Authors: Roger Moorhouse
a little bit, scraped together out of their own need, fought for amongst
bombs, forced labour, failing communications, and personal hardship,
gained by defying every prohibition, law, and propaganda decree.47
There were myriad additional concerns. As Erich Neumann dis -
covered, if a Jewish refugee died under Aryan care, it was extremely
difficult to dispose of the body. A conventional burial for an anonymous
corpse with no documentation was out of the question; likewise,
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berlin at war
simply dumping a corpse often raised profound ethical concerns. In
Erich’s case, a solution to the problem of what to do with the body
of Wolfgang – the refugee he and his mother had been hiding – was
eventually forthcoming. A regular at his mother’s café, who was often
required to collect air raid dead, was prevailed upon to take Wolfgang’s
body and dispose of it in the local cemetery, along with other air raid
casualties, at the next opportunity.48
Correct documentation, therefore, was vital. Forged or stolen docu-
ments could afford a fugitive a certain degree of independence, enabling
him or her to receive ration cards, medical care, even legitimate accom-
modation. Yet, they were fairly hard to come by. Though there was a
roaring black market trade in original documents or in forgeries, the
prices were prohibitively high. In 1941, one forger was charging over 400
Marks for identification documents, but in subsequent years his fee
would rise to as much as 4,000 Marks.49
There were, however, other sources. The lucky few were able to
persuade Berlin’s oppositionally minded citizens to part with their
documents, which they could then report as lost. In some cases, no
persuasion was necessary. In one peculiar instance in 1941, a young
Jewish woman working in a factory noticed that she was attracting
the close attention of one of her colleagues. Leaving the factory one
evening, she found herself following her Aryan colleague, who deliber-
ately dropped her identity papers on the pavement, before walking
on. Though no words were ever exchanged between the two, this
single act of selflessness enabled the young Jewish Berliner to survive
the war.50
In later years, as the air raids increased in intensity, there were other
opportunities. The daring could simply present themselves to the
authorities as refugees from the bombing, whose homes and records
had all been destroyed, and demand new documentation. As Charlotte
Joseph recalled:
I chose a district in which not only the Police Station, but also the
Rationing Office had been destroyed . . . Schöneberg . . . there I told
them that I had lived in that area and had been bombed out. As my
details could not be checked, I received a so-called ‘Bomb Certificate’
as a refugee . . . with the name Elsa Hohberg.51
against all odds
301
Later, Charlotte – or Elsa – presented herself at a state-run shelter for
refugees at Rüdnitz, just outside the capital, where she was housed
and supplied with ration cards. While her worries were far from over,
she would at least survive the war.
For those
Taucher
who did not choose this method, there was
always the chance of finding a fresh corpse – preferably one with
some physical similarity to themselves – from which identity docu-
ments and ration cards could be ‘liberated’. Hanna Sohst was one
of the lucky ones:
When the all-clear was given, I saw that there were people lying dead
on the street. Then I got the idea, check if they have an identity card
on them. Everywhere, at all times, and at every opportunity I kept my
eyes peeled for papers, day and night . . . like a man dying of thirst
looking for a mirage. And then . . . I struck gold!52
In their desperation to source documents, some Jews fell into the
clutches of criminals and swindlers. Early in 1942, three individuals –
one of whom was a Berlin lawyer – were arrested in the capital for
running a scam in which wealthy Jews were persuaded to pay 5,000
Reichsmarks on the understanding that strings would be pulled with
the authorities to provide them with Aryan identities.53 The three men
were successfully prosecuted for fraud, while their ‘victims’ – who
had testified at the trial – were deported.
Life in the underground put enormous mental strains on Jewish
refugees. In addition to the normal difficulties of living in a city at
war – the bombing, rationing and so on – they had to cope with isola-
tion, exhaustion and the constant fear of capture. In response, some
abandoned the pretence of a ‘normal life’ altogether and found a
refuge of sorts in crime and prostitution.54 In the netherworld of
Berlin’s bordellos, they were often free to rent rooms with no ques-
tions asked, and could come and go without attracting attention to
themselves.55
The young in particular seemed to have exulted in the sudden freedom
of life as a fugitive, relishing the thrill of being on the run and living
on their wits. In one case, two female
Taucher
found accommodation
with a fanatical Nazi woman by telling her that they were agents engaged
on a secret mission for the Führer. They only abandoned their refuge
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berlin at war
when the woman suggested that they might like to meet her son, an
officer in the SS.56 Cioma Schönhaus, meanwhile, liked to spend the
profits from his forgery business by dining in the best Berlin restaurants,
often surrounded by Nazi functionaries. His logic, it seems, was that
the best place to hide was in plain sight.57
Another such daredevil was Margot Linczyk, a sixteen-year-old
Berliner, living with her mother under false papers:
I thought our life was a great adventure. I got us hiding places. I
could steal, I could lie – it was fun! I think it was a reaction to my
Germanic upbringing, always having to sit up straight and so on. I
got my identity card from the post office by yelling ‘Heil Hitler!’ so
loud that they got scared I might report them for not responding
fast enough.58
The remarkable memoir by Larry Orbach testifies to this para-
doxical ‘liberation’. Orbach had just turned eighteen when he went
underground in the winter of 1942. Under the Aryan identity of
‘Gerhard Peters’, he robbed, cheated, lied and fornicated his way
through Nazi Berlin, demonstrating by turns tremendous courage and
astonishing nerve. In one instance, he and a friend hatched a plan
whereby they would team up to swindle rich Aryan men. His friend
would pose as a rent boy, while Orbach would play the role of the
Gestapo man who caught the two
in flagrante
, only to be bribed into
silence. For all the undoubted perils that Orbach endured in surviving
wartime Berlin, his memoir has a thoroughly uplifting, even optimistic
tone. For him there were ‘flashes of light and warmth’ in the dark-
ness; there was ‘romance, friendship, delight and adventure in the
midst of murderous oppression’.59
The vast majority of
Taucher
, however, found it extremely hard to
meet the challenge of a life on the run, an existence one of them
described as ‘like living in a mousetrap’.60 As one young Jewish woman
noted in 1943, ‘We live . . . only from day to day, worrying about our
sheer survival doesn’t give a moment’s respite.’61 After a series of near
misses with the Gestapo, one
Taucher
confided to a friend: ‘I can’t go
on; I’m too tired’, before adding in grim resignation: ‘They’ll catch
me and kill me.’62 She disappeared soon after.
The authorities were certainly not tardy in tracking down fugitives.
against all odds
303
As well as encouraging denunciations from Aryan Berliners, the
Gestapo organised blitz raids in an effort to find
Taucher
. Most no -
toriously, they sought the assistance of Jewish
agents provocateurs
or
Greifer
(‘catchers’), who would betray fugitive Jews in return for
payment, or immunity from deportation.
The most infamous of these
Greifer
was Stella Kübler. Born Stella
Goldschlag in 1922 and raised in a middle-class, thoroughly assimilated
household in Berlin’s western suburbs, Stella was one of those Jews
who would benefit from the blond hair and blue eyes that the Nazis
considered to be typically ‘Aryan’. Initially, Stella’s existence mirrored
that of her fellow Jews; she wore the
Judenstern
and worked in an
armaments factory. Like others, too, she went underground after the
Fabrik-Aktion
in the spring of 1943. However, her capture by the Gestapo later that year, along with that of her parents, compelled her to take
a rather different path.
Betrayed by a Gestapo ‘catcher’, Stella was brutally tortured as her
interrogators sought – in vain – to beat out of her the identity of the
man who had supplied her with false documents. Psychologically
broken by the experience, she agreed to use her Aryan looks and inside
knowledge of the underground community to identify other Jewish
fugitives. In return, she was given Aryan papers and a room, and was
paid 200 Marks for each
Taucher
she turned in. Furthermore, she was
assured that in return for her cooperation her parents would be spared
deportation to Auschwitz.
Stella soon turned out to be a model ‘catcher’. Having already
impressed the Gestapo with her ingenuity, after two escape attempts,
she would not disappoint them once in their employ, using her memory
for names, dates and addresses and her naturally flirtatious nature to
devastating effect. The first Jew she denounced was her own husband.
Quickly earning herself the nickname ‘the blonde poison’, she was
feared in the Berlin underground, where a photograph of her was
circulated by way of a warning. One
Taucher
, Ernst Goldstein, recalled
seeing her sauntering into a café on the elegant Kurfürstendamm,
coolly surveying the clientele, looking for fugitive Jews. Fortunately
for Goldstein, he had the presence of mind to react swiftly. Whispering
to his wife that the ‘head-hunters’ had arrived, he quickly but incon-
spicuously paid his bill and left.63
Stella Goldschlag remained active as a ‘catcher’ right to the very
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berlin at war
end of the war. The total number of her victims is not known, but
is thought to range between many hundreds and a few thousand. In
one single weekend, she was said to have led her Gestapo handlers to
sixty-two fugitive Jews.64 She herself became a victim of sorts, when
the Gestapo reneged upon its agreement with her and sent her parents
to Auschwitz. Goldschlag escaped with her life, but little more.
Imprisoned after the war, she committed suicide in 1994, at the age
of seventy-two.
Bizarrely, it seems that, apart from going underground, the only other
chance Jewish Berliners had of avoiding the deportations was to
become seriously ill. Though every other Jewish institution across the
Reich was shut down by the Nazis, the Jewish Hospital in Berlin,
located on the Iranische Strasse in Wedding, was permitted to exist
right through to the end of the war.65 The precise logic applied by the
Gestapo in allowing the hospital to remain open is unclear, but it may
well have been similar to that which allowed the Jewish cemetery in
Weissensee to survive – the principle being that Jews should deal with
Jews. So, while there were Jews remaining in Germany, who were
forbidden to be treated in Aryan hospitals, it was necessary to have a
Jewish hospital to treat them.
Whatever the reasons, the decision did not go uncontested. In the
immediate aftermath of the
Fabrik-Aktion
, the hospital was almost shut
down and in the remaining years of the war would be exposed to the
full capricious and murderous fury of the Gestapo. Its medical and
nursing staff were routinely required to accompany each of the trans-
ports taking Berlin Jews to their fate ‘in the east’, a trip from which
none of them would return. In due course, the hospital was itself targeted
to make up the numbers in the deportations, with its director – Dr
Lustig – having to draw up a list of those employees that would be sent
to their deaths.
Consequently, experienced and qualified staff had to be replaced
by individuals much like those who had been held at the Rosenstrasse
– people of mixed race, those in mixed marriages, those Jews who
were ‘privileged’ and ‘tolerated’ by the Nazi regime. As a result, medical
care at the hospital became increasingly perfunctory, more and more
conspicuous by its absence.
In such circumstances, merely being ill was no guarantee of survival;
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305
one also had to be lucky. Countless patients at the hospital were
deported once they had recovered sufficiently to be moved. The
hospital also received those Jews who had attempted suicide upon