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Joel Brand

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Joel Brand

Joel Brand (1907 – 1964) was a Hungarian Jew who played a prominent role, during the Nazi occupation of Hungary, in an attempt by the Jewish Aid and Rescue Committee to save Jews by making a deal with Adolf Eichmann, who was in charge of their deportation to the German death camp at Auschwitz. During a meeting with Brand in April 1944, Eichmann offered to release up to one million Hungarian Jews in exchange for trucks, soap, tea, coffee, and sugar from the Allies. The deal, which failed, became known as the "blood for trucks" agreement.

Background

Brand's wife, Hansi, with Oskar Schindler in the mid-1960s. It was rescuing Hansi's sister from deportation that led to Brand becoming involved in "buying" Jewish refugees.

Brand was born in Năsăud, Transylvania, now Romania, moving in 1910 with his family to Erfurt in Germany, where he was raised and educated. He became a communist and worked for the Comintern as a sailor and odd-job man, spending time in the Philippines, Japan, China, and South America before returning to Germany, where he became a middle-ranking communist functionary. His position led to his arrest after the Reichstag fire in 1933, when the Nazis began rounding up socialists and communists. When he was released in 1934, he left Germany and settled in Budapest, Hungary, where he got a job with the Budapest Telephone Company and became a Zionist, joining the Mapai (Israel Labour Party) youth movement.

In 1935, he married another member of the Zionist movement in Budapest, Hansi Hartmann, who owned a factory that produced gloves, socks, and sweaters. When Hansi's sister was deported in 1941, Brand paid Josezf Krem, a Hungarian espionage agent, to get her back, and from that point on, Brand became involved in smuggling Jewish refugees from Poland and Slovakia to the relative safety of Hungary.

As the situation of Jews in Europe worsened, Brand teamed up with Rudolf Kastner, a Zionist lawyer and journalist from Cluj, and Samuel Springmann, a Polish Jew and center-left Zionist who owned a jewellery store, and who began to function as the treasurer of their fledgling rescue committee. In 1941 and 1943, Kastner tried to interest the Hungarian Social Democrats in joining forces with the committee to undertake the large-scale rescue of Jews, but the non-Jews among them were allegedly not willing to endanger themselves for the sake of Jews, and the proposal came to nothing.

In early 1943, the group was joined by Otto Komoly, a Budapest engineer, reserve officer, war veteran, and member of the Liberal Zionist Party, who was known and highly respected among the Jewish community in Budapest. He became their chairman, and with that, the Va'adat Ezrah Vehatzalah (Vaada), or Aid and Rescue Committee, was born, consisting of Komoly, Kastner, Joel and Hansi Brand, Moshe Krausz and Eugen Frankl (both Orthodox Jews and Zionists), and Ernst Szilagyi from the left-wing Hashomer Hatzair.

Meeting with Eichmann

On Sunday, March 19, 1944, the Germans invaded Hungary, with relatively weak forces which met no resistance. Brand was abducted and hidden in a safehouse by Josef Winninger, a courier for the German Abwehr (military intelligence), who had been taking money from Brand in exchange for information about Jewish refugees, and who took between $8,000 and $20,000 from Brand for providing him with a place to hide.

According to testimony Brand gave in 1954 to a court in Israel in the middle of April 1944, he was told by one of the German agents in Budapest, probably Winninger, that he was to wait at a certain street corner at an appointed time, and would be taken to meet Adolf Eichmann.

Notes

  1. "Yehuda Bauer: Teaching about the Holocaust (Part 2)", Online Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies, Volume 18, No. 2, Winter 2005
  2. >"Devil's Poker: A True Story", a screenplay by Leo Zahn
  3. ^ Bauer, Yehuda. Jews for Sale: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945, Yale University Press, 1994, p. 152
  4. Hansi Brand's testimony", The Trial of Adolf Eichmann, Session 58, part 2 of 5, The Nizkor Project
  5. Bauer, Yehuda. Jews for Sale: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945, Yale University Press, 1994, p. 152. Sources differ on whether it was Hansi Brand's sister or brother who was deported. Online Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies published in its Volume 18, No. 2 issue that it was her brother, but according to historian Yehuda Bauer, it was her sister.
  6. Bauer, Yehuda. Jews for Sale: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945, Yale University Press, 1994, p. 153
  7. Bauer, Yehuda. Jews for Sale: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945, Yale University Press, 1994, p. 154
  8. The court case was the 1953-5 trial of Malchiel Greenwald, a freelance writer who had accused Rudolf Kastner, Brand's colleague on the Aid and Rescue Committee, and by then a government minister in the new State of Israel, of having collaborated with the Nazis. The government sued Greenwald for libel on Kastner's behalf. The judge ruled against Kastner, a verdict that was overturned in part by the Supreme Court of Israel in January 1958. Kastner himself was assassinated in March 1957 in connection with the allegations.
  9. Hecht, Ben. Perfidy, Milah Press, 1999, p. 219

References

  • "Yehuda Bauer: Teaching about the Holocaust (Part 2)", Online Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies, Volume 18, No. 2, Winter 2005, retrieved May 7, 2006
  • "Devil's Poker: A True Story", a screenplay by Leo Zahn, retrieved May 7, 2006
  • Hansi Brand's testimony", The Trial of Adolf Eichmann, Session 58, part 2 of 5, The Nizkor Project, retrieved May 7, 2006
  • Bauer, Yehuda. Jews for Sale: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945, Yale University Press, 1994. ISBN 0300068522
  • Hecht, Ben. Perfidy, Milah Press, first published in 1961; this edition 1999. ISBN 0964688638