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Baron Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim
was born on October 5, 1900 in Cologne. He was a distant descendant
of the German-Jewish banker Salomon Oppenheim, Jr, (1772-1828), who,
at the end of the eighteenth century, had established in Cologne the
famous banking house of Sal Oppenheim Jr. & Cie. Baron Friedrich C.
von Oppenheim and his brother Waldemar, Salomon Oppenheim, Jr’s
great grandsons, were considered by the Nazis as “quarter Jews,” or
“Mischlinge (cross-breeds) of the second degree.” Although they
were excluded from the Nazi party and, consequently, from holding
positions of power, “quarter-Jews” were allowed to retain their
German citizenship, serve in the military, and intermarry with
Germans. In the period immediately following the Nazi takeover in
1933, the Oppenheim banking firm in Cologne and its employees were
subjected to a certain degree of harassment from Nazi party circles.
Baron Schröder, head of the private banking group within the Nazi
party and “Gauwirtschaftsberater” (a title for a local Nazi
economic chief), was especially involved in these activities.
However, barring the fact that, in 1938, it was forced to change its
name to “Pferdmenge (after Dr. Robert Pferdmenge, a non-family
partner who lent his name) & Co,” the bank was by and large allowed
to carry on its normal business. Although Friedrich von Oppenheim,
who had never hidden his dislike of Nazism, was subjected to special
Gestapo surveillance after 1938, he continued to enjoy some
protection by virtue of the economic importance of his indispensable
business connections abroad. Both Friedrich von Oppenheim and his
elder brother, Waldemar, were inducted, after the outbreak of war,
into Canaris’ Abwehr (German counter-intelligence), which entitled
them to a special pass and virtually unrestricted travel abroad.
Baron Friedrich von Oppenheim himself continued to maintain close
business contacts and friendly relations with Jews after the Nazi
takeover, in disregard of Nazi propaganda and his own heightened
vulnerability as a so-called Mischling. Sensing, in 1938, that the
danger to Jews was imminent, he urged the Griessman and Lissauer
families, with whom he had close business contacts, to leave
Germany. He helped them emigrate and to set up their business,
which dealt in metal manufacture, in the Hague and in Amsterdam. He
continued to maintain contact with them even after their emigration.
In May 1940, the German invasion of the
Netherlands again caught up with von Oppenheim’s Jewish friends, but
he was not prepared to leave them in the lurch. In September 1940,
he finally succeeded in obtaining exit visas for them from Holland
to Portugal and from there to South America. He traveled in person
to the Netherlands to part from his friends and arrange the details
of their escape plan. On September 7, 1940, a special German bus,
commanded by German Abwehr officers, arrived at the Lissauers’
residence at 4 Minerva Plein, Amsterdam, and took them, together
with the Griessman family - eleven persons in all - through occupied
Belgium and France to the safety of the Spanish border at Irun. From
Spain they took the train to Portugal and from there traveled by
ship to Brazil. After the Germans began deporting the Dutch Jews in
1942, von Oppenheim was active in a largely unsuccessful attempt to
save the lives of the Jewish workers of the Oxid firm in Amsterdam.
The firm, which had previously belonged to the aforementioned
Lissauer and Griessman families, was taken over in 1940/41 by the
Oppenheim bank - alias Pferdmenge & Co. - together with another
German company. Since the Oxid firm was engaged in the production of
certain metal alloys that were of importance to the German
ammunitions’ industry, its Jewish workers - most of them former
German-Jewish refugees - enjoyed a relatively protected status. This
fact was used by von Oppenheim - who also lobbied other bodies with
whom he stood in contact, like the Reichsbank and the Ministry for
Military Production - in his appeal against their deportation.
However, these efforts largely came to naught, with the
intensification of the anti-Jewish campaign in the Netherlands. In
1943, von Oppenheim personally went to Aus der Funten, the SS Chief
in the Netherlands, to plead for the exemption of Dr. Hugo Weil, the
former Jewish director of Oxid who had been incarcerated in
Westerbork pending his deportation. This was of no avail: Weil was
included in a transport from Westerbork to Bergen-Belsen and
perished there. In the end, only ten Jewish Oxid workers (out of an
estimated eighty) survived the Holocaust. There is also considerable
evidence regarding von Oppenheim’s efforts on behalf of other Jewish
individuals who were either in hiding or under arrest. Thus, in
November 1941, he dispatched an employee, the Swiss-national Ernst
Gut, to Switzerland for the sole purpose of phoning friends in New
York to raise money for immigration permits for certain Jewish
persons. Von Oppenheim also extended help to Cologne Police Chief
Karl Winkler, who was of Jewish descent, from the time that Winkler
and his family went into hiding at the beginning of 1944, until his
own arrest in September. Following the abortive attempt on Hitler’s
life in July 1944, von Oppenheim, who had long been targeted by the
Gestapo, was arrested and thrown into prison pending his trial on
charges of treason. In an attempt to frame him, the Gestapo
produced, in August 1944, fabricated evidence to prove that his
mother was of Jewish descent and hence that he should be treated as
a “half-Jew,” or “Mischling of the first degree.” This by itself
could have had fatal consequences for the outcome of his trial.
Fortunately, however, the interrogation dragged on until the end of
the war, and von Oppenheim was able to survive in prison until he
was released by the Americans. After the war the Oppenheim firm
reverted in 1947 to its original name. On October 10, 1996, Yad
Vashem recognized Baron Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim as Righteous
Among the Nations.
The Baron Friedrich Carl von
Oppenheim Chair for the Study of Racism, Antisemitism, and the
Holocaust was founded by the family of Baron Friedrich Carl
von Oppenheim in 1997 with the aim of enhancing the research work of
the International Institute for Holocaust Research – Yad Vashem.
The Chair awards annually two to three postdoctoral fellowship
grants. The recipients of these fellowships are chosen by the von
Oppenheim Family from a list of candidates approved by the
Institute’s Academic Board. In total, the Institute awards 8
postdoctoral fellowships per year. The length of an individual
fellowship is normally four months. (The fall semester is 1 October
– 31 January / the spring semester is 1 March – 30 June.) Project
proposals must be related to the Holocaust (including its antecedent
and aftermath.)
The von Oppenheim Chair enables
eminent scholars to pursue important research on the Holocaust and
related subjects. Thanks to the fellowships sponsored by the Chair,
these scholars will be able to contribute their share to the
development of scholarship and thus testify to the vision of the
donors.
The following is the list of the
recipients chosen by the Barons von Oppenheim for the Baron
Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim Chair for the Study of Racism,
Antisemitism, and the Holocaust since its foundation:
1998-1999
Professor Avraham Barkai
Professor David Cesarani
1999-2000
Professor Inge Marszolek
Professor Szymon Rudnicki
2000-2001
Dr. Michal Unger
Dr. Sergei Kudryashov
2001-2002
Dr. Michael Wildt
Professor Renée Poznanski
2002-2003
Dr. Sandra Goldstein
Dr. Roni Stauber
Dr. David Kranzler
2003-2004
Dr. Sara Bender
Dr. Susanna Urban
2004-2005
Dr. Jean-Marie Dreyfus
Dr. Yvonne Kozlovsky
2005-2006
Dr. Albert Kaganovitch
Dr. Dariusz Libionka |