Haus Deutschland, oder, Die Geschichte eines ungesühnten Mordes
Chronicles the story of the author's family in the Holocaust and his attempts to trace Nazis who played a part in that story: Otto Braeutigam, who as a consular official in Paris sought to deprive Jewish refugees of their German passports (among them, the author's father); Martin Fischer, the German consul in Shanghai who pressured Japanese authorities to force the German refugees into a ghetto (among them, the author's parents); and above all Anton Malloth, a guard in the Kleine Festung (Little Fortress) in Theresienstadt, who, according to witnesses, murdered the author's grandfather. All three went free: the author's demands to bring Malloth to justice were rejected by the German prosecutor and courts. 1. Aufl. 170 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
- Finkelgruen, Peter, 1942-
- NIOD Bibliotheek
- Text
- ocm27350647
- Germany--Ethnic relations.
- Jewish refugees--China--Shanghai--Biography.
- Theresienstadt (Concentration camp)
- Jews--Germany--Biography.
- Finkelgruen, Peter, 1942-
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Germany--Influence.
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