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Edith Hahn Beer

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Full Name
  
Edith Hahn

Education
  
University of Vienna

Name
  
Edith Beer

Religion
  
Jewish

Nationality
  
AustrianBritish


Edith Hahn Beer Le Femme De L39Officier Nazi Comment Une Juive Survecut a L

Born
  
January 24, 1914 (
1914-01-24
)
Vienna, Austria

Residence
  
Golders Green, Barnet, London

Other names
  
Grete Denner, Grete Vetter

Died
  
March 17, 2009, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Fred Beer (m. 1957–1984), Werner Vetter (m. 1944–1947)

Children
  
Angelika "Angela" Schluter

Books
  
The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust

Parents
  
Klothilde Hahn, Leopold Hahn

Book Review || The Nazi Officer's Wife by Edith Hahn Beer with Susan Dworkin


Edith Hahn Beer (January 24, 1914 – March 17, 2009) was an Austrian Jewish woman who survived the Holocaust by hiding her Jewish identity and marrying a Nazi officer.

Contents

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What I Read - February 2017 (Part 2)


Early life and education

Edith Hahn Beer Quotes by Edith Hahn Beer Like Success

Hahn was one of three daughters born to Klothilde and Leopold Hahn. Her parents owned and ran a restaurant. In June 1936, Leopold Hahn died while working at a hotel as the restaurant manager in the Alps.

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Although it was uncommon for a girl of that time to attend high school, her professor persuaded her father to give in and he sent her to high school. She continued her studies at university and was studying law at the time of the Anschluss, when she was forced to leave the university because she was Jewish.

World War II

Edith Hahn Beer Moxie Firecracker Films

In 1939, Hahn and her mother were sent to the ghetto in Vienna. They were separated in April 1941, when Hahn was sent to an asparagus plantation in Osterburg, Germany and then to the Bestehorn box factory in Aschersleben. Her mother had been deported to Poland, two weeks before Hahn was able to return to Vienna in 1942. With duplicate copies of the identity papers of a Christian friend, Christa Denner, she went to Munich.

Edith Hahn Beer Oral history interview with Edith HahnBeer Collections Search

In Munich, she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who sought her hand in marriage, and volunteered as a German Red Cross nurse. The couple lived together in Brandenburg an der Havel and married to legitimise the impending birth of their daughter, Angelika, born in 1944. Vetter became a prisoner-of-war and was sent to a Siberian labour camp in March 1945.

Later life

Following the war, she used her long-hidden Jewish identity card to reclaim her true identity. The Allies' need for jurists called her law education into use and she was appointed as a judge in Brandenburg. Hahn pleaded with the Soviet occupation authorities to free Vetter and he was released in 1947, but their marriage ended shortly afterward. Vetter died in 2002.

Pressed by the authorities to work as an informer, she fled with her daughter to London, where her sisters settled after they had sought refuge in Palestine at the onset of the war. Hahn worked as a housemaid and a corset designer. She married Fred Beer, a Jewish jewellery merchant, in 1957 and they remained married until his death in 1984. After his death, she moved to Netanya, Israel.

In December 1997, a collection of Hahn's personal papers was sold at auction for $169,250. The collection, known as the Edith Hahn Archive, was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. She died in 2009.

Works

  • The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust with Susan Dworkin (Little, Brown & Company, 1999)
  • References

    Edith Hahn Beer Wikipedia