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Helen Spitzer Tichauer

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Helen Spitzer Tichauer
Born(1918-11-10)November 10, 1918
DiedJuly 6, 2018(2018-07-06) (aged 99)
New York City, U.S.
Other names
  • Zippi Spitzer
  • Helen Spitzer
  • Helen Iichauer
  • Zippi Spitzer Tichauer
Occupation(s)graphics designer, human rights worker
Known forHolocaust survivor widely consulted by historians
SpouseErwin Tichauer

Helen Tichauer (November 10, 1918 – July 6, 2018) was an American graphics designer, Holocaust survivor and human rights worker.[1][2][3] Tichauer was born in Pozsony, Austro-Hungarian Kingdom (now Bratislava, Slovakia), as Helen Spitzer, was kidnapped by the SS, and held in death camps, in Poland, lived in displaced persons camps in Germany, after the war. It was there that she married Erwin Tichauer, then the chief of security of her camp. The Tichauer were called upon by the United Nations on multiple humanitarian projects. Erwin Tichauer also served as a professor of bio-engineering, at University of New South Wales and New York University.

SS Detention

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Tichauer was one of the first women sent to Auschwitz in early 1942.[1] Eventually Auschwitz camp authorities discovered Tichauer's skills as a graphics designer, which preserved her from being killed, and even allowed her relatively free-run of the camp, and even occasional excursions, outside the camp.[1][2][3] Multiple historians have used Tichauer's account of life in Auschwitz. Konrad Kwiet contributed a biography of Tichauer as a chapter of Approaching an Auschwitz Survivor

Tichauer played mandolin in the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz, assembled to meet trains of individuals destined to go straight to the gas chambers.[4][5] The orchestra would play calming music so captives who did not know they were about to die would be more tractable.

In December 2019 The New York Times published an article on a previously undocumented aspect of her life in Auschwitz - 25 year old Tichauer had taken a 17 year old lover in Auschwitz, David Wisnia.[1] The pair had been able to engage in monthly liaisons, and had planned to meet, and marry, if they should survive the war. However, they lost track of one another, for several years, and, when they had news of one another, they were both married.

Camp authorities tried to evacuate the camp, and destroy evidence of their crimes, as the armies of the Soviet Union approached.[1][2][3] Tichauer and a friend were able escape from their guards during a death march to another camp.

In her PhD thesis Anna-Madeleine Halkes Carey described Tichauer as a holocaust survivor whose multiple accounts of the camp system had been thoroughly confirmed.[6]

Post-war displaced person

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She married Erwin Tichauer, chief of security at the Feldafing displaced persons camp.[1][2] According to The New York Times Tichauer was vague about efforts she made to help refugees with limited travel documents to make their way to Israel, and other safer places.

United Nations projects, and life with Erwin Tichauer

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The Tichauers participated in United Nation's projects in Peru, Bolivia and Indonesia.[1] According to The New York Times "Throughout their travels, Ms. Tichauer continued to learn new languages and use her design skills to help populations in need, particularly pregnant women and new mothers." The Tichauers never had children.

Erwin Tichauer was an academic, a professor of bio-engineering, at the University of New South Wales, and New York University.[1] Tichauer lived with him until his death in 1996.

History professor Konrad Kwiet, who had survived World War 2 as a child, said Tichauer served as a mother-figure for him, and phoned her once a week, after she left Sydney.[1]

Relationship with David Wisnia

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Wisnia's first job, at Auschwitz, was to retrieve the bodies of captives who committed suicide by electrocuting themselves by throwing themselves at the camp's electrified fences.[1] Guards who learned he was a skilled singer started calling upon him to sing to them, and he was later transferred to work as a bathroom attendant in the sauna operated for the guard force.

Tichauer met him there, and was able to use her position of trust to arrange privacy for their liaisons.[1] The pair agreed to try and meet, if they should both survive the war.

Wisnia did not tell his children and grandchildren he had a lover, while in Auschwitz, and Tichauer did not tell her biographers.[1] The New York Times described Wisnia and Tichauer having a final meeting, near the end of her life. Wisnia was able to ask her whether she had used her position of trust to help him survive the death camp, and she confirmed that she had been able to prevent him being shipped to an extermination camp on five separate occasions.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Keren Blankfeld (2019-12-08). "Lovers in Auschwitz, Reunited 72 Years Later. He Had One Question: Was she the reason he was alive today?". The New York Times. p. MB1. Retrieved 2019-12-08. Yet Ms. Spitzer was never a Nazi collaborator or a kapo, a Jew assigned to oversee other prisoners. Instead, she used her position to help inmates and allies. She used her design skills to manipulate paperwork and reassign prisoners to different job assignments and barracks. She had access to official camp reports, which she shared with various resistance groups, according to Konrad Kwiet, a professor at the University of Sydney.
  2. ^ a b c d David P. Boder (1946-09-23). "David P. Boder Interviews Helen Tichauer; September 23, 1946; Feldafing, Germany". Voices of the Holocaust. Retrieved 2019-12-08.
  3. ^ a b c Joan Ringelheim (2000-09-07). "Oral history interview with Helen Spitzer Tichauer". United States Holocaust Museum. Retrieved 2019-12-08.
  4. ^ Susan Eischeid (2016). The Truth about Fania Fénelon and the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Springer. pp. 18, 34, 57. ISBN 9783319310381. Retrieved 2019-12-07. Survivor Helen Tichauer, who worked in the Camp Office and also played mandolin in the camp orchestra, questions whether this incident could have happened.
  5. ^ Brown, Kellie D. (2020). The sound of hope: Music as solace, resistance and salvation during the holocaust and world war II. McFarland. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-4766-7056-0.
  6. ^ Anna-Madeleine Halkes Carey. "Jewish Masculinity in the Holocaust" (PDF). University of London. p. 30. Retrieved 2019-12-07. In the case of Helen "Zippi" Spitzer Tichauer, Jürgen Matthäus and his fellow academics offer us as near to a cast-iron source as we will ever find, every moment of her multiple testimonies being checked and cross - checked, confirmed and corroborated.