Rosenstrasse protest
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The Rosenstrasse protest took place on 27th February, 1943 during the Holocaust when the Nazis wanted to round up the last of the Jews in Berlin, but were resisted by the victims' relatives.
Around 1,800 Jewish men, most of them married to non-Jewish women, were separated from the other 6,000 of the last Jews left in Berlin, in an attempt to convince their family members that they were being sent to labor camps rather than to concentration camps. Before these men could be loaded onto the trains to be deported, their wives and other close relatives turned up at Rosenstraße 2-4, a welfare office for the Jewish community located in Central Berlin, where the men were held until deportation, in estimated numbers of up to 6,000. For a week, the protesters, mainly women, demanded their husbands back by holding a peaceful protest. The protesters appeared first in ones and twos; afterwards their number grew rapidly, even though all of the 6000 never appeared at the same time.
Not wanting to invite open dissent by shooting the women down in the streets, Joseph Goebbels, at that time Gauleiter of Berlin, released the prisoners, and ordered the return of 25 men already sent to Auschwitz. Almost all the released men survived the war.
This little-known episode in the dark history of the Holocaust is highly significant, because it was one of few attempt by anyone during the Third Reich to peacefully and openly protest the Reich's actions. Another peaceful protest took place in Berlin's Große Hamburger Straße. Amazingly, the protesters and their arrested relatives were not harmed, and most survived until the end of World War II. This event is even more noticeable, because the women that protested were unarmed, unorganized, didn't have a leader, and confronted one of the most brutal of Hitler's establishments — the SS.
The building on Rosenstraße, near Alexanderplatz, in which the men were held was destroyed during an Allied bombing of Berlin at the end of the war. The original Rosenstraße location is now marked by a red kiosk 2-3 meters high, dedicated to the demonstration. Information about this event is posted on the kiosk.
In the mid-1980s, Ingeborg Hunzinger, an East German sculptor, created a memorial to those women who took place in the Rosenstrasse Protest. The memorial, named "Block der Frauen" (Block of Women), was erected in 1995 in a park not far from the site of the protest. The sculpture shows protesting and mourning women, and an inscription on the back reads: "The strength of civil disobedience, the vigor of love overcomes the violence of dictatorship; Give us our men back; Women were standing here, defeating death; Jewish men were free."
The events of the Rosenstrasse protests were made into a film in 2003 by Margarethe von Trotta under the title Rosenstrasse.
[edit] Reference
- Nathan Stoltzfus, Resistance of the Heart: Intermarriage and the Rosenstrasse Protest in Nazi Germany, Rutgers University Press (March 2001) ISBN 0-8135-2909-3 (paperback: 386 pages)