It was her “revenge on Hitler,” it said in advance. “A Jewish revenge, no blood, just joy, freedom and hope,” emphasized freeman. she donated personal memorabilia and documents to the House of Austrian History (hdgö) in Vienna on Monday.
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“They hoped they’d never see us again,” he said freeman related to the National Socialists. “But the Lord God is a nice guy.” As a Jew, she had to flee as a child. “Now I’m standing there,” smiled the 95-year-old, who has held both American and Austrian citizenship since this year – and has exercised her right to vote, as she said at the media event. The balcony is also known as the “Hitler Balcony”. “Now the balcony doesn’t belong to him anymore,” he said freeman. On this is now “the young 95-year-old lady, Jewess, survived, came back and still loves the country.”
“You can still love a country even if it hates you,” said freeman. “That happened to us. But the country is the people. And when the people change, the country changes. The only question is whether you want to.” The balcony is “a beautiful place”. freeman spoke out in favor of making it accessible to the public, which hdgö has been campaigning for for a long time. “Such a beautiful place. You don’t throw away this beauty.”
About that day in March 1938 when Hitler spoke to thousands of enthusiastic Austrians at Heldenplatz freeman: “He (Hitler) screamed very loudly. You don’t need to say much when you scream. You think that someone has something important to say – but that’s not true. When you scream, you know exactly that it’s not important is.” One should listen to the silent voices. And: “Don’t make yourself important, make yourself useful, then you are important.”
freeman, accompanied by Margit Fischer (“meine Heimatgeberin”), handed over certificates, the Nazi passport with a red J for Jews as well as the Austrian one and the ticket for the Holland-America Line, which brought her from Rotterdam to New York in February 1940 , the museum. This is “a very special moment” for the house, stressed director Monika Sommer. The presentation will take place during the week of action against anti-Semitism in the exhibition area “Dispose of Hitler – from the basement to the museum”.
“I was born in Vienna, but they didn’t allow me to stay Viennese for long,” she said freeman. Her mother was able to hide from the Nazis, but died in the course of acts of war in 1945, and her father escaped from the Theresienstadt concentration camp. freeman became a psychoanalyst for famous people. In old age she approached her birthplace again.
“We must not forget that the children learn a lot from us,” she warns. “Hate too. And hate isn’t healthy.” At the same time spoke freeman for optimism, even if many would be pessimistic about the world situation at the moment. “If you feel something is bad, see if the light is somewhere,” she said. “If you only have flour and water, then you already have bread.”
Source: Nachrichten