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996: How To Hide In Berlin

My father had nerves of steel.

Before the war, Jews were obliged to put ‘Israel’ in front of their names.

My father refused. He said his name wasn't Israel & nobody was going to tell him what to do.

So he was hauled up before the magistrates, who sentenced him to 3 weeks in Spandau. He went to prison.

My mother was absolutely terrified of what they were doing to him inside, came to meet him at the prison gates with bags of sandwiches in case he’d been starved.

He said, “Put those away. I couldn’t eat a thing more.”

In the evenings, he said, the warders used to come round to his cell, & say, “Come on Danziger, tell us. What are these idiots doing to the Jews?"

He told them what was going on & they were amazed.

Another time, when they were hiding during the war, he'd been somewhere & was coming through the railway barriers.

My mother was waiting for him & somebody jostled my father. My father turned around & offered to punch him in the face. My mother nearly died.

My father said to her afterwards “If I'd cowered, they might have been saying, ‘Are you a Jew or something?’” He said, “As it was, nobody dared question it.”

Another day, he was on the tram, having been to the country to fetch eggs & butter & so forth from a farmer. Black market.

He was on the tram & some Nazi with a big swastika in his buttonhole said to him, “What have you got in your case?”

My father said, “I've got butter, eggs, sugar, a bit of this, leg of chicken.” The chap says, “Yeah, yeah. In your dreams.”

My father said, “Just shows you my son, always tell the truth.”

This is how they first hid: my father was working in Daimler-Benz.

One day, the Jews were told to stay behind. My father thought, well, this does not bode well. So he put his hat & coat on, & went.

The gatekeeper said to him, “A bit early, isn't it?” My father said “I've got a dental appointment.” “OK, see you tomorrow.” He obviously hadn't been told to keep the Jews in.

So my father went. God knows what happened to the rest.

My father went straight to the underground, took off his yellow star, rode around, I don't know for how long.

He then phoned some friends who said, “Yes, Lotti’s with us.” So he knew my mother was safe.

Then he went to the house. Fischer, the porter, had made an arrangement with him.

If there was trouble or the Nazis were upstairs, he would turn a cup upside down in his porters’ lodge.

So my father went past & he saw the cup upside down. So he didn't go up.

Then a couple of nights later, he went back again. There was nothing there. So he went upstairs.

He broke the seal on the door, because the Gestapo had sealed the door.

He started getting the boxes ready & the porter came rushing up & said, “What are you doing? Are you mad?"

"Some people are saying there's a light on in the Danziger flat.” So they turned the lights off.

My father said “Take what you want, just get the boxes to Goerner.” So they did up the boxes & manhandled them downstairs to the porter’s lodge.

From there, they went to his friend Goerner’s place. These were all non-Jews.

There were many people, all non-Jews who helped them, hid them, gave him false papers, took them out.

I can't say enough about them. My father tried with Yad Vashem to get honours for certain people.

One of them employed my father as a night watchman.

So during the day, my father went out of the district where he was known & went to different places. At night, he had a safe place to go as a night watchman.

By this time, my mother had been questioned by the Gestapo about where my father was. She could answer honestly saying she hadn't a clue. They left her alone.

Then her friend Helli was working at an electrical plant, Siemens. The foreman there quite fancied her.

When it was time, all the Jews stayed behind, he said to her “Look, I know you're not that keen, but do you want to go with them? Or do you want to come home?”

She said, “I'll come home with you if my friend Lotti can come.”

So he said, “Alright, bring your friend Lotti, but you’d better hurry.” So he got them to his house & put them up.

There was an old railway carriage at the end of his garden with the chickens in. He threw out the chickens & installed Helli & my mother.

He used to bring them little bits of felt to make hats, which he then sold in the factory. Nobody asked where he got the hats from.

He was a bit of a drunk, & when he was drunk, he used to sing anti-Nazi songs. Not a good thing to do in those days.

So, my mother got very frightened & said to Helli, “I don't think we ought to hang around here.”

So my mother stayed with some other friends, one of whom was not Jewish. Had been married to a Jew, who had divorced him.

He found my mother a job with some woman who had dementia & was some raving old Nazi. My mother didn't look very Jewish so that was OK.

We have a photo of a Nazi officer in the photograph book. And we said, “What on earth’s he doing in there?!” You know.

She said, “you don't judge a book by its cover”.

She said she was somewhere at a party & this officer was there & he said to her, “I'm sure,” you know, “ask your husband's permission..."

",,,but honoured Lady—gnädige Frau—if you would care to have my arm should you want to go out. I would always be—here's my phone number.”

So she phoned him & he took her out. If she wanted to go shopping to some shop, where she wouldn't be allowed normally, he would take it to the shops.

He knew she was Jewish. He didn't ask any questions; he didn't want to know.

He never asked. He never said anything. But obviously, why should he bother, you know?

Sadly, sadly, he was killed by the Russians at the end of the war & both his sons died on the Russian front—they were both doctors.

Very sad. The ones who do good get killed.

My father had nerves of steel.

Before the war, Jews were obliged to put ‘Israel’ in front of their names.

My father refused. He said his name wasn't Israel & nobody was going to tell him what to do.

So he was hauled up before the magistrates, who sentenced him to 3 weeks in Spandau. He went to prison.

My mother was absolutely terrified of what they were doing to him inside, came to meet him at the prison gates with bags of sandwiches in case he’d been starved.

He said, “Put those away. I couldn’t eat a thing more.”

In the evenings, he said, the warders used to come round to his cell, & say, “Come on Danziger, tell us. What are these idiots doing to the Jews?

He told them what was going on & they were amazed.

Another time, when they were hiding during the war, he'd been somewhere & was coming through the railway barriers.

My mother was waiting for him & somebody jostled my father.

My father turned around & offered to punch him in the face.

My mother nearly died.

They had no papers, nothing.

My father said to her afterwards “If I'd cowered, they might have been saying, ‘Are you a Jew or something?’” He said, “As it was, nobody dared question it.”

Another day, he was on the tram, having been to the country to fetch eggs & butter & so forth from a farmer. Black market.

He was on the tram & some Nazi with a big swastika in his buttonhole said to him, “What have you got in your case?”

My father said, “I've got butter, eggs, sugar, a bit of this, leg of chicken.” The chap says, “Yeah, yeah. In your dreams.”

My father said, “Just shows you my son, always tell the truth.”

This is how they first hid: my father was working in Daimler-Benz.

One day, the Jews were told to stay behind. My father thought, well, this does not bode well. So he put his hat & coat on, & went.

The gatekeeper said to him, “A bit early, isn't it?” My father said “I've got a dental appointment.” “OK, see you tomorrow.” He obviously hadn't been told to keep the Jews in.

So my father went. God knows what happened to the rest.

My father went straight to the underground, took off his yellow star, rode around, I don't know for how long.

He then phoned some friends who said, “Yes, Lotti’s with us.” So he knew my mother was safe.

Then he went to the house. Fischer, the porter, had made an arrangement with him.

If there was trouble or the Nazis were upstairs, he would turn a cup upside down in his porters’ lodge.

So my father went past & he saw the cup upside down. So he didn't go up.

Then a couple of nights later, he went back again. There was nothing there. So he went upstairs.

He broke the seal on the door, because the Gestapo had sealed the door.

He started getting the boxes ready & the porter came rushing up & said, “What are you doing? Are you mad?

Some people are saying there's a light on in the Danziger flat.” So they turned the lights off.

My father said “Take what you want, just get the boxes to Goerner.” So they did up the boxes & manhandled them downstairs to the porter’s lodge.

From there, they went to his friend Goerner’s place. These were all non-Jews.

There were many people, all non-Jews who helped them, hid them, gave him false papers, took them out.

I can't say enough about them. My father tried with Yad Vashem to get honours for certain people.

One of them employed my father as a night watchman.

So during the day, my father went out of the district where he was known & went to different places. At night, he had a safe place to go as a night watchman.

By this time, my mother had been questioned by the Gestapo about where my father was. She could answer honestly saying she hadn't a clue. They left her alone.

Then her friend Helli was working at an electrical plant, Siemens. The foreman there quite fancied her.

When it was time, all the Jews stayed behind, he said to her “Look, I know you're not that keen, but do you want to go with them? Or do you want to come home?”

She said, “I'll come home with you if my friend Lotti can come.”

So he said, “Alright, bring your friend Lotti, but you’d better hurry.” So he got them to his house & put them up.

There was an old railway carriage at the end of his garden with the chickens in. He threw out the chickens & installed Helli & my mother.

He used to bring them little bits of felt to make hats, which he then sold in the factory. Nobody asked where he got the hats from.

He was a bit of a drunk, & when he was drunk, he used to sing anti-Nazi songs. Not a good thing to do in those days.

So, my mother got very frightened & said to Helli, “I don't think we ought to hang around here.”

Hans Danziger's Jewish parents survived the war in hiding in Berlin:
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Hans Danziger's Jewish parents survived the war in hiding in Berlin.


"My father had nerves of steel. Before the war, Jews were obliged to put ‘Israel’ in front of their names. My father refused. He said his name wasn't Israel & nobody was going to tell him what to do. So he was hauled up before the magistrates, who sentenced him to 3 weeks in Spandau. He went to prison. My mother was absolutely terrified of what they were doing to him inside, came to meet him at the prison gates with bags of sandwiches in case he’d been starved. He said, “Put those away. I couldn’t eat a thing more.” In the evenings, he said, the warders used to come round to his cell, & say, “Come on Danziger, tell us. What are these idiots doing to the Jews?" He told them what was going on & they were amazed.


Another time, when they were hiding during the war, he'd been somewhere & was coming through the railway barriers. My mother was waiting for him & somebody jostled my father. My father turned around & offered to punch him in the face. My mother nearly died. They had no papers, nothing. My father said to her afterwards “If I'd cowered, they might have been saying, ‘Are you a Jew or something?’” He said, “As it was, nobody dared question it.”


Another day, he was on the tram, having been to the country to fetch eggs & butter & so forth from a farmer. Black market. He was on the tram & some Nazi with a big swastika in his buttonhole said to him, “What have you got in your case?” My father said, “I've got butter, eggs, sugar, a bit of this, leg of chicken.” The chap says, “Yeah, yeah. In your dreams.” My father said, “Just shows you my son, always tell the truth.”


This is how they first hid: my father was working in Daimler-Benz. One day, the Jews were told to stay behind. My father thought, well, this does not bode well. So he put his hat & coat on, & went. The gatekeeper said to him. “A bit early, isn't it?” My father said “I've got a dental appointment.” “OK, see you tomorrow.” He obviously hadn't been told to keep the Jews in. So my father went. God knows what happened to the rest. 


My father went straight to the underground, took off his yellow star, rode around, I don't know for how long. He then phoned some friends who said, “Yes, Lotti’s with us.” So he knew my mother was safe. Then he went to the house. Fischer, the porter, had made an arrangement with him. If there was trouble or the Nazis were upstairs, he would turn a cup upside down in his porters’ lodge. So my father went past & he saw the cup upside down. So he didn't go up. 


Then a couple of nights later, he went back again. There was nothing there. So he went upstairs. He broke the seal on the door, because the Gestapo had sealed the door. He started getting the boxes ready & the porter came rushing up & said, “What are you doing? Are you mad? Some people are saying there's a light on in the Danziger flat.” So they turned the lights off. My father said “Take what you want, just get the boxes to Goerner.” So they did up the boxes & manhandled them downstairs to the porter’s lodge. From there, they went to his friend Goerner’s place. 


These were all non-Jews. There were many people, all non-Jews who helped them, hid them, gave him false papers, took them out. I can't say enough about them. My father tried with Yad Vashem to get honours for certain people.


One of them employed my father as a night watchman. So during the day, my father went out of the district where he was known & went to different places. At night, he had a safe place to go as a night watchman. By this time, my mother had been questioned by the Gestapo about where my father was. She could answer honestly saying she hadn't a clue. They left her alone. Then her friend Helli was working at an electrical plant, Siemens. The foreman there quite fancied her. When it was time, all the Jews stayed behind, he said to her “Look, I know you're not that keen, but do you want to go with them? Or do you want to come home?” She said, “I'll come home with you if my friend Lotti can come.” So he said, “Alright, bring your friend Lotti, but you’d better hurry.”


So he got them to his house & put them up. There was an old railway carriage at the end of his garden with the chickens in. He threw out the chickens & installed Helli & my mother. He used to bring them little bits of felt to make hats, which he then sold in the factory. Nobody asked where he got the hats from. He was a bit of a drunk, & when he was drunk, he used to sing anti-Nazi songs. Not a good thing to do in those days. So, my mother got very frightened & said to Helli, “I don't think we ought to hang around here.” 


So my mother stayed with some other friends, one of whom was not Jewish. Had been married to a Jew, who had divorced him. He found my mother a job with some woman who had dementia & was some raving old Nazi. My mother didn't look very Jewish so that was OK. We have a photo of a Nazi officer in the photograph book. And we said, “What on earth’s he doing in there?!” You know.


She said, “you don't judge a book by its cover”. She said she was somewhere at a party & this officer was there & he said to her, “I'm sure,” you know, “ask your husband's permission, but honoured Lady—gnädige Frau—if you would care to have my arm should you want to go out. I would always be—here's my phone number.” So she phoned him & he took her out. If she wanted to go shopping to some shop, where she wouldn't be allowed normally, he would take it to the shops. He knew she was Jewish. He didn't ask any questions; he didn't want to know. He never asked. He never said anything. But obviously, why should he bother, you know? 


Sadly, sadly, he was killed by the Russians at the end of the war & both his sons died on the Russian front—they were both doctors. Very sad. The ones who do good get killed."


After many further experiences hiding in plain sight in Berlin & surviving postwar, Hans' parents were reunited with their children in Britain in 1948.

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996: How To Hide In Berlin

Text adapted and edited by Susanna Kleeman


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996: How To Hide In Berlin

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