feldwebel Anton Schmid

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feldwebel Anton Schmid

Mensaje por V.Manstein » Mar Sep 06, 2005 1:24 am

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fuente www.vilnaghetto.com/gallery2/d/9368-2/Anton_Schmidt.jpg
During the years of the Nazi occupation of Lithuania a German Sergeant Anton Schmid disobeyed his superior officers and saved 250 Jewish men, women, and children from extermination in Nazi death camps by hiding them, supplying them with false ID papers and helping them escape. On 13. April 1942, he was executed by the Nazis ...

We would never have known the story of Sergeant Anton Schmid, had it not been for those who owe him their lives. Most recently, Germany renamed a military base Feldwebel Anton Schmid Kaserne in his honor for his courage.

Anton Schmid was an electrician who owned a small radio shop in Vienna. Drafted into the German army after the Anschluss of 1938, Schmid found himself stationed near Vilnius in the autumn of 1941. The Germans had entered Lithuania shortly before. As a sergeant of the Wehrmacht he witnessed the herding of Jews into two ghettos and the shooting of thousands of them in nearby Ponary. In a letter to his wife, Stefi, Schmid described his horror at the sight of mass murder and of "children being beaten on the way". He went on: "You know how it is with my soft heart. I could not think and had to help them."

During much of the 19th century and continuing in the 20th century until the Nazi invasion, Vilnius and Warsaw were Europe's two preeminent centers of Jewish cultural, intellectual, religious and political life. In the summer of 1941, the Nazis launched a genocidal campaign of mass murder and deportations to death camps that, in three years, systematically killed about 180,000 Jews, i.e. about 94% of the Jews living in Lithuania before World War II, the largest percentage of any country. Today there are 6,000 Jews left in Lithuania ..

Anton Schmid was moved by the suffering of the Jews in the Vilnius ghetto and decided to help. He managed to release Jews from jail and risked his own life by smuggling food into the ghetto. His courageous assistance involved the saving of more than 250 Jews whom he managed to hide and the supplying of materiel and forged papers to the Jewish underground.

Arrested in January 1942, and summarily tried before a Nazi military court on February 25, Anton Schmid was executed on April 13 by the Nazis for his acts.

If Sergeant Schmid's acts were enormously rare, he evidently saw nothing extraordinary in them. "I merely behaved as a human being," he said in his last letter to his wife. In all the hell that was breaking loose around him, he chose to stay awake, to keep his head up and his heart opened. In the midst of so much death and destruction, he found some way to value life and brought back life and restoration in the only way he knew to do. He stood out as one of the few known German soldiers who had enough courage to do what he felt was right.

On 16 May 1967, the Israeli government paid tribute to Sergeant Anton Schmid. Yad Vashem awarded his widow the medal 'Righteous Among the Nations' which bears the inscription: "Whoever saves one life - saves the world entire."

In Germany the honoring of army sergeant Anton Schmid on May 8, 2000, appeared particularly significant because his name replaced that of an army general, Günther Rudel, who fought in two world wars and had been held up as a hero and example in the first decades after World War II.

Many Germans have long clung to the notion that Nazi atrocities were not the work of the army but of Hitler's elite SS and fanatical death squads. Now the government decided to strip a Wehrmacht general's name from a base and, for the first time, identify a military institution with a soldier who saved Jews. As Rudolf Scharping, the defense minister, said:



"We are not free to choose our history, but we can choose the examples we take from that history. Too many bowed to the threats and temptations of the dictator, and too few found the strength to resist. But Sgt. Anton Schmid did resist ..."
http://www.shoah.dk/Courage/Schmid.htm


No fué un caso único. El Teniente Hans Günther Stark en julio dem 1941 transitaba por una región Lituana con su división cuando al oir ruido de disparos y gritos en las proximidades , fué con 2 suboficiales y encontró un pelotón de lituanos de un Eisantzgruppe mandados por un oficial alemán de las SS, fusilando a 300 civiles de todas las edades. El teniente detuvo la masacre a punta de pistola con la ayuda de sus hombres y gestionó la dentención por la gendarmería de la división de los asesinos del pelotón en cuestión. Su acción no recibió castigo ni persecución alguna y fué felicitado por su jefe regimental y divisionario.
Soldat im 20.Jahrhundert

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Audie Murphy
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Re: feldwebel Anton Schmid

Mensaje por Audie Murphy » Dom Jun 22, 2014 12:34 pm

Otro caso similar y con funesto final. En el gueto de Minsk el SS Oberleutnant Schultz de 48 años, se enamoró de la joven judía Elsa de 23 años. Harto de la infame persecución que sufría esta gente decidió desertar y rescatarla. Compró un camióny sacó del gueto a 25 mujeres judías del gueto dirigiéndose a los bosques donde operaban los partisanos. Como "recompensa" por sus acciones las autoridades soviéticas lo encerraron en un campo de prisioneros donde murió semanas más tarde. Por su parte Elsa fue enviada a una comunidad judìa en el Lejano Oriente donde sobrevivió a la guerra.
http://www.vectorsite.net/twsnow_06.html

El oficinal de la Wehrmacht protestó personalmente ante el Fieldmarshal Von Reichnau para evitar el fusilamiento de 90 niños judíos en Byleva-TSERKOV, pero recibió como respuesta que "se ocupara de sus asuntos" y no pudo evitar su asesinato. Wehrmacht Pionerr Hauptmann, Otto Schulz Dubois, mandó una carta de protesta tras presenciar la masacre de 8000 judíos en los bosques de Rumbula (cerca de Riga). La misiva llegó hasta el Almirante Canaris que se la presentó a Hitler. Dubois no fue represaliado por su iniciativa.
http://historum.com/war-military-histor ... cht-2.html
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