Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants start work 70 years after Invasion of Poland
AHMS started on September 1st The first participant of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service (AHMS) started his work on September 1st 1992 at the Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau. Since then more than 400 Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants have been working with major Holocaust memorial institutions in 23 countries worldwide. The intent of the AHMS is to recognize Austria's part of the collective responsibility for the Holocaust. 70 years later The invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany on September 1st 1939, one week after the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, precipitated World War II. Exactely 70 years later seven Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants start their work in the USA, France, Hungary and Italy. They are working with:
LA Museum of the Holocaust honors AHMS Founder Andreas Maislinger
Polish Hero Paweł Roszkowski
During a studytrip of the AHMS to Poland in April 2009, Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants visited the "Polish Heroes" exhibit at the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow and had the great honor to listen to a lecture of Righteous Paweł Roszkowski, who's story is part of the exhibition. After the 11th Braunau Contemporary History Days in 2002, which reminded of the 85 Austrian Righteous Among the Nations, the exhibit again directed the special focus of the AHMS on the Righteous Among the Nations. In spring 2010 the exhibit "Polish Heroes" will be shown at Austrian universities. First official visit of an Austrian delegation in Oradour-sur-Glane
The close Austrian-French relationship now results in the first visit of an Austrian delegation to Oradour-sur-Glane: Marina Ruhland- Chrystoph, embassy counselor of the Republic of Austria in Paris, and Andreas Maislinger, chairman and founder of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service, visited the remains of the martyr's village as well as the commemoration site of Oradour on March 19, 2008. "Austria was allied to the German Reich 70 years ago. Due to this anniversary we're getting reminded of that very often. The participation of many Austrians in the NS crimes, though, has been concealed for a very long time", says Andreas Maislinger. "1970 the German chancellor Willy Brandt kneeled before the monument in Warsaw's ghetto. At the same time Austrian chancellor Bruno Kreisky admitted former Nazis in his government. Only the end of "Real Socialism" in Middle- and Eastern Europe facilitated a change of views in Austria. Thinking about the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service, I had places like Marzabotto, Lidice, Distomo or Oradour in mind from the very beginning on." Highlight of the visit in Oradour was a meeting and a guided tour through the ruins of the village by Robert Hébras, the last survivor who could escape the mass murder of Oradour. On March 17, 2008, only two days before the arrival of the Austrian delegation in Oradour, Austria's ambassador Hubert Heiss awarded Robert Hébras with the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award in the embassy in Paris. French survivor of the SS massacre in Oradour receives Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award
As a representative for the victims and survivors of all SS-mass murders in Europe, Robert Hébras (82) received the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award (AHMA) in the Austrian Embassy in Paris on March 17, 2008. He was suggested by the current Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servant at the Centre de la Mémoire d'Oradour, René J. Laglstorfer. The Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service wants to remind of the historical, but publically mostly hushed up fact, that Austrians were, measured against the total number of people, above-average participants in the SS. Apart from Jean-Marcel Darthout, Robert Hébras is the only person alive, who could luckily escape the mass murder of Oradour on June 10, 1944 by pretending to be dead and hiding under the pile of dead bodies of his friends and neighbours. Andreas Maislinger, chairman and founder of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service: The awarding of Robert Hébras is a bow for the victims of Oradour and expresses our respect for the performance of the survivors. As the founder and head of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service I want to thank Robert Hébras for the warm reception of young Austrians." Since seven years the Centre de la Mémoire d'Oradour cooperates with the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service already. Werner Kutil was the first Austrian to do his National Service in 2001. René J. Laglstorfer, who moved to France in November, 2007, is the fourth Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servant at the Centre de la Mémoire already. Mathias Althaler is going to follow him in September 2008.
While the name of the small village Oradour became a symbol of the NS-crimes in postwar France, its sad story remained almost unknown abroad. Four days after D-Day in Normandie, Oradour was surrounded by a unit of the SS-tank-division "Das Reich". Almost the whole civilian population (207 children, 254 women and 181 men) was shot, suffocated in the village's church or burnt alive. Altogether, only one woman and five men survived this in Western Europe unusual massacre on civilians. At the Eastern front, Nazis killed millions of innocent people this way. After June 10, 1944 Robert Hébras participated in the resistance against National Socialism and fought with the French Résistance during the last year of the war. Despite the immense woe the then 19-year-old suffered from - he didn't only lose his mother in the massacre, but also two of his three sisters - Robert Hébras committed himself to reconciliation between Germans, Frenchmen and Austrians. Especially, Robert Hébras was engaged in the commemoration as a time witness and a book author. Despite his old age the grandfather of three grandchildren still gives tours through the ruins of the martyr's village. He is available for young people, especially for students, volunteers, and Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants, for interviews and still plays an active part at the Centre de la Mémoire d'Oradour.
Guestlist:
Stéphanie Boutaud, Vicent Clausell, Michèle Faure, Sandra Gibouin, Robert Hébras, Christine Hébras, Delphine Hébras, Dr. Hubert Heiss, Richard Jezierski, Beate Klarsfeld, Werner Kutil, René J. Laglstorfer, Yves Lescure, Dr. Andreas Maislinger, Dr. Stefan Martens, Jutta Perisson, Mag. Marina Ruhland-Chrystoph, Angelika Schenk, Nicola Schieweck, David Schwarzenbacher, Jean Serog, Daniel James Schuster Austrian Servant Abroad of the year 2007
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