DEAD MEN ON VACATION Pubblico Deposited

BOOK AND MOVIE HIGHLIGHT NAZI WWII COUNTERFEITING

Contenuto dell'articolo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 4, January 28, 2007, Article 7

    DEAD MEN ON VACATION: BOOK AND MOVIE HIGHLIGHT NAZI WWII COUNTERFEITING

    Mark Tomasko writes: "There was a front page feature story in the
    Monday, Jan 22, 2007 Wall Street Journal on Adolf Burger, one of the
    primary concentration camp inmates who participated in "Operation
    Bernhard," the Nazi counterfeiting of English pounds during WWII. The
    reason for the article seems to be a combination of the fact that an
    Austrian film on the subject is coming out soon, and that Mr. Burger
    actively gives talks about his experiences in order to rebut the
    Holocaust deniers' claims. It's a fascinating story and when I was down
    at the National Archives doing research a year and a half ago, I believe
    I came across an inventory of the material seized by our troops."

    [The article included an illustration of a counterfeit £5 note made
    by inmates of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and an interview
    with one of the surviving forgers. There is new attention being paid
    to the topic because of a recent book and the new film called "The
    Forger," to be released in Germany and Austria in March. -Editor]

    "Adolf Burger, a sprightly 89-year-old survivor of Nazi concentration
    camps, held up one of the British £5 notes he helped forge for the
    Germans during the war.

    "'Britannia was hard' to render, he said, pointing to the female symbol
    of Great Britain, a toga-wearing woman with spear and shield drawn in
    the note's top left-hand corner.

    "Mr. Burger was a reluctant player in one of the biggest attempts at
    financial sabotage in history. The Nazis forced Mr. Burger and about
    140 other Jewish prisoners -- all marked for liquidation -- to forge so
    much British currency that by 1945, 12% of all pound-sterling bills in
    existence, measured by face value, were fake."

    "If Germany had been able to drop the fake fortune on Britain as planned,
    it could have undermined trust in the currency and crippled the British
    economy, according to "Krueger's Men," by American author Lawrence
    Malkin, the first comprehensive account of the saga.

    "Capt. Krüger and his team of SS guards spared their Jewish prisoners
    the degradations they had known previously in Nazi camps, according to
    Mr. Malkin's account. The inmates had decent food, civilian clothes,
    cigarettes, books and board games. They even received parcels from
    outside. They were allowed to grow their hair and listen to the radio.
    They worked eight-hour days. They had Sundays off. Mr. Burger played
    ping-pong with the SS.

    "The inmates were to be killed when the project ended, and they knew
    it. Those who fell ill weren't taken to see a doctor, to whom they
    might reveal something; they were shot. Inmates' only hope was to
    keep counterfeiting successfully until the war was over.

    "We were dead men on vacation," says Mr. Burger."

    To read the complete article (subscription required):
    Full Story

    [The article called "Krueger's Men: The Secret Nazi Counterfeit Plot
    and the Prisoners of Block 19" by Lawrence Malkin (2006) "the first
    comprehensive account of the saga", but that isn't true. My shelves
    hold the following earlier titles: "Operation Bernhard: The Greatest
    Forgery of All Time" by Anthony Pirie (1961) and "Nazi Counterfeiting
    of British Currency during World War II: Operation Andrews and
    Operation Bernhard" by Bryan Burke (1987). I've ordered a copy of
    the Malkin book. -Editor]

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2007-01-28
Volume
  • 10

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Autore NNP