March 1939 the Germans invaded
all of Czechoslovakia and Fredy could have fled to South America with his
Brother (who survived the war) but instead he stayed to help the children.
He was on the first transport
from Prague to the Theresienstadt (Terezín) Ghetto in March 1941. Fredy became
the Deputy Supervisor of Children at Theresienstadt.
Because of his German extraction,
charisma, and careful appearance, he was able to convince SS guards to grant
privileges to the children, including exemptions from Deportation and extra
rations, which saved their lives at least temporarily.
Fredy and his assistants
maintained clandestine education under the difficult circumstances. Fredy’s
insistence on exercise, discipline, and strict hygiene reduced death rates
among the children.
In 1943, he arranged to hold the
Maccabi Athletic Children’s Games inside the Ghetto which were observed by
thousands of spectators.
In August 1943 1,200 Jewish
Children from the Bialystok Ghetto in Poland arrived in Theresienstadt and were
kept from the other children in the Ghetto (because they spoke of Gas
Chambers.)
Fredy jumped the fence separating
these children from the others to see if he could help them in any way. A Czech
Guard stopped him and he was deported to Auschwitz in September 1943.
At Auschwitz Fredy was made the
Supervisor (Kapo) of the 600 children in the Children's Block at the
Theresienstadt Family Camp at Auschwitz II-Birkenau.
The Theresienstadt Family Camp
was a German ruse where whole families were allowed to stay together with
civilian clothes and kept for when the Red Cross would come visit Auschwitz in
February 1944 (the way they had visited the Theresienstadt Ghetto in June
1943.)
Each transport from
Theresienstadt was only allowed to live for 6 months before they were gassed
(although they weren’t told this by the Germans.)
In March 1944, the September
Transport from Theresienstadt (which brought Fredy) was due to be sent to the
Gas Chambers – since the 6 months had elapsed.
Fredy was made aware of his fate
and the fate of all the children from his Transport (by the Jewish
Sonderkommando Prisoners who worked in the Gas Chambers) and was offered (by
the Germans) to continue to help the children from different Transports but he couldn’t
abandon his children and declined the Germans’ offer.
What happened next is not known.
Fredy either attempted suicide by poison so he wouldn’t have to see his
children gassed to death or Jewish Prisoners poisoned him so he wouldn’t start
an Uprising and get everyone killed.
What is known is that Fredy
Hirsch was semi-consciously brought into the Gas Chamber on March 8, 1944,
along with his children and all the others from the 1st Transport and murdered.
According to Sonderkommando
Prisoners, they sang the Czech National Anthem, the Hatikvah Jewish Anthem
(today’s Israel’s National Anthem), and the Internationale before entering the
Gas Chambers. In total 3,792 people were murdered from the 1st Transport that
night.
Fredy Hirsch was 28 years old when
he died. He had no children of his own (he was openly Homosexual) and yet
worked hard for them in Nazi Germany, in Czechoslovakia, in German-occupied
Czechoslovakia, at the Theresienstadt Ghetto and at the Auschwitz Death Camp.
He stayed with them even when he
was given 2 official chances to flee and survive.
This is not only about the Jewish
Holocaust, but also about the Homosexual Holocaust. June is Pride Month.
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