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Prior to the deportation of individuals of Jewish background to the concentration camps there were at least 2,173 Jews in Norway. During the Nazi occupation of Norway 772 [1] of these were arrested, detained, and/or deported, most of them sent to Auschwitz. 742 were murdered in the camps[ clarify ], 23 died as a result of extrajudicial execution, murder, and suicide during the war. [2] Between 28 and 34 of those deported survived [3] their continued imprisonment (following their deportation). The Norwegian police and German authorities kept records of these victims, and so, researchers were able to compile information about the deportees. [4] [Note 1]
The deportation followed a series of steps to discriminate, persecute, and disenfranchise Jews in Norway. Jewish individuals were at first arrested, Jewish property was confiscated, Jews were ordered to report to local police stations and have their identification cards stamped with a "J" and fill in a lengthy form about their profession, holdings, and family. Based on the lists the police compiled, most Jewish adult men were arrested and detained in October 1942, and by November 26, women and children were also arrested for deportation. This is the only time in Norwegian history that Norwegian police had been ordered to arrest children. [5] [6]
The deportation from Norway to concentration camps followed a planned staging of events involving both Norwegian police authorities and German Gestapo, Sicherheitsdienst, and SS staff, though the front for the campaign was through Statspolitiet under the command of Karl Marthinsen: [4] [7]
Detentions and deportation took on scale when all Jewish men were ordered arrested on October 26, 1942 and sent to camps in Norway, notable Berg, Grini, and Falstad, where they were held under harsh conditions until the deportation, targeted for November 26 on the Donau. [4]
Women and children were arrested on or just before November 26 with the goal of deporting them the same day. [3] [4]
The arrests were conducted by Norwegian policemen and lensmenn —not by Germans—according to Baard Herman Borge (a researcher). [8]
The deportation schedule for the major transports was:
Departure date | Ship | No. of Jewish deportees | No. of survivors | Route and destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
20-Nov-1942 | Monte Rosa | 19 | 0 | Docked in Århus, train to Auschwitz via Hamburg |
26-Nov-1942 | Monte Rosa | 27 | 2 | Docked in Århus, train to Auschwitz via Hamburg |
26-Nov-1942 | Donau | 532 [9] | 9 | Docked in Stettin, train to Auschwitz |
25-Feb-1943 | Gotenland | 157 | 6 | Docked in Stettin, train to Auschwitz via Berlin |
Other, 27-Apr-1941 - 10-Aug-1944 | Various ships | 30 | 11 | |
Total | 768 | 28 |
Most of those deported were Norwegian citizens. Some were stateless refugees, and a few were citizens of other countries.
In addition to those Jews from Norway which were killed by the Nazis in death camps (Vernichtungslager), at least 22 more Jews died in Norway as a result of murder, extrajudicial executions and suicide. [Note 2]
Age | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
0-5 | 16 | 2.2% |
6-15 | 49 | 6.6% |
16-25 | 121 | 16.5% |
26-35 | 128 | 17.5% |
36-45 | 104 | 14.0% |
46-55 | 153 | 20.7% |
56-65 | 112 | 15.2% |
66-75 | 43 | 5.9% |
>76 | 11 | 1.5% |
Jewish individuals who were deported included those with Norwegian citizenship, foreign citizens, and stateless refugees that were arrested and deported. The site where they were arrested was not always their place of residence; many had relocated to rural areas to avoid detection. The majority of those deported were immediately murdered in the gas chambers at Auschwitz; some were put to slave labor but perished soon after. A very small number ultimately survived. [3]
Ship | ||||||
County | Donau | Gotenland | Kvarstad | Monte Rosa | Other route | Totals |
Østfold | 2 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 9 | |
Akershus | 36 | 2 | 1 | 39 | ||
Aust-Agder | 2 | 2 | ||||
Buskerud | 15 | 1 | 4 | 20 | ||
Finnmark | 2 | 2 | ||||
Hedmark | 5 | 1 | 3 | 9 | ||
Hordaland | 13 | 12 | 1 | 26 | ||
Møre og Romsdal | 3 | 24 | 3 | 30 | ||
Nordland | 6 | 3 | 4 | 13 | ||
Oppland | 12 | 2 | 14 | |||
Oslo | 395 | 41 | 23 | 17 | 476 | |
Rogaland | 5 | 5 | 2 | 13 | ||
Sør-Trøndelag | 6 | 53 | 1 | 2 | 62 | |
Sogn og Fjordane | 4 | 4 | ||||
Telemark | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||
Troms | 1 | 8 | 8 | 17 | ||
Vest-Agder | 2 | 2 | ||||
Vestfold | 27 | 2 | 29 | |||
Totals | 534 | 157 | 1 | 46 | 30 | 768 |
Thousands of Norwegians were deported to camps in Germany and German-occupied territories during World War II. Most of those who survived were rescued by the White Buses campaign undertaken by the Norwegian government in exile, the Swedish government, the Danish government, with the Swedish Red Cross implementing the rescue with its offices. [10] This followed intensive efforts by Norwegian and other Scandinavians to track and maintain contact with Norwegian citizens in camps. [11] [12] [13] By comparison, there was no organized effort to maintain contact with and establish the fate of Jews who had been deported from Norway.
34 of the deportees survived the war. [14] At least 21 of them returned to Norway soon after the war. [Note 3] The survivors were liberated from the following camps:
2015 saw the death of the last remaining survivor of those deported from Norway—Samuel Steinmann. [16] [17]
Four Norwegian Jews were rescued by the White Buses. [Note 11] At least one prisoner at the Dachau concentration camp was denied—by an SS-soldier—leaving with the White Buses, because the prisoner allegedly was not considered a Norwegian since he was a Jew. [18]
In trials in 1946 and 1948 regarding Knut Rød's role in the deportations, he was found not guilty. [1] An Aftenposten article in 2014 said that the not guilty verdict has been called "the point of absolute zero in Norway's judicial history". [1]
Individual deportees have been commemorated with stolpersteine on a number of sidewalks in Oslo. [19]
The history of Jews in Norway dates back to the 1400s. Although there were very likely Jewish merchants, sailors and others who entered Norway during the Middle Ages, no efforts were made to establish a Jewish community. Through the early modern period, Norway, still devastated by the Black Death, was ruled by Denmark from 1536 to 1814 and then by Sweden until 1905. In 1687, Christian V rescinded all Jewish privileges, specifically banning Jews from Norway, except with a special dispensation. Jews found in the kingdom were jailed and expelled, and this ban persisted until 1851.
Drancy internment camp was an assembly and detention camp for confining Jews who were later deported to the extermination camps during the German occupation of France during World War II. Originally conceived and built as a modernist urban community under the name La Cité de la Muette, it was located in Drancy, a northeastern suburb of Paris, France.
On 19 April 1943, members of the Belgian Resistance stopped a Holocaust train and freed a number of Jews who were being transported to Auschwitz concentration camp from Mechelen transit camp in Belgium, on the twentieth convoy from the camp. In the aftermath of the attack, a number of other captives were able to jump from the train as well. In all, 233 people managed to escape, of whom 118 ultimately survived. The remainder were either killed during the escape or were recaptured soon afterwards. The attack was unusual as an attempt by the resistance to free Jewish deportees and marks the only mass breakout by deportees on a Holocaust train.
Leo Eitinger was a Norwegian psychiatrist, author and educator. He was a Holocaust survivor who studied the late-onset psychological trauma experienced by people who went through separation and psychological pain early in life only to show traumatic experience decades later. He devoted a long period studying posttraumatic stress disorder among Holocaust survivors, which had led Holocaust survivors including Paul Celan (1920–1970), Primo Levi (1919–1987) and many others to commit suicide several decades after the experience. Eitinger was a pioneer of research into psychological trauma among refugees, and also laid the foundation for Norwegian military psychiatry research with emphasis on psychological trauma among soldiers.
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The German occupation of Norway began on 9 April 1940. In 1942, there were at least 2,173 Jews in Norway. At least 775 of them were arrested, detained and/or deported. More than half of the Norwegians who died in camps in Germany were Jews. 742 Jews were murdered in the camps and 23 Jews died as a result of extrajudicial execution, murder and suicide during the war, bringing the total of Jewish Norwegian dead to at least 765, comprising 230 complete households.
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Knut Rød was a Norwegian police prosecutor responsible for the arrest, detention and transfer of Jewish men, women and children to SS troops at Oslo harbor. For these and other actions related to the Holocaust in Norway, Rød was acquitted in two highly publicized trials during the legal purge in Norway after World War II that remain controversial to this day. The trials and their outcome have since been dubbed the "strangest trial in post-war Norway."
Julius Paltiel was one of the 26 Norwegian Jews who returned from Auschwitz. For their efforts in telling about the atrocities in the Nazi extermination camps, both Paltiel and his widow were awarded St. Olav's Medal, he in 2004 and she in 2016. Paltiel was given a Norwegian state funeral, attended by King Harald V.
Antisemitism in contemporary Norway deals with antisemitic incidents and attitudes encountered by Jews, either individually or collectively, in Norway since World War II. The mainstream Norwegian political environment has strongly adopted a platform that rejects antisemitism. However, individuals may privately hold antisemitic views. Currently, there are about 1,400 Jews in Norway, in a population of 5.3 million.
Kristian Ottosen was a Norwegian non-fiction writer and public servant.
Wanda Maria Heger was a Norwegian social worker noted for her efforts to help Norwegian and other prisoners in Nazi concentration camps during World War II.
Erling Bauck was a Norwegian resistance member and writer. He was in Nazi captivity from 1942 to 1945 during World War II, first in Norway, then from 1944 in Auschwitz.
Jonas Brunvoll was a Norwegian advertisement manager, editor and politician for the Labour Party.
Kirsten Brunvoll, née Sørsdal, was a Norwegian playwright, resistance member, Nacht und Nebel prisoner, World War II memoirist and politician for the Labour Party.
Herman Sachnowitz was a Norwegian merchant. He was one of the few Norwegian Jews who survived deportation to a concentration camp.
MS Gotenland was a cargo motor ship that was built in Denmark during the Second World War and scrapped in China in 1970. Her first operator was the German Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL) line. In 1945 she passed to Norwegian ownership and was renamed Hopeville. In 1967 she was acquired by Greek owners, who at first renamed her Oinoussian Hope, and then changed her name to Esperanza.
av alle nordmenn med "J-merket pass"In this op-ed, Nore incorrectly writes that they arrests were based on J stamps in passports. As documented by Søbye, Ottosen, and others, the police generated arrest sheets based on lists compiled of Jews and suspected Jews. Further, national identification cards were stamped with a "J."
Survivors:
Deceased in camps:
Stefansen, Arnt; Feinberg, Kai (1995). Fange nr 79108 vender tilbake[Prisoner no. 79108 returns]. Cappelen.