Heinz Drossel

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Heinz Drossel
Heinz and his wife Marriane Drossel, who he saved during the Holocaust and married in 1946, when this photo was taken
Born(1916-09-21)21 September 1916
Died28 April 2008(2008-04-28) (aged 91)
Simonswald, Germany
Occupation(s)Attorney, judge, and Head of the Courts Council
Known forSaving Jewish refugees
Spouse
Marianne Hirschfeld
(m. 1946)
Awards

Heinz Drossel (German: [haɪnts ˈdʁɔsl̩] ; 21 September 1916 – 28 April 2008) was a German lieutenant in World War II who was named one of the Righteous Among the Nations, shared with his parents, for helping Jews escape persecution. He was the son of Paul and Elfriede Drossel, both anti-Nazis, and shared their political philosophy. Drafted in November 1939, Drossel served in the Battle of France before serving on the Eastern Front for the rest of the war. He saved a woman, Marriane Hirschfeld, who became his wife after the war. He also freed Soviet soldiers to avoid execution. He and his parents also save a woman Margot, her parents, Lucie and Jack Hass and Ernst Frontheim, who became Margot's husband after the war.

Drossel and his parents Elfriede and Paul Drossel received the title Righteous Among the Nations from Yad Vashem on 12 January 1999 in recognition of the risk they had taken to hide and care for Jews during the war.[1] In 2001, he received the Federal Cross of Merit, the highest award made to civilians, in Germany.[2][3] In 2004, he received the Wallenberg Medal given to humanitarians.[2]

Personal life[edit]

Born in Berlin, Germany[3] on 21 September 1916, Drossel was the son of Elfriede (1892–1975) and Paul Drossel (1880–1954).[1] He completed law school in 1939.[4]

Drossel's parents were Anti-Nazis and they refused to join the Nazi Party. Because he would not join the extreme German nationalist party, he was unable to practice law and was drafted into the German Army.[5]

His parents were retired and living in Senzig, near Berlin during World War II (1939–1945).[1] They also had an apartment in Berlin, but left the city during the war to avoid the bombing.[5][6]

World War II[edit]

Drossel served the German Army for six years.[4][5] He fought in the Battle of France in 1940 before being transferred to the Eastern Front on the border of the Soviet Union (USSR). In 1942, he was commissioned a lieutenant.[1][5] Drossel was loyal to his troops, but hated Nazism.[2][4] Others felt a moral quandary, but did not know how to resolve it. Drossel tried to help a man who did not think he could shoot anyone for Nazi Germany. When the soldier was threatened to be executed if he could not shoot his gun, Drossel advised him to shoot in the air. Unable to do that, he was shot by a firing squad. Drossel said of the soldier, "He was the only hero in my life."[7]

Rather than executing several Soviet prisoners as ordered in 1941, Drossel helped them escape. He later released a Russian officer.[5] In 1942, he saved a woman, Marianne Hirschfeld, while on leave. She was in the process of jumping off a bridge in Berlin.[5] Drossel found out that she was a Jew who would rather kill herself than be sent to a concentration camp. He let her stay in the family's apartment in Berlin. Drossel provided her food and shelter temporarily. He also gave her money to find a safer place to stay.[5]

When he was wounded during the war, he went to his parents' house to recuperate.[1] Ernst Fontheim approached Drossel the evening of 26 March 1945 and asked for his help. Frontheim had been renting the summer home of Drossel's neighbor, Frieda Kunze, and was living there with his future wife Margot and her parents, Lucie and Jack Hass[1][6][a] since 30 January 1943. They had forged identification papers, claiming to be a family named Hesse who left the city due to the air raids. They lived by purchasing food on the black market.[1] Someone had reported that they were Jews to authorities.[1] The Drossels provided food, a place to store their belongings, and helped them find a place to hide out.[1] Ernst and Jack stayed at the Drossel's apartment in the Tempelhof quarter of Berlin,[5] sharing it with a family who moved in after their home was destroyed during the war.[1] Margot and Lucie lived in another apartment.[5] The Gestapo had come to Senzig looking for the four the following night.[1]

Drossel returned to the Eastern Front and led troops in the fight against the Russian Army. He was imprisoned for disobeying orders by the Waffen-SS (combat branch of the Nazi Party) to lead his men into a "suicide attack" against Soviet troops on 4 May 1945.[1][b] Drossel was arrested, court-martialed, and sentenced to death.[2][5] The Russian Army advanced into Germany in the last days of the war (End of World War II in Europe on 8 May 1945). They freed Drossel from the German prison, and then put him in a Russian prison camp, where he remained for a couple of months[5] or until the end of the year.[6]

After the war[edit]

Berlin after air raids

Drossel found Marianne Hirschfeld in Berlin and they were married on 4 May 1946.[8] They had a daughter Ruth.[3] Antisemitism lingered after the war.[3] Because his wife was Jewish, Drossel had difficulty establishing a law practice. He was a judge and then became head of the Courts Council, which makes decisions about hiring and promoting judges.[4] He was a director of the social court in Berlin. He moved to Freiburg in 1975 and he became the director of Constance's Social Court.[3][c] He retired in 1981.[4][5]

Drossel wrote the book Die Zeit der Fuechse (The Time of the Foxes) of his experiences and had it published in 1988.[9][10]

External media
Audio
audio icon Oral history interview with Heinz Drossel
Video
video icon Heinz Drossel, 2004 Wallenberg Lecture

He spoke to groups of people to them about the realities of the war, the nature and prevalence of antisemitism, and how to manage moral dilemmas.[4] Drossel and his parents were awarded the title Righteous Among the Nations from Yad Vashem on 12 January 1999,[1] and participated in a ceremony at the Israeli Embassy in Berlin for them in 2000.[2] After receiving the award he said,

After I got the honor of Yad Vashem, I have spoken before more than 5,000 German young people in schools and high schools. It's necessary to give young people the courage to be human.[5]

In 2001, he received the highest award made to civilians in Germany.[2] On 19 October 2004 Drossel received the Wallenberg Medal given to humanitarians.[2] Drossel gave an oral history interview at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2007.[4] He died on 28 April 2008 in Simonswald.[1][5] A biography of Drossel's life Bleib immer ein Mensch: Heinz Drossel, ein stiller Held 1916-2006 (Staying Human: The Story of a Quiet WWII Hero, English edition) was published by Katarina Stegelmann in 2013.[5][11]

Margot and Ernst Fontheim moved to the United States and settled in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ernst worked at the University of Michigan's Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences Department as a senior research scientist.[5]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Kunze had worked for Ernst's father, Dr. Georg Martin Fontheim, who with his wife, Eva Irene, were arrested on 24 December 1942 by the Gestapo. Jews and non-Jew German citizens were outlawed from contact, but Kunze had continued to see the family friends and help Ernst.[1]
  2. ^ A version of the events is that when the SS unit ordered Drossel's soldiers to shoot and kill him, Drossel ordered that they shoot the SS unit.[2][5]
  3. ^ According to Constance's Social Court, "[t]he social court in Konstanz decides on matters of social security, basic security for those who are able to work, social assistance, social compensation law, the law on severely disabled persons and other areas of law."[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Heinz Drossel". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Seguine, Joel (19 October 2004). "Wallenberg Medal honors officer who hid family, refused to join Nazis". The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Konstanz, Sozialgericht. "Vortragsveranstaltung Heinz Drossel (Lecture and Discussion on Heinz Drossel)". sozialgericht-freiburg.justiz-bw.de (in German). Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Oral history interview with Heinz Drossel". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Committee, Wallenberg (10 April 2004). "Heinz Drossel". Wallenberg Legacy, University of Michigan. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  6. ^ a b c Bartrop, Paul R. (6 June 2016). Resisting the Holocaust: Upstanders, Partisans, and Survivors. ABC-CLIO. pp. 57–59. ISBN 978-1-61069-879-5.
  7. ^ Stahel, David (2015). The Battle for Moscow. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-107-08760-6.
  8. ^ Die Gegenwart der Vergangenheit : der lange Schatten des Dritten Reichs (in German). Munchen : Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. 2004. p. 407. ISBN 978-3-421-05754-9.
  9. ^ Laqueur, Walter (2001). Generation exodus : the fate of young Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. Hanover, NH : Brandeis University Press, Published by University Press of New England. p. 314. ISBN 978-1-4175-4195-9.
  10. ^ Drossel, Heinz (1988). Die Zeit der Füchse (in German). H. Drossel.
  11. ^ Stegelmann, Katharina (6 January 2015). Staying Human: The Story of a Quiet WWII Hero. Skyhorse. ISBN 978-1-63220-135-5.