Charles Coward
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Charles Joseph Coward (1905—1976), known as the "Count of Auschwitz", was a English soldier captured during World War II who rescued Jews from Auschwitz.
Coward joined the Army in June 1937. He was captured in May 1940 near Calais, while serving with the 8th Reserve Regimental Royal Artillery as Quartermaster Battery Sergeant Major. He managed to make two escape attempts before even reaching a prisoner-of-war camp, and then made seven further escapes, on one memorable occasion managing to be awarded the Iron Cross whilst posing as a wounded soldier in a German army field hospital. When in captivity he was equally troublesome organising numerous acts of sabotage while out on work details.
Finally, in December 1943, he was transferred to Auschwitz III (Monowitz) labour camp only two miles away from the better-known extermination camp of Auschwitz II (Birkenau). Monowitz was under the direction of the industrial company IG Farben - who were building a synthetic rubber and liquid fuel plant there - and housed over 10,000 Jewish slave labourers, as well as POW's and forced labourers from all over occupied Europe.
Thanks to his command of the German language Coward was appointed Red Cross liaison officer for the 1,200-1,400 British prisoners. In this trustee role he was allowed to move fairly freely throughout the camp and often to surrounding towns. He witnessed the arrival of trainloads of Jews to the extermination camp, followed by their 'selection' for either slave labour or the gas chambers. Coward and the other British prisoners would smuggle food and other items to the Jewish inmates, even supplying dynamite to the Sonderkommando in a partially successful attempt to blow up the gas chambers and cremtoria. He also exchanged coded messages with the British authorities via letters to a fictitious Mr. William Orange, giving military information, notes on the conditions of POW's and prisoners in the camps, as well as dates and numbers of the arrival of trainloads of Jews to the extermination camp.
On one occasion a note was smuggled to him from a Jewish-British naval doctor who was being held in Monowitz. Coward determined to contact him directly and managed to swap clothes with an inmate on a work detail and spent the night in the Jewish camp, seeing at first hand the horrific conditions in which they were held.
Determined to do something about about it he used Red Cross supplies, particularly chocolate, to "buy" corpses of prisoners who had died, including Belgian and French civilian forced labourers, from the SS guards. At night when Jews judged to be no longer fit for work were marched from Monowitz to the gas chambers at Birkenau, healthy men hid among the group and on the way concealed themselves in a ditch. In the meantime Coward scattered the corpses on the road to give the impression that they had died on the march. The escapers adopted the non-Jewish identities and were then smuggled out of the camp altogether. Coward carried out this scheme on numerous occasions and is estimated to have saved at least 400 Jewish slave labourers.
After the war Coward testified at the IG Farben Trial in Nuremberg. In 1954 a book The Password Is Courage by John Castle was published giving an account of his wartime activities, and this formed the basis of a 1962 film of the same name starring Dirk Bogarde - which glossed over his time in Auschwitz, concentrating instead on his numerous escapes.
In 1963 Coward was awarded the title of one of the Righteous Among the Nations and had a tree planted in his honour in the Avenue of Righteous Gentiles in Yad Vashem. In 2003 Coward was further commemorated with the mounting of a blue plaque at his home at 133 Chichester Road, Edmonton, London, where he lived from 1945 until his death.
[edit] Sources
Castle, John, The Password Is Courage (Souvenir Press, London 1954)