Historical records matching Walter Süskind
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About Walter Süskind
Walter Süskind (Lüdenscheid, 29 oktober 1906 – Midden-Europa, 28 februari 1945) was een Joodse Duitser van deels Nederlandse afkomst die als medewerker van de Hollandse Schouwburg ongeveer 600 Joodse kinderen aan de Jodenvervolging heeft helpen ontsnappen. Zie verder Wikipedia
- archiefkaart Stadsarchief Amsterdam
- Joods Monument > profiel foto
- Wikipedia > zie de tekst hieronder (engels)
- Oorlogsgravenstichting
- Westerbork Portretten
Walter Süskind (29 October 1906 – 28 February 1945) was a German Jew of Dutch parents who helped about 600 Jewish children escape the Holocaust. He was a member of the Dutch Jewish council (Dutch: Joodsche Raad) during the Second World War.
Süskind was born in Lüdenscheid in Germany as the first child of Hermann Süskind and Frieda Kessler. He had two younger brothers, Karl Süskind (1908) and Alfred Süskind (1911).
Süskind initially worked as a manager of a margarine factory in Germany. In March 1938, he fled to the Netherlands with the intention to emigrate to the United States, because of the persecution of Jews by the Nazis. From 1942 until his deportation to Westerbork, he lived at the Nieuwe Prinsengracht 51 in the center of Amsterdam with his wife Johanna Natt (1 November 1906 – 1944) and their daughter Yvonne Süskind. During the Second World War he became involved in helping children escape the Holocaust via the nursery on the Plantage Middenlaan in Amsterdam.
Süskind worked for the Dutch Jewish council. He was the manager of the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater), where the Jews of Amsterdam had to report themselves prior to their deportation to the Westerbork transit camp. In that position he could manipulate the personal data of children in particular. His close relationship with the German authorities helped him in his activities to help children escape. He especially tried to get close with the SS officer Ferdinand aus der Fünten, who was then the second man of the Central Office for Jewish Emigration in Amsterdam.
Opposite of the Hollandsche Schouwburg on the Plantage Middenlaan, there was a nursery. The Nazis put the young children there instead of in the theater. The Jewish director of the nursery, Henriette Henriques Pimentel, together with Süskind and economist Felix Halverstad (who also worked at the Hollandsche Schouwburg), set up a system to rescue children via the nursery. Children were secretly brought to the Hervormde Kweekschool (Reformed Teacher Training College), two houses from the theater. They got there through the garden. They received help from the head of the school, Johan van Hulst. From there, the children went into a backpack, shopping bag or laundry basket to be transported to Limburg and Friesland by train and tram, often with help from the Utrechts Kindercomité (Utrecht Children's Committee) of Piet Meerburg and the NV, a secret organization that managed to organize many addresses in Limburg. Süskind and Felix Halverstad ensured that these children were not registered and removed their names from the records of the theater. Thanks to this plan, about 600 children were saved.
In 1944, Süskind, his wife and his daughter were sent to the Westerbork transit camp. Due to his good relations with the SS leadership of the Dutch Theater, he could return to Amsterdam, but he eventually went back to his family in Westerbork. He also wanted to let people escape from the transit camp, but failed. His wife and daughter were murdered in Auschwitz in October 1944 and he himself died on 28 February 1945 at an unknown location in central Europe during the death marches.
On 19 January 2012, the Dutch movie Süskind was released. This movie is based on the life of Walter Süskind.
Walter Süskind's Timeline
1906 |
October 29, 1906
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Lüdenscheid, Arnsberg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
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1939 |
March 28, 1939
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Bergen op Zoom, Bergen op Zoom, North Brabant, The Netherlands
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1945 |
February 28, 1945
Age 38
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Central Europe
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