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Kurt Klein, WWI Veteran Who Helped
Spread Hope
With the simplest of gestures –
a door held open, a gentle voice – Kurt Klein and Gerda
Weissmann brought a sense of humanity to a scene of horror.
He was a US Army lieutenant. She, one day shy of her 21st
birthday, at 68 pounds, with gray hair, at the end of a 300-mile
death march, was a Holocaust survivor.
Their first encounter outside a booby-trapped
warehouse in Europe on May 7, 1945, blossomed into a 57-year
love affair with a tireless mission: to battle intolerance
and hunger and to turn heartache into hope for generations
ranging from Holocaust victims to Columbine High School survivors.
Mr. Klein died Friday, April 19, 2002, in Guatemala on a lecture
tour to deliver their message of hope. He was 81.
"Their life together was like a
fairy tale," their friend from Buffalo, Ruth Kahn Stovroff,
told The Buffalo News. "They carried a message around
the world… how you can turn any horrible degree of evil
into good, with enough courage and faith."
Following Mr. Klein’s retirement
in the late 1980s, the couple moved to Scottsdale, Ariz.,
established the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation, and spread
their message through an international lecture tour.
Their story was also retold in a variety
of settings. Gerda Klein was the subject of HBO’s Academy-Award
winning documentary "One Survivor Remembers," in
which she delivers a quiet, personal, shattering account of
her three years in a concentration camp. She also wrote a
book about her experiences and liberation called "All
But My Life," for which Mr. Klein was the editor. The
two are featured prominently in videotapes shown at the Holocaust
Museum in Washington, DC.
Born in Germany, Kurt Klein was forced
to leave school shortly after his bar mitzvah as conditions
worsened for Jews. He taught himself English by reading about
America, and when he was 16, his parents sent him to the United
States.
Mr. Klein arrived in Buffalo with $10 in his pocket and worked
as a typesetter, dishwasher, and cigar store clerk to help
pay for his parents’ passage from Germany. They made
it as far as France, but efforts to get US visas were snarled
by red tape and a lack of interest by US Embassy officials,
and the war caught up with them. They were sent to Auschwitz,
where they died.
Mr. Klein’s efforts to save them
from the Nazis were recounted in the PBS firm "America
and the Holocaust: Deceit and Indifference."
Mr. Klein joined the US Army and fought
against his homeland. As the war dragged to a close and hundreds
of thousands of Germans began surrendering, US intelligence
agents tapped his ability to speak German.
He was on patrol when he heard that a
group of concentration camp survivors had been found near
a warehouse. That group included Gerda Weissmann.
After three years in a German concentration
camp, Gerda had been forced to march with 2,000 other camp
survivors toward Czechoslovakia. By early May, when SS officers
abandoned them in a booby-trapped warehouse and joined the
German retreat, only 150 of them were still alive.
"All of a sudden, I saw a strange
car coming down the hill, no longer green, not bearing a swastika,
but a white star," Mrs. Klein later said of the US jeep.
When Lieutenant Klein walked up to her, he asked if anyone
spoke German or English. Her response was a warning.
"We are Jewish, you know,"
she said in German.
She said the soldier hesitated. "Then his own voice sort
of betrayed his own emotion and he said, ‘So am I,’"
she later recounted. "It was the greatest hour of my
life.
"Then he asked an incredible question:
‘May I see the other ladies?’
"It was a form of address I hadn’t
heard in six years. Then he held the door for me and let me
precede him and in that gesture restored me to humanity."
When she took him inside to stand among the sick and dying
young women, she made an encompassing gesture with her hand
and said, "Noble be man, merciful and good."
The soldier recognized the words. "What
shocked me was that she could recall the opening lines of
a poem by Goethe under those unspeakable conditions,"
he recalled.
In addition to bringing his future wife
to safety, Lieutenant Klein also helped arrange safe passage
into American hands for a group of suspected German prisoners
who turned out to be concentration camp escapees.
Only in 1987, when one of the prisoners
wrote him, did Mr. Klein learn that among the group he saved
was a person who became famous decades later for his own heroics.
His name was Oskar Schindler.
Associated Press obituary
April 25, 2002
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