Georg
Ferdinand Duckwitz (1904-1973)
Preben
Munch-Nielsen
(1926- )
was born to a Protestant family in a small Danish
fishing village, Snekkersten. He was only 14 when
German troops occupied Denmark in 1940. Preben soon
became a courier in the Danish resistance movement,
and when the Nazis began hunting down the Danish
Jews in October 1943, he like so many other Danes
decided to help.
Again
and again he risked his life by hiding Jewish
refugees in churches and houses near the shore. He
led them to fishing boats which took them across
the sea to neutral Sweden and safety. Preben
Munch-Nielsen himself had to take refuge in Sweden
in November 1943. He returned to Denmark in May
1945.
Still
alive today, Preben Munch-Nielsen is a successful
Danish businessman who was honored for his wartime
heroics by President Bill Clinton in
1997.
During
an interview with Lesley Pearl, The Jewish
Bulletin of Northern California, in 1995 he
emphasized that the Danish Jews were considered
neighbors, friends, schoolmates and nothing
else.
"This
is our history. We have no scapegoats. No pogroms.
No Holocaust. It's so simple," Munch-Nielsen said.
"We didn't recognize Jews as Jews, but as Danes,"
he added. "They were victims of an insane movement
created by lunatics," Preben Munch-Nielsen
said.
"If you wanted to retain your self-respect, you did
what you could .."
Knud
Dyby (1915-2011),
former policeman, actively participated in the
Danish resistance to the German occupation of
Denmark. A strong sense of decency and compassion
caused him to risk his life to aid Jewish victims
of the Nazi Holocaust that engulfed Europe from
1939-1945.
Using
his connections with fishing boat skippers, he
arranged for the secretive transport of Jews to
safety in Sweden and showed great courage in
assisting Jewish families.
He
conveyed to Swedish safety over thirty Allied
airmen downed behind enemy lines, and saboteurs,
Baltic refugees and others fleeing the Nazis were
smuggled across the narrow body of water between
Denmark and Sweden. Knud Dyby alone was responsible
for as much as eighty percent of the information
that reached Sweden from Denmark in the last months
of 1944 and the first three months of
1945.
After
the war, Knud Dyby emigrated from Denmark,
ultimately settling in the San Francisco Bay
area.
His
efforts to assist Danish Jews in escaping to Sweden
has been recognized by numerous Jewish
organizations. On November 9, 1999, he was honored
again by the Los Angeles Simon
Wiesenthal Center
for his humanitarian efforts during WW
II.
Special
Selected Link:
The
Holocaust and Denmark --a Country of Blessed
Memory
.
|