Simon Wiesenthal(1908-2005)
- Writer
- Additional Crew
A graduate of the Czech Technical University in Prague, Simon
Wiesenthal was an architect in the city of Lvov in the Ukraine when
World War II broke out; due to the non-aggression treaty with Nazi
Germany, the Russians forced Wiesenthal, as with other Jews, from his
livelihood; he was working as a mechanic in a bedspring factory when he
was imprisoned in a labor camp working on a railroad for the duration
of the war. He had smuggled his wife, a blonde who could pass for
Polish, to safety through the underground, but both thought the other
had died during the war. At various times during his captivity, he
contemplated suicide rather than face torture; however, he made a wager
with an SS Corporal who bet him that no one would ever believe the
truth of what had gone on in the concentration camps. Wiesenthal had
his purpose in life - to survive and bring the truth of the horrors of
the Holocaust to the public at large, as well as bringing the
perpetrators of those atrocities to justice. After the war's end,
Wiesenthal went to an Allied base in Lidz, Austria with an extensive
list of atrocities he had witnessed and offered his services to the
Allies. He was permitted to make arrests of those people who had been
accused of committing them, and from that small start, in 1947 he
established the independent Jewish Documentation Center in Lidz (later
in Vienna) where he started searching for war criminals. He was
successful in aiding in the detection and ultimate capture and
subsequent execution of SS Major Adolf Eichmann, who had helped devise
"The Final Solution" - the transport and murder of Jews and other
"inferior persons" to gas chambers in death camps. Wiesenthal estimated
that he helped bring to trial at least 1,100 ex-Nazis.