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Carl Laemmle LAEMMLE`S LIST
AFFIDAVITS SAVE LIVES. Illustrierte Ausgabe

Inglese · Tascabile

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Udo BayerLaemmle's ListCarl Laemmle's struggle for affidavits for Jewish refugees "I am doing what my heart dictates me to do and I do it unstintingly..."first published in FILM HISTORY 4/1998 - Courtesy of S. Wiliams, Indiana University Press, USABefore Carl Laemmle's death on 24 September 1939, one of his great humanitarian deeds was the granting of affidavits for persecuted Jews. He wrote that he had never felt so much sympathy for any one thing in his life, and had only done what his heart had dictated. Until now the only published information on this has been the statement by the former chief executive of the Jewish Oberrat in Stuttgart, J. Wissmann1, who mentions more than three-hundred affidavits. The most important source of documentation is to be found in the National Archives in Washington DC.The discovery of these documents was accomplished toward the end of 1994 thanks to KarinSchick of Laupheim. Her research brought to light 45 documents consisting mostly ofLaemmle's correspondence with American officials from November 1936 until May 1939. Attimes the actual files were not available, only index cards with date and names of the personsconcerned; the actual files can be found in a branch of the Archives in Maryland. We could not determine the reason for the gaps in the material stored in the Archives.It is acknowledged that the persecution of Jews in the territories controlled by the Third Reichwas unique, and is hardly comparable to the many reasons for migration and asylum seekingtoday. The one and only reason for their persecution was their ethnic origin, and was completely unrelated to any of their actions; for them this reason was immutable. Emigration was thus their sole option to escape with their lives. In spite of increasing obstacles set up by Germanauthorities, and in spite of increasing restrictions enacted by possible guest countries, emigration was possible to some extent until the second half of 1941.The many American publications regarding the rescue of European Jews are almostcompletely devoted to administrative actions and the activities of persons in authority, even including those concerned with Jewish organisations. It is remarkable, however, that the difficulties in granting affidavits are neglected, even though they were the main condition for the rescue by flight.CarI Laemmle's correspondence would be of great importance in shedding light on this topic, but the present whereabouts of most of his letters are unknown. Carl Laemmle's son in law,Stanley Bergerman, has donated some memorabilia and a few letters to the City of Laupheim.The Kohner collection in the Stiftung Kinemathek in Berlin owns the letters from Laemmle to Paul Kohner, and now and then some other pieces of the correspondence in this matter also emerge. The fragmentary correspondence from the National Archives must be read against American immigration policies and the political events in Germany about which Laemmle was very well informed. He had first-hand information from his relatives in Laupheim. 1 J.Wissmann,´Zur Geschichte der Juden in Wuerttemberg, 1924-1939`, in P.Sauer, Die juedischen Gemeinden in Wuerttemberg und Hohenzollern (Stuttgart,1966), 204 2F ig.1. Laemmle maintaines contact with a large number of European émigrés, including Thomas Mann, at left, whowas a guest at Laemmle´s home on 10 April 1938. Max Reinhardt and Ernst Lubitsch at right (Courtesy of the Mann Archive, Zurich) Germany, some of them from Laupheim; contact with emigrants (one of the most prominentwas Thomas Mann); and he made yearly trips to Carlsbad, Switzerland and Paris. Beyond that,Laemmle engaged Joseph Roos, a German-born public relations specialist, who later wouldconduct an investigation of the Nazis for General Marshall.2 Stanley Bergerman has been able to supply an interesting letter which Laemmle wrote 1936 to his old friend and attorney, Edwin Loeb:"For a long time I have been a subscriber to the Jewish Telegraphic A

Info autore

Udo Bayer, geboren 1943; Studium der Germanistik, Geschichte, Philosophie und Politologie; Promotion 1994 bei Max Bense und Elisabeth Walther; Studiendirektor am Gymnasium in Laupheim.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Con la collaborazione di Gabriele Bayer (Editore)
Autori Udo Bayer
Editore CARL LAEMMLE PRESS Laupheim
 
Contenuto Libro
Forma del prodotto Tascabile
Data pubblicazione 02.05.2017
Categoria Libri per bambini e per ragazzi > Biografie
Narrativa > Romanzi > Epistole, diari
Saggistica > Musica, film, teatro > Biografie, autobiografie
 
EAN 9783981844429
ISBN 978-3-9818444-2-9
Numero di pagine 64
Illustrazioni Oscar Award in 1930-"All Quiet On The Western Front" was honored twice; for the best director Lewis Milestone (09/30/1895 - 09/25/2015) as well as for the best film of the year. Laemmle received the award from L.B. Mayer, one of the initiators of the Oscar.
Dimensioni (della confezione) 14.9 x 21.1 x 0.6 cm
Peso (della confezione) 136 g
 

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